Stock Market Strategy
There’s a lot more to the stock market than just buying and selling, but where do you start? In this post, I’ll give you some ideas to help you figure which stock market strategy is right for you. You don’t have to stick to just one way of trading stocks.
1. Research and Due Diligence
This is a must if you want to be successful in trading stocks and investing in your future. Before you buy any shares of any company, you must know how fundamentally solid they are as a business. Look at their balance sheets and their financial reports. Any company traded on any of the major indicies must report periodically to the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC). Are they profitable? What kind of guidance are they given for the near (next Quarter) and the distant (annually) future.
2. Buy and Hold
The name speaks for itself. Once you find a company that has great growth potential and has a good grasp of their industry, you buy stocks of the company and hold on to them for a long period. This strategy doesn’t work out in cases where an investor puts his money in just before the markets go through a correction period like we saw in 2007 -2009.
3.Day Trading
Another strategy that isn’t hard to understand the concept by the name. This type of trading is not wise for the new investors and traders to get involved with. You need to understand the markets as a whole before doing so. In a unstable market, the price per share for most companies fluctuate greatly to give opportunities to experience traders to make money
4. Trailing stop
I like doing this type of treading in almost any type of market. In doing a trailing stop you are trying minimize your loses especially when you don’t have the time to monitor your portfolio on a regular basis.
When you put in a buy order (limit or market) with a trailing stop you must include a sell activation price too. If you buy 100 shares of XYZ Corp. at $35 per share, and you set your sell price by either percentage or points of the price of the stock. Let’s say we put a trailing stop of $1.00. as the price moves up in value, the sell price moves up also. If the stock moves up to $40 per share your sell price will be $39. If the stock comes down without going below the activation price if $39, you will still hold to those shares. Once it falls below the activation price, the sell order will trigger.
If instead it never falls below $1.00 of the highest price it hits once you’ve placed the order, you will continue to make gains in the stock and minimize your loses.
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Filed Under Stock Market 101, Stock Market Basics, Stock Market Strategy, Stock Trading Information | Leave a Comment
Tagged With balance sheets, day trading, dow, due diligence, exchange commission, investing in your future, investor, investors, major indicies, money, stock market, Stock Market Strategy, trading stocks
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