http://www.FtseStockMarket.info/ This is a Q and A session for What are Blue Chip Stocks and how they affect the market. Learn how these pay dividend and appreciate in value as well.

Author: FTSEStockMarket
Keywords: blue chart chip closing companies dividend etf exchange financial ftse funds futures graph growth high stock stocks
Added: August 2, 2008

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What are Blue Chip Stocks

http://www.FtseStockMarket.info/ This is a Q and A session for What are Blue Chip Stocks and how they affect the market. Learn how these pay dividend and appreciate in value as well.

Author: FTSEStockMarket
Keywords: blue chart chip closing companies dividend etf exchange financial ftse funds futures graph growth high stock stocks
Added: August 2, 2008

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What Are Municipal Bonds

http://www.FtseStockMarket.info/ This is a Q and A session for What are Municipal Bonds and how they are a very safe investment type.

Author: FTSEStockMarket
Keywords: chart closing companies dividend etf exchange financial ftse funds futures graph growth high historical index stock
Added: August 2, 2008

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What Are Mutual Funds Investments And Hedge Funds

http://www.FtseStockMarket.info/ This is a Q and A session for What are Mutual Funds and Hedge Funds Investment options.

Author: FTSEStockMarket
Keywords: chart closing companies dividend etf exchange financial ftse funds futures graph growth hedge high mutual stock
Added: August 1, 2008

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What Are Futures And Options

http://www.FtseStockMarket.info/ This is a Q and A session for What are Futures Contracts and Options in trading. Day traders understand these terms and concepts.

Author: FTSEStockMarket
Keywords: chart closing companies contract dividend etf exchange financial ftse funds futures graph growth high options stock
Added: August 1, 2008

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What is a Portfolio Management System

http://www.FtseStockMarket.info/ This is a Q and A session for What a portfolio Management System is and how it helps with day to day management of your investments.

Author: FTSEStockMarket
Keywords: chart closing companies dividend etf exchange financial ftse funds futures graph growth high historical index stock
Added: August 1, 2008

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Day Trading In Stocks

http://www.FtseStockMarket.info/ This is a Q and A session - Understand what it means to be day trading in stocks and forex. This is how the service operates.

Author: FTSEStockMarket
Keywords: chart closing companies dividend etf exchange financial ftse funds futures graph growth high historical index stock
Added: July 31, 2008

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What Are Economies Of Scale

http://www.FtseStockMarket.info/ This is a Q and A session for Undesratnd what the term Economies of Scale Means and how it affects a company and their production levels and cycles. The concept is explained in this video.

Author: FTSEStockMarket
Keywords: chart closing companies dividend etf exchange financial ftse funds futures graph growth high historical index stock
Added: July 31, 2008

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Investment In A Recession

http://www.FtseStockMarket.info/ This is a Q and A session for What is the best investment in a recession especially the current one in the USA as a result of the sub prime mortgage crisis.

Author: FTSEStockMarket
Keywords: chart closing companies dividend etf exchange financial ftse funds futures graph growth high historical index stock
Added: July 29, 2008

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FTSE Stock Market

http://www.FtseStockMarket.info/ This is a Q and A session for What is the FTSE Stock Market. Learn about the index and how to day trade this London Stock Exchange Market.

Author: FTSEStockMarket
Keywords: chart closing companies dividend etf exchange financial ftse funds futures graph growth high historical index stock
Added: July 29, 2008

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Should I Buy Into A Fund? -- Stock Invest (3)

