moneyangel
- 29 Aug 2006 14:48
Hi Guys & Girls
My name is sam i have just inherited little bit & have about 100K to invest in stock Market.
Please help me with what shares to buy?
What Stock Broker?
I dont mind high Risk shares.
Many Thanks
Sam
maddoctor
- 29 Aug 2006 14:51
- 2 of 42
read your way thro the various headers here but remember everybody here has an axe to grind!
ptholden
- 29 Aug 2006 15:03
- 3 of 42
Sam
You have probably come to the wrong place to find advice for investing in the stock market, either this BB or any other.
Read the threads on various companies, extract the research, ignore the opinion totally and make up your own mind.
There are some posters on MAM who know what they are talking about, most probably do not; it takes time to find the ones who do. Even those who do will have their own agenda, it is not easy to be unbiased about a stock in which you are invested.
Of course, I include myself in all of the above. Good luck.
pth
moneyangel
- 29 Aug 2006 15:23
- 4 of 42
Thanks guys
What Stock Brokers do you use?
moneyangel
- 29 Aug 2006 15:26
- 5 of 42
Also what shares do you hold & what shares to advise that i buy?
maddoctor
- 29 Aug 2006 15:28
- 6 of 42
read what pth has said - we are not advising - do your own research
hewittalan6
- 29 Aug 2006 15:37
- 7 of 42
You don't wanna buy the sort of shares tipped by the sort of person who would tip shares.(??)
Best investment you could possibly make is a good book on understanding business fundamentals, and a very long time of pretend trading, while you test your ideas, theories and strategies, and see how much you would have lost.
Then and only then, should you think about playing the markets. Meanwhile, stick all the money in a high interest account (except a tenner for that book), and learn. The markets will still be here when you are ready.
Alan
ptholden
- 29 Aug 2006 15:55
- 8 of 42
Alan, can I borrow your book please?
hewittalan6
- 29 Aug 2006 15:57
- 9 of 42
You can, but if my success over the last couple of years is anything to go by, the guy who wrote it is a complete ass.
Alan
ptholden
- 29 Aug 2006 15:58
- 10 of 42
Must be the same guy who wrote my TA book :-)
maddoctor
- 29 Aug 2006 15:59
- 11 of 42
as many people have pointed out , if they were any good why would they tell other people?
soul traders
- 29 Aug 2006 16:02
- 12 of 42
Sam,
Alan is right. I found myself in a similar situation to you a few years back (although not with quite as much money) and made some heavy losses before finally beginning to sort out what investing is really all about. EDIT: In retrospect I think it took me as much as five years before I could really say I felt I had grasped it - this could have been cut down considerably had I been more diligent in my learning in the first place!
There is no substitute for education and your own sound judgment; unfortunately these take time to learn but are skills that will pay for themselves many times over. You will learn to develop your own "feel" for investing and to form your own opinions as to why a stock may or may not be worth investing in, which is most important.
I'm sorry if you were hoping to discover a money-making machine on this forum. Believe me, if such a thing existed then none of us would have day jobs.
You need to understand how both companies and the stock market work, and that is going to take time and effort. If you don't think it is worth it now, you will do when you've invested 10,000 in a stock and seen it turn into 3,000 in a mtter of months while you panic over what to do about it.
Book recs to help you out:
"How to read the Financial Pages" - Michael Brett
"A Guide to Stockpicking" - Gillian O'Connor
both of these books are good on the basics of what stocks and markets are all about.
Anything by Peter Lynch - I read "One up on Wall Street" and found it to be the most accessible and memorable text on investing I have yet read.
Also worth a read; "The Zulu Principle" by Jim Slater.
Do not bother to read: "How to make a Killing in Penny Shares." It's out of print, and with good reason: it really is not a very good book on investing.
You should consider taking the Financial Times on a regular basis as there is nothing like immersing yourself in the jargon on a daily basis for bringing you to the point where you wake up one day and say "I understand how this works!" If you find the FT difficult to digest initially, the business pages of the Times are also excellent, in my opinion.
Finally, NEVER, EVER, publish on a bulletin board how much you have to invest. Some unscrupulous person out there could persuade you to invest a lot of money in a "sure thing", which turns out to benefit only them. I can think of two or three stocks I could have suggested you buy right now in order to make me a huge profit. Instead, I have attempted to warn you of the dangers. Not everybody on this BB is so caring (although I take my hat off to PTH and Alan who I understand to be on the level).
RE Stockbrokers - some independent brokers provide an advisory service, suggesting which stocks you might like to buy and when. Could be worth looking into. Most of us on here make our own way and use online brokers, of which there are many. Which one you should use is a matter of choice, but if you intend to trade frequently, obviously you'll want to use one that charges very little to trade.
Don't be in a hurry to adopt a short term, day-trading strategy. There are people who make money at it, but the shorter the term, the more it starts to look like gambling. Far better that you acquaint yourself with the markets and learn how to invest for the medium to long term.
Okay, sermon over, I think.
Enjoy your learning and, one day, your investing! Please feel free to use this forum and ask lots of questions - the more you learn, the better and more successful your investing will be.
good luck!
Soul Traders
ptholden
- 29 Aug 2006 16:09
- 13 of 42
Good post ST, can I start ramping my stocks now ;-))
leedslad
- 29 Aug 2006 16:09
- 14 of 42
Hi sam
Good luck with the investing. Invest in whot YOU have researched. Don't listen to others.
pt give him a good one to start with.:-)
PS buy low sell high.LOL
Dave
moneyangel
- 29 Aug 2006 16:10
- 15 of 42
Thanks Soul Traders
ptholden
- 29 Aug 2006 16:14
- 18 of 42
I have an unlimited number of currency traders I would like to turn to dust having spiked me out of a cable short and then dropped it like a stone, all within 5 mins. &^%$*** +*&^&*&^
:-(
The joys of FX
pth
leedslad
- 29 Aug 2006 16:15
- 19 of 42
soul trades
Thats me get in first before the herd.
:-)
dave
ptholden
- 29 Aug 2006 16:31
- 21 of 42
ah, best get me a shotgun then, preferably one with three barrels!