Results 1 to 10 of 10
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March 8th, 2012 01:19 PM #1
im very noob how stocks work so im not confident to invest.
anyway, i'll take chances base from what I read.
THE OFW INVESTOR: Magkano ang Minimum Investment sa Stock Market?
any good tips?
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March 8th, 2012 03:38 PM #2
Rule No. 1: Never lose money.
Rule No. 2: Never forget rule No.1
— Warren Buffett
punta ka sa
financemanila.net
traderspizza.com
stockmarketpilipinas.com
pinoymoneytalk.com
yan lang madalas ang pinupuntahan ko.
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March 19th, 2012 05:15 AM #3
Jansky anong broker mo?
Trading stocks is like riding a bike.
kung self taught ka better prepare to loose money as your "tuition fee".
Start with small amounts only in 5-10k.
when you finally build up confidence saka ka mag buy ng malakihan.
Iba iba ang game strategy ng konti pera, medyo may pera at sobrang pera.
For noobs easiest is to pick blue chips, yung established na talaga pangalan then buy little by little each month regardless pataas or pababa ang price...pero chambahan ang gains mo dito, and this is ideal for bull market and limited but long term investing, na parang nag save ka sa bank. With this atleast you begin to have a feel while you attend seminars on how to read charts. When you know how to read charts thats the next level na taas confidence mo to the point that you are not worried if lugi ka for time being because you speculate na temporary lang yun.
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Tsikoteer
- Join Date
- Jun 2007
- Posts
- 1,161
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March 19th, 2012 08:26 AM #5
I started stock trading last Jan 2012..
My advice: learn first otherwise just stick with Mutual Funds or UITF's
Plenty of videos in youtube to learn from..
If you are interested I can email you some ebooks(PDF format)
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March 19th, 2012 09:50 AM #6
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Verified Tsikot Member
- Join Date
- Nov 2010
- Posts
- 98
March 19th, 2012 01:10 PM #7best to learn the basics first. short term traders usually rely on technical analysis, which is figuring market/stock trend graphically- more of sentiment driven. investors who take on long positions tend to look at fundamentals which is the overall financial health of a company.
some traders prefer one school of thought over the other, others combine both.
kung pure trading lang like day-trading, buy-sell/ in-out on short-range periods ... technical analysis works. most popular tools are MACD, Stochastics, RSI, Bollingers Bands. you can also look at trend patterns like head-and-shoulders, triangle formations, etc. if you want to park your money, try bluechips or the PSEi stocks which are identified to have good fundamentals.
buy when there is blood and gore in the streets...
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March 19th, 2012 03:15 PM #8
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March 19th, 2012 03:21 PM #9
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March 19th, 2012 03:21 PM #10
Where in throttle body is the adjustment the bizscew or on fix SAS
high idle RPM at engine start