Should I Buy Into A Fund? -- Stock Invest (3) Mutual or investment funds are very popular nowadays. One basic difference between an individual trader and a fund is that the former plays with his own money, whereas the latter plays with other people's money. The following are the reasons why I won't buy into a fund: No Real Product The funds only sell you a dream that your investment will multiply for the long term. They package the dream in such a way that you think you own a bunch of good companies too. In this way, they sell you one dream on top of another. Dreams can evaporate so easily. Anchoring a dream to a good company will perpetuate it. Therefore, the selling points for a fund have to be: huge capital, technical expertise, diversified holdings in good companies, expertise in emerging markets and industries. Impressive indeed! Are they selling all of these to you or merely a dream nonetheless? If you can buy such impressive power, why can you still lose money in a fund? Lack of Responsibility Investment funds compete with banks for depositors' money. The banks have a real product to sell. They sell you a specified interest rate. You are guaranteed the interest payment even if the bank loses money. Thus, the banks are responsible for the products they sell. In many countries, your deposit is even insured by the government should the bank go under. The funds promise a dream that beat the banks' interests by many times. However, they are not responsible for the dreams they sell. You may win or lose, even losing all of your initial investment. What a cool business to be in! People give you money and a management fee. You produce nothing but a dream. Best of all, you are not responsible for the outcome. No wonder the banks are selling investment funds to their customers, too. In a market boom, the funds will report higher portfolio values to the customers. There is no real gain yet until you cash out. This means the dream gets inflated. The customers never question how much money the funds actually made, compared to how much was distributed to them. They have no choice but to accept a periodic report. In a downturn, the funds always blame the stock market or the economy as the scapegoat for the decreasing fortunes of their customers. It's never their fault to cause the customers to lose money. The strange thing is that the customers also accept what the funds say. Impressive but Irrelevant Information The funds are really good at packaging the dream they sell. Customers are given an impressive brochure with graphs and statistics. Most people fall into the trap of studying the materials and becoming convinced. You should think about what they don't tell you rather than savoring what they tell you. In addition, the funds are best in creating technicalities to protect themselves and impress customers. When facing technicalities hard to comprehend, customers tend to shy away or accept. Many even admire the complexity. Very few customers refuse to be bullied or conned by sales people using technicalities. Lack of Transparency In good times, the funds make tons of money each trading day when billions of dollars change hands at the stock market. The customers never bother to ask how much profit is made and how much is given back to them. Instead, they only receive a periodic report showing what the funds want them to see. In bad times, the funds still make plenty of money by shorting the shares as they fall. Don't you ever suspect that they know how to profit in a down market too? Who initiates a downturn in the first place? Is it some big player or the herd? The profits made by their short selling on each trading day are never transparent. Thus they pocket all the profits with your thinking that they lose money like you in bad times. Consequently, besides losing a cut of this short-selling profit, the customers also lose part of their initial investments, which are tied to the falling market indexes, as cleverly designed by the funds. In conclusion, I won't let any "experts" to play with my money without some reasonable guarantee of returns during good times. Also, I will not accept any loss if the market comes down. I always remember that I am giving them my cash, and cash is king. I dictate the terms, not they. That's why I will never invest in a fund. For further information, please email to stockfessor@comcast.net.

Author: stockfessor
Keywords: stock market invest share mutual fund finance retirement stockfessor
Added: July 26, 2008

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Experiment: No Player Interaction

We've created 3 new accounts in our quest to see how far you can get in one week of playing RuneScape with no ability to buy anything from the player stock for shops, no ability to use the grand exchange, and no ability to trade with players. This is part one of our experiment, in two weeks we'll post how well we did in another video. Edit July 29 2008: I've extended the timelimit. We haven't really been playing the accounts (we've been spending most of our time on our mains). We're extending it until we feel we're ready to present our conclusion, which may be in a week, or may be in a month. It depends when we feel we've hit two weeks of playing time. RuneScape is owned by Jagex ltd. This is not an official video. http://runescape.com/

Author: TheChronicNoob
Keywords: RuneScape rune scape run escape cooking experiment f2p fishing formula free free2play graph help interact play player players result RSHD test
Added: July 21, 2008

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π Pi Clint Mansell - Darren Aronofsky

Restate my assumptions: One: Mathematics is the language of nature. Two: Everything around us can be represented and understood through numbers. Three: If you graph the numbers of any system, patterns emerge. Therefore, there are patterns everywhere in nature. Evidence: The cycling of disease epidemics;the wax and wane of caribou populations; sun spot cycles; the rise and fall of the Nile. So, what about the stock market? The universe of numbers that represents the global economy. Millions of hands at work, billions of minds. A vast network, screaming with life. An organism. A natural organism. My hypothesis: Within the stock market, there is a pattern as well... Right in front of me... hiding behind the numbers. Always has been...

Author: Baranowski
Keywords: Clint Mansell Darren Aronofsky Eraserhead Tetsuo paranoia social anxiety disorder david lynch Nihilism Nietzsche
Added: July 8, 2008

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Beware of Stock Market Predictions

http://www.stockpicksguide.com One type of stocks, which are predictable among stock market predictions, is the volatility of Penny stocks. Penny stocks can suddenly quadruple in a very short time.

Author: cdreyer03
Keywords: stock market predictions nasdaq penny bar graph
Added: June 28, 2008

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network layout

Understanding the complex system of market interactions as a complex network. Visualization of an ownership network layout process. The algorithm balances attractive and repulsive forces between nodes [1]. Nodes are shareholders or stocks in the Canadian stock market, and arrows represent shareholdings [2]. The size of nodes represents the firms market capitalization value. The width of the arrows is proportional to the percentage of ownership. The network has a "bow tie" topology [3] and is located in a connected component of the market: green nodes are incoming, blue nods outgoing, and the pink nodes form the strongly connected component. [1] Cuttlefish Adaptive NetWorkbench http://sourceforge.net/projects/cuttlefish/ [2] http://www.bvdep.com/en/ORBIS.html [3] Akin to the graph structure of the web, e.g., http://www9.org/w9cdrom/160/160.html#bowtie

Author: jNode
Keywords: complex-systems complex-networks complexity bow-tie topology layout visualization graph science economics ownership
Added: June 26, 2008

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Stock Market Jun 9/08

A look at the major stock market indexes along with gold and oil commodities. The market is moving on a downward spiral as the stock market crash of 2008 approaches.

