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I Advice - Always Use Protection! Sell-Stops for Safe Investing
Do You Know How To Make Money With eBay? stock” is an ETF (exchange-traded fund). This is because funds are typically less volatile than company stocks, so they don’t need as much wiggle room.If you are a regular Internet surfer, you would by now have seen and heard a lot about eBay. Off hand, it is one of the largest online shopping mall operating and one that supports one of the most popular Internet payment methods, the payapal. It is not possible that you would want something and you would not find it on eBay. You name it, you will have it on eBay.eBay As A Tool For Making Money OnlineThe Internet is the best thing that happened to humankind yet. eBay is one such example, which shows what tremendous potential can be unleashed if you are able to harness its strength. eBay has started with the intention to provide a basic, easily accessible, free platform for people to showcase their products or services to a global market. It gives you a “shop” or a “stall” in exhibition, which has international audience.What started with this basic need, and a handful of items is today a mult • And I might use a stop as low as 2 percent or 3 percent for a stock that I have decided to sell. The tight stop price lets me squeeze out any unexpected upside that the stock may have left in it, but it still gets me out with negligible damage if the stock falls at all. The second way to set the stop price is to examine the stock’s chart for the past year or so. You may see that while overall the stock has been rising, some significant leaps and falls are part of its normal behavior. The dips may exceed any reasonable percentage sell-stop that you would normally set. But you don’t want to sell the stock on such dips, because you can see that the overall trend has been upward, and you believe that it will be continue to be that way. In that case, what I usually do is have the charting software (available on most financial websites) draw the stock’s moving average line (MA). Try MA’s between 50 and 200 days. What you might disco Leading Change - Don't Forecast Heroism For most individuals, whether to sell a stock is the hardest decision in stock investing.Leading change means making tough calls. There’s none tougher than making the calls regarding the scope, timing and resources of the project. One of the biggest mistakes leaders make is getting happy and caught up in the moment trying to impress the boss and making commitments you’re not able to keep.The biggest problem I see is when otherwise good leaders and managers reach out and forecast what I call ‘heroism’. With the war in Iraq right now we read daily of the exploits of some of our soldiers and Marines. They do some extraordinary things. They are heroes but heroism can’t be forecast, it just happens.I wrote a book called Dead Center about the exploits of a Marine sniper team in Vietnam. A couple of years after it came out I was traveling on a consulting job in Ohio when one night in a motel I saw this PBS special on Medals of Honor winners. There before me was none other than one of my Drill It sounds simple at first: “Sell your losers and let your winners run.” Sure, obviously. But how do you know which stocks are your future long-term winners and losers? More to the point, how do you tell the difference—right now—between a stock that is only on a short-term losing streak as opposed to one which is destined to be a long term loser? Clearly, it’s easy to list your winners and losers as of right now. But that’s not what this particular decision is about. This is about future events—unknowable by definition. Even if your stock is falling in price, you don’t want prematurely to decide that you made a mistake buying it or that its prospects have reversed from bright to dim. It may not be a loser at all. It just may have hit a bad patch. Your original positive outlook on the company and its stock may be correct, and the optimum decision may be to give the stock more time to reach its profitable destination. A stock in a short-term stall can become a long-term winner. On the other hand, we all know Rule #1 of investing: Don’t lose. So you can’t wait forever to make your decision when a stock’s price keeps falling. Every Sensible Stock Investor wants to take a strategic—not whimsical—approach to making sell decisions. You want to contain losses and sidestep risks. The trailing sell-stop order is a very effective tool for sticking to a strategic approach. Let’s make sure we understand what this order is. Then we’ll talk about how to use them. A trailing sell-stop order—which is a standard type of order with all brokerages—has these characteristics: • It is a “sell” order with a condition attached. You attach it. When the condition is satisfied, the order to sell is executed—whether you are at work, in the bathroom, on vacation, or wherever. • The condition is the ''stop'' price. That