The Investment FAQ

Your Investment Guide Online. Stock Investment, Investment Risk and all other kind of Investment Tips.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Do you want a cool Investment? Buy your own country!

Buyanation.com Delivers the World to Advertisers

For those advertisers looking for a unique way to spread the word about their web site or product, Buyanation.com can deliver to you the world. Buyanation.com is a new spin on pixel advertising adding benefits to both advertisers and web site visitors. If you are looking for a great way to gain exposure and reap a hefty return on your advertising investment, Buyanation.com should definitely be considered.

Buy a Nation is a pixel advertising site in which pixel blocks in the shape of each country are available for sale and viewed on one large world map. Advertisers that are bored with conventional pixel advertising sites will find Buyanation.com refreshing. This site not only looks great, but is extremely easy to navigate and advertisements are simple to spot. Even those countries that are small are extremely easy to find thanks to the “View by Continent” feature. “View by Continent” lets web site visitors easily find and view even the smallest countries of the world by easily clicking on their continent of choice which highlights the specific area of interest. Also any visitor can easily click on a specific country to highlight an advertiser’s ad including profile, link, etc.

Buy a Nation definitely has one of the best concepts in the pixel advertising niche sporting a very clean and easy to navigate design. This site is sure to benefit the many advertisers looking for an extra source of traffic, as well as valuable one way back link. Buyanation.com states that the site will be up and running for a minimum of 5 years making this site an extremely attractive investment for the link alone.

The cost to buy each country varies dependent upon area (total amount of pixels), desirability and location. However, a quick glance reveals countries such as the United States and Russia at $600 and $450 respectively, while smaller countries such as Ireland are available at $40 or even less.

You can visit Buyanation.com via the following link: http://www.buyanation.com

Thursday, May 03, 2007

Swing Trader Rules

Swing trading can be a great way to profit from market upswings and downswings,
but as I’ve always said, it’s not easy. Mastering the swing- trading techniques takes
time and effort. To help get you started, I am giving you 20 Rules to think about as
you begin – and ultimately master – swing trading.

Rule 1: If you have to look, it isn’t there.

Forget your college degree and trust your instincts. The best trades jump out of
nowhere and create a sense of urgency. Take a deep breath, then act quickly before
the opportunity disappears.

Rule 2: Trends depend on their time frame.

Make sure your trade fits the clock. Price movement aligns to specific time cycles.
Success depends on trading the right ones.

Rule 3: Price has memory.

What happened the last time a stock hit a certain level? Chances are it will happen
again. Watch trades closely when price returns to a battleground. The prior action can
predict the future.

Rule 4: Profit and discomfort stand side by side.

Find the setup that scares you the most. That’s the one you need to trade. Don’t
expect it to feel good until you take your profit. If it did, everyone else would be
trading it. Wisdom from the East: What at first brings pleasure in the end gives only
pain, but what at first causes pain ends up in great pleasure.

Rule 5: Stand apart from the crowd at all times.

Trade ahead, behind or contrary to the crowd. Be the first in and out of the profit
door. Your job is to take their money before they take yours. Be ready to pounce on
ill-advised decisions, poor judgment and bad timing. Your success depends on the
misfortune of others.

Rule 6: Buy the first pullback from a new high. Sell the first pullback from a
new low.

Trends often test the last support/resistance before taking off. Trade with the crowd
that missed the boat the first time around.

Rule 7: Buy at support. Sell at resistance.

Trend has only two choices upon reaching a barrier: Continue forward or reverse. Get
it right and start counting your money.

Rule 8: Short rallies, not selloffs.

Shorts profit when markets drop, so they start to cover. This makes it a terrible time
to enter new short sales. Wait until they get squeezed and shaken out, then jump in
while no one is watching.

Rule 9: Manage time as efficiently as price.

Time is money in the markets. Profit relates to the amount of time set aside for
analysis. Know your holding period for every trade. And watch the clock to become a
market survivor.

Rule 10: Avoid the open.

They see you coming, sucker.

Rule 11: Trades that work in hot markets destroy accounts in cool ones.

Stocks trend only 15% to 20% of the time. Price ranges cause grief to momentum
traders the rest of the time.

Rule 12: The best trades show major convergence.

Watch for the bull’s eye. Look for a single point in price and time that points
repeatedly to a trade entry. The market is trying to tell you something.

Rule 13: Don’t confuse execution with opportunity.

Save Donkey Kong for the weekend. Pretty colors and fast fingers don’t make
successful careers. Understanding price behavior and market mechanics does. Learn
what a good trade looks like before falling in love with the software.

Rule 14: Control risk before seeking reward.

Wear your market chastity belt at all times. Attention to profit is a sign of immaturity,
while attention to loss is a sign of experience. The markets have no intention of
offering money to those who do not earn it.

Rule 15: Big losses rarely come without warning.

You have no one to blame but yourself. The chart told you to leave, the news told you
to leave and your mother told you to leave. Learn to visualize trouble and head for
safety with only a few bars of information.

Rule 16: Bulls live above the 200-day moving average, bears live below.

Are you flying with the birds or swimming with the fishes? The 200-day moving
average divides the investing world in two. Bulls and greed live above the 200-day,
while bears and fear live below. Sellers eat up rallies below this line and buyers come
to the rescue above it.

Rule 17: Enter in mild times, exit in wild times.

The big move hides beyond the extremes of price congestion. Don’t count on the
agitated crowd for your trading signals. It’s usually way too late by the time they act.

Rule 18: Perfect patterns carry the greatest risk for failure.

Demand warts and bruises on your trade setups. Market mechanics work to defeat the
majority when everyone sees the same thing at the same time. When perfection
appears, look for the failure signal.

Rule 19: Trends rarely turn on a dime.

Reversals build slowly. Investors are as stubborn as mules and take a lot of pain
before they admit defeat.

Rule 20: See the exit door before the trade.

Assume the market will reverse the minute you get filled. You’re in very big trouble
when it’s a long way to the door. Never toss a coin in the fountain and hope your
dreams will come true.

One-Line Wisdom

This is a collection of one-line pieces of investment wisdom, with brief
explanations. Use and apply at your own risk or discretion. They are
not in any particular order.

Hang up on cold calls.

While it is theoretically possible that someone is going to offer
you the opportunity of a lifetime, it is more likely that it is
some sort of scam. Even if it is legitimate, the caller cannot
know your financial position, goals, risk tolerance, or any other
parameters which should be considered when selecting investments.
If you