Author: endlessmountain
Keywords: DJIA TSX S&P 500 hang seng FTSE bull bear market recession depression chart graphs
Added: June 9, 2008

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Undeniable LOGIC, Inflationary Depression inevitable

Stock Market WILL CRASH very soon. Probably sometime between September 2008 and February 2009. U.S. Stocks currently have a fourth-quarter earnings growth of 62% priced in them. Stocks are set up for a huge fall!!!!! All dollar strength is coming from the assumption that the U.S. economy will recover in 2008 and boom in 2009. As weak as the dollar appears to be, it's very strong compared to what's to come. If you really believe the dollar will recover look at a 10,20,30,40 year graph.

Author: visionvictory
Keywords: Recession Great Depression 2008 2009 stock market Oil Euro Dollar Crash economy September Global Systemic crisis
Added: May 7, 2008

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Commodity prices on the rise!

BNN reports many commodities with graphs showing resistance and support lines

Author: endlessmountain
Keywords: BNN Stock Market Crash Crude Oil Gold Wheat Corn Agriculture Canada
Added: April 14, 2008

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Israhell Bubble Log 4 (a spike on a graph)

Tel Aviv stock exchange jumped 900% in 15 years, but it seems that people are less content. "Poetry in Economics" (something I wrote a while back)

Author: nimrodhalpern
Keywords: Israhell bubble tel aviv tlv stock market exchange economics poetry
Added: March 25, 2008

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BUY SELL, BUY SELL

location, location, location

Author: tjm346
Keywords: buy sell stock market stocks bonds nasdaq new york exchange wall street graphs business comedy short film
Added: February 27, 2008

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41. How to Use the Average True Range (ATR) To Set Stops

http://www.informedtrades.com/ A lesson on how to include volatility in setting for traders of the stock, futures, and forex markets. In our last lesson we looked at determining how much you are willing to risk on any one trade as the first step in developing a successful money management strategy. Now that we have established this, in today's lesson we are going to look at some of the different ways that you can then set your stop, which fit within this initial criteria. As we learned in last lesson, risking more than 2% of total trading capital on any one trade is a major reason for the high failure rate of most traders. Does this mean that when setting a stop we should simply figure out how many points away from our entry represents 2% of our account balance and set the stop there? Well, traders could obviously do this and to be honest it would probably be a lot better than most of the other money management strategies I have seen, but there better ways. Although many traders will look at other things in conjunction, having an idea of the historical volatility of the instrument you are trading is always a good idea when thinking about your stop loss level. If for instance you are trading a $100 stock which moves $5 vs. a $100 stock that moves $1 a day on average, then this is going to tell you something about where you should place your stop. As it is probably already clear here, all else being equal, if you put a stop $5 away on both stocks, you are going to be much more likely to be stopped out on the stock which moves on average $5 a day than you are with the stock that moves on average $1 a day. While I have seen successful traders who get to know a list of the things they are trading well enough to have a good idea of what their average daily ranges are, many traders will instead use an indicator which was designed to give an overview of this, which is known as the Average True Range (ATR) Developed by J. Welles Wilder the ATR is designed to give traders a feel for what the historical volatility is for an instrument, or very simply how much it moves. Financial instruments that exhibit high volatility move a lot, and traders can there fore make or lose a lot of money in a short period of time. Conversely, financial instruments with low volatility move a relatively small amount so it takes longer to make or lose money in them all else being equal. As with many of the other indicators we have studied in previous lessons, Wilder uses a moving average to smooth out the True Range numbers. When plotted on a graph it looks as follows: What you are basically seeing here is a representation of the daily movement of the EUR/USD. As you can see when the candles are longer (which represents large trading ranges and volatility) the ATR moves up and when the candles are smaller (representing smaller trading ranges and volatility) it moves down. So with this in mind, the most basic way that traders use the ATR in setting their stops is to place their stop a set number of ATR's away from their entry price so they have less of a chance of being knocked out of the market by "market noise". That's our lesson for today. In tomorrow's lesson we are going to look at how you can use volatility based stops in conjunction with another method traders use for setting stops based on technical levels so we hope to see you in that lesson. As always if you have any questions or comments please leave them in the comments section below so we can all learn together and good luck with your trading!

Author: InformedTrades
Keywords: howto trade Averagetruerange ATR daytrade investing money finance business forex futures stock market informedtrades
Added: January 11, 2008

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