is the price you pre-select to trigger the sell order. If the stock’s price falls to or through that point, the sell order is executed. You pre-select the trigger price when you are thinking objectively and strategically, not in the heat of a fast-moving stock price. • It is a “trailing” order. Over time, as the price of your stock moves up, you reset the trigger price a little higher—say once per week. That way, the stop price trails along behind the stock’s actual price, protecting you on the downside while not limiting your upside. • It is a “standing” order. That means it just sits there until (1) it is executed, (2) it expires, (3) you change it, or (4) you remove it. Of course if the stock’s price is going down, you leave the existing stop price alone. The whole idea is that it is there to protect you against losses. It does not take long to review and reset all the stop prices in a small portfolio—maybe a minute per stock online. So trailing sell-stops are used to limit losses from your purchase price or to lock in the gains of your stocks as they advance. A trailing stop order gets you out if the stock suddenly starts to tumble. It works like a ratchet, letting your stock price move up but not down past the trigger price you have selected. I follow one hard-and-fast rule: Sell a new purchase before losing 10 percent in it. So as soon as I purchase a stock, I enter a sell-stop order too, usually at 8 percent less than I paid for it. After a stock gains 10 percent for you, your stop price will have reached what you paid for it, so you will never lose money on that stock. After that hurdle has been cleared, how do you set the stop price? The goal is to give the stock enough room for normal volatility, while at the same time being restrictive enough so as not to let profits escape if the stock starts to go backwards. There are two main methods to set stop prices. First, you can set the stop price as a percentage below today’s price (but never below what you paid once the stop price has reached your purchase price). I use the percentage approach most of the time. My “default” percentage is 15 percent, although I may change that (up or down) in certain situations. • I might use a looser stop (such as 20 or even 25 percent) for a “blue chip” company that I really expect to hold for a long time. This would typically be a company that has a fat dividend yield. • I usually use 10 percent if the “stock” is an ETF (exchange-traded fund). This is because funds are typically less volatile than company stocks, so they don’t need as much wiggle room. • And I might use a stop as low as 2 percent or 3 percent for a stock that I have decided to sell. The tight stop price lets me squeeze out any unexpected upside that the stock may have left in it, but it still gets me out with negligible damage if the stock falls at all. The second way to set the stop price is to examine the stock’s chart for the past year or so. You may see that while overall the stock has been rising, some significant leaps and falls are part of its normal behavior. The dips may exceed any reasonable percentage sell-stop that you would normally set. But you don’t want to sell the stock on such dips, because you can see that the overall trend has been upward, and you believe that it will be continue to be that way. In that case, what I usually do is have the charting software (available on most financial websites) draw the stock’s moving average line (MA). Try MA’s between 50 and 200 days. What you might discov Planning Your 10 Prospects and, we all know Rule #1 of investing: Don’t lose. So you can’t wait forever to make your decision when a stock’s price keeps falling.I know of a large company that is growing rapidly and their biggest success is traced back to contacting ten people everyday. The ten they contact are usually past customers and referrals from those customers. They almost never do cold calls, the information they send out is always welcome. You may recognize Olympia Funding as one of the top ten fastest growing companies in the California Bay Area. A lot can be learned from their methodologies. Olympia Funding started with one person, a large credit card debt and a great idea. They gained their first deal within two weeks of starting and have never looked back. Here are some things that you can do to plan for your list of ten.Write down all the customers you currently have and if the list is very small, you can list all the business people who actually know you (not the ones you know) Prioritize the list so that the customers t Every Sensible Stock Investor wants to take a strategic—not whimsical—approach to making sell decisions. You want to contain losses and sidestep risks. The trailing sell-stop order is a very effective tool for sticking to a strategic approach. Let’s make sure we understand what this order is. Then we’ll talk about how to use them. A trailing sell-stop order—which is a standard type of order with all brokerages—has these characteristics: • It is a “sell” order with a condition attached. You attach it. When the condition is satisfied, the order to sell is executed—whether you are at work, in the bathroom, on vacation, or wherever. • The condition is the ''stop'' price. That is the price you pre-select to trigger the sell order. If the stock’s price falls to or through that point, the sell order is executed. You pre-select the trigger price when you are thinking objectively and strategically, not in the heat of a fast-moving stock price. • It is a “trailing” order. Over time, as the price of your stock moves up, you reset the trigger price a little higher—say once per week. That way, the stop price trails along behind the stock’s actual price, protecting you on the downside while not limiting your upside. • It is a “standing” order. That means it just sits there until (1) it is executed, (2) it expires, (3) you change it, or (4) you remove it. Of course if the stock’s price is going down, you leave the existing stop price alone. The whole idea is that it is there to protect you against losses. It does not take long to review and reset all the stop prices in a small portfolio—maybe a minute per stock online. So trailing sell-stops are used to limit losses from your purchase price or to lock in the gains of your stocks as they advance. A trailing stop order gets you out if the stock suddenly starts to tumble. It works like a ratchet, letting your stock price move up but not down past the trigger price you have selected. I follow one hard-and-fast rule: Sell a new purchase before losing 10 percent in it. So as soon as I purchase a stock, I enter a sell-stop order too, usually at 8 percent less than I paid for it. After a stock gains 10 percent for you, your stop price will have reached what you paid for it, so you will never lose money on that stock. After that hurdle has been cleared, how do you set the stop price? The goal is to give the stock enough room for normal volatility, while at the same time being restrictive enough so as not to let profits escape if the stock starts to go backwards. There are two main methods to set stop prices. First, you can set the stop price as a percentage below today’s price (but never below what you paid once the stop price has reached your purchase price). I use the percentage approach most of the time. My “default” percentage is 15 percent, although I may change that (up or down) in certain situations. • I might use a looser stop (such as 20 or even 25 percent) for a “blue chip” company that I really expect to hold for a long time. This would typically be a company that has a fat dividend yield. • I usually use 10 percent if the “stock” is an ETF (exchange-traded fund). This is because funds are typically less volatile than company stocks, so they don’t need as much wiggle room. • And I might use a stop as low as 2 percent or 3 percent for a stock that I have decided to sell. The tight stop price lets me squeeze out any unexpected upside that the stock may have left in it, but it still gets me out with negligible damage if the stock falls at all. The second way to set the stop price is to examine the stock’s chart for the past year or so. You may see that while overall the stock has been rising, some significant leaps and falls are part of its normal behavior. The dips may exceed any reasonable percentage sell-stop that you would normally set. But you don’t want to sell the stock on such dips, because you can see that the overall trend has been upward, and you believe that it will be continue to be that way. In that case, what I usually do is have the charting software (available on most financial websites) draw the stock’s moving average line (MA). Try MA’s between 50 and 200 days. What you might disco How to Get Free Credit Cards Free credit cards - what a concept! We're all enticed by the very word free. The more common term for free credit cards, however, is 0% (or zero percent) APR credit cards. APR stands for annual percentage rate. In other words, free credit cards can refer to those that charge you no interest on the purchases you make with them.Years, and decades ago, the APR was standard no matter which card you chose, and which financial provider. The APR simply depended on the bank rates, which in turn were influenced by the federal reserve. 18 percent was then a fairly standard APR. This was clearly not a time when free credit cards abounded and, in fact, competition wasn't very frenetic, because the rate was the same no matter which card you chose.Then, however, monoline banks came into being. These banks, unlike the traditional financial institution that accepted deposits and gave out loans, served simply as is • It is a “trailing” order. Over time, as the price of your stock moves up, you reset the trigger price a little higher—say once per week. That way, the stop price trails along behind the stock’s actual price, protecting you on the downside while not limiting your upside. • It is a “standing” order. That means it just sits there until (1) it is executed, (2) it expires, (3) you change it, or (4) you remove it. Of course if the stock’s price is going down, you leave the existing stop price alone. The whole idea is that it is there to protect you against losses. It does not take long to review and reset all the stop prices in a small portfolio—maybe a minute per stock online. So trailing sell-stops are used to limit losses from your purchase price or to lock in the gains of your stocks as they advance. A trailing stop order gets you out if the stock suddenly starts to tumble. It works like a ratchet, letting your stock price move up but not down past the trigger price you have selected. I follow one hard-and-fast rule: Sell a new purchase before losing 10 percent in it. So as soon as I purchase a stock, I enter a sell-stop order too, usually at 8 percent less than I paid for it. After a stock gains 10 percent for you, your stop price will have reached what you paid for it, so you will never lose money on that stock. After that hurdle has been cleared, how do you set the stop price? The goal is to give the stock enough room for normal volatility, while at the same time being restrictive enough so as not to let profits escape if the stock starts to go backwards. There are two main methods to set stop prices. First, you can set the stop price as a percentage below today’s price (but never below what you paid once the stop price has reached your purchase price). I use the percentage approach most of the time. My “default” percentage is 15 percent, although I may change that (up or down) in certain situations. • I might use a looser stop (such as 20 or even 25 percent) for a “blue chip” company that I really expect to hold for a long time. This would typically be a company that has a fat dividend yield. • I usually use 10 percent if the “stock” is an ETF (exchange-traded fund). This is because funds are typically less volatile than company stocks, so they don’t need as much wiggle room. • And I might use a stop as low as 2 percent or 3 percent for a stock that I have decided to sell. The tight stop price lets me squeeze out any unexpected upside that the stock may have left in it, but it still gets me out with negligible damage if the stock falls at all. The second way to set the stop price is to examine the stock’s chart for the past year or so. You may see that while overall the stock has been rising, some significant leaps and falls are part of its normal behavior. The dips may exceed any reasonable percentage sell-stop that you would normally set. But you don’t want to sell the stock on such dips, because you can see that the overall trend has been upward, and you believe that it will be continue to be that way. In that case, what I usually do is have the charting software (available on most financial websites) draw the stock’s moving average line (MA). Try MA’s between 50 and 200 days. What you might disco AdSense – Is It All the Hype Says It Is? it. So as soon as I purchase a stock, I enter a sell-stop order too, usually at 8 percent less than I paid for it.We’ve all seen the hype surrounding AdSense, contextual advertising on your web site, and heard the stories of people banking thousands from this groundbreaking concept. But… for every person banking $1,000’s there are many, many more who are banking less than $50 per month. There are many reasons for this so let’s examine a few.* Value of the ads – despite the hype over the high paying keywords, many keyword pay only a few cents to the advertiser (that’s you). The high paying keywords are fiercely fought over by both bidders and advertisers. That’s a fierce arena for someone with little experience and little traffic to their site. So forget about throwing up a “meso” or credit web site and then sitting back and banking your new found fortune. That is probably not going to happen.* Your business model– there are two many ways to profit from AdSense – a few web sites with After a stock gains 10 percent for you, your stop price will have reached what you paid for it, so you will never lose money on that stock. After that hurdle has been cleared, how do you set the stop price? The goal is to give the stock enough room for normal volatility, while at the same time being restrictive enough so as not to let profits escape if the stock starts to go backwards. There are two main methods to set stop prices. First, you can set the stop price as a percentage below today’s price (but never below what you paid once the stop price has reached your purchase price). I use the percentage approach most of the time. My “default” percentage is 15 percent, although I may change that (up or down) in certain situations. • I might use a looser stop (such as 20 or even 25 percent) for a “blue chip” company that I really expect to hold for a long time. This would typically be a company that has a fat dividend yield. • I usually use 10 percent if the “stock” is an ETF (exchange-traded fund). This is because funds are typically less volatile than company stocks, so they don’t need as much wiggle room. • And I might use a stop as low as 2 percent or 3 percent for a stock that I have decided to sell. The tight stop price lets me squeeze out any unexpected upside that the stock may have left in it, but it still gets me out with negligible damage if the stock falls at all. The second way to set the stop price is to examine the stock’s chart for the past year or so. You may see that while overall the stock has been rising, some significant leaps and falls are part of its normal behavior. The dips may exceed any reasonable percentage sell-stop that you would normally set. But you don’t want to sell the stock on such dips, because you can see that the overall trend has been upward, and you believe that it will be continue to be that way. In that case, what I usually do is have the charting software (available on most financial websites) draw the stock’s moving average line (MA). Try MA’s between 50 and 200 days. What you might disco Bankruptcy Attorneys - Let Them Do The Work stock” is an ETF (exchange-traded fund). This is because funds are typically less volatile than company stocks, so they don’t need as much wiggle room.If you are facing financial horrors such as property repossession, debt lawsuits, property liens, foreclosure, or just in some serious debts, you should consider a bankruptcy attorney. A bankruptcy attorney is well versed in the various laws of bankruptcy and can give you advice on the options you may have.By providing legal assistance, bankruptcy attorneys, can help you eliminate your debt, as well as liquidating your assets to pay off your creditors. If you need to reorganize your debt, a bankruptcy attorney can help you with this as well, by helping form a court-approved plan to pay back the creditors in a specific period of time.Furthermore, bankruptcy attorneys have full knowledge of the United States Bankruptcy code, such as Title 11. When it comes to bankruptcy proceedings, this is the regulation code. Because bankruptcy is an often confusing process, bankruptcy attorneys can help guide you • And I might use a stop as low as 2 percent or 3 percent for a stock that I have decided to sell. The tight stop price lets me squeeze out any unexpected upside that the stock may have left in it, but it still gets me out with negligible damage if the stock falls at all. The second way to set the stop price is to examine the stock’s chart for the past year or so. You may see that while overall the stock has been rising, some significant leaps and falls are part of its normal behavior. The dips may exceed any reasonable percentage sell-stop that you would normally set. But you don’t want to sell the stock on such dips, because you can see that the overall trend has been upward, and you believe that it will be continue to be that way. In that case, what I usually do is have the charting software (available on most financial websites) draw the stock’s moving average line (MA). Try MA’s between 50 and 200 days. What you might discover is that although the stock has its ups and downs, it essentially never falls below one of those moving average lines—it always seems to “bounce” off the MA line and head back up. If that’s the case, use that MA as the stop price. This has worked perfectly for me with Chicago Mercantile Holdings (CME). Viewed through a wide-angle lens, the stock has done nothing but go up since it went public a few years ago. But viewed up close, it can be volatile. A couple of times I purchased it, only to have it trigger my stop order before too long. Then I made the observation that the stock never seemed to drop below its 200-day MA. So now I use that for my stop price. As the stock bounces around, the actual percentage of the stop price below the actual price varies. But I don’t care. By using that approach, I’ve held one block of shares without interruption since February 2006, and it is up 43 percent—nearly 50 percent on an annual basis. CME is one of my all-time favorite stocks. “The Merc” has an exceptional business model, generates cash faster than McDonald’s makes burgers, and has rewarded its shareholders handsomely. I am protected to the downside on a fairly volatile stock. Just as with percentage-based stops, I reset the stop price once a week. I just look up the current 200-day MA, and that’s my stop price. If you employ trailing sell-stop orders, you will find from time to time that you are “stopped out” of a stock that, as things turn out, you would have been better off just hanging on to. But that’s OK. Cutting losses and preserving gains are so important to overall success that the risk of getting stopped out is preferable to the risk of taking a large loss. And, if a stop-out proves to be a mistake, you can reverse it. As the situation clarifies, nothing prevents you from repurchasing the stock.
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