about 11 months ago - 1 comment
about 11 months ago - 1 comment
The required returns on all stocks are the same, and the required returns on stocks are higher than the required returns on bonds. The required returns on stocks equal the required returns on bonds. A trading strategy in which you buy stocks that have recently fallen in price is likely to provide you with a More >
about 11 months ago - 2 comments
about 11 months ago - 1 comment
Which Hedge Fund Groups or Corporations Purchase REO Portfolios?
about 11 months ago - 2 comments
looking to find free investment reports or information on hedge fund holdings
about 11 months ago - 3 comments
Arent there any kind of investments you can do online besides the 3 mentioned? They all perform lousy-anything other than markets as long as you can trade it online and make profits.
about 11 months ago - 3 comments
Some of these stocks were given 30 years ago ,some 10 yrs ago. sometimes it was 10 shares ,sometimes it was 50 shares.
about 11 months ago - 1 comment
I worked on the floor of NYSE for many years. I was laid off in Octoer of 2006. I traded mostly equities but I will really like to work as an assistant bond trader until I take my series 7 exam. Only series 21 and 25 were required for floor clerks.
about 11 months ago - 1 comment
The markets around the world have gone dramatically up today and Friday on news that the U.S Gov. will continue to bail out distressed financial institutions (ie Citibank) and will consider bailing out non-financial institutions (ie Ford and GM). Needless to say, the Gov. doesn’t really have this money to lend, so it’s raising same More >
about 1 year ago
If you’re a novice technical analyst, you might find our site useful:
http://www.traderbots.com/
We built it to help people get started with technical analysis.
about 1 year ago
The float is a piece of fundamental information that is published by many different sources. For example, follow this link on Yahoo Finance to see the float of Citigroup: http://finance.yahoo.com/q/ks?s=C
It is on the right hand side in the ‘share statistics” section.
Float is available from many online sources, and is also published in Investor’s Business Daily. Technical analysis (the study of price movements and trends) has nothing to do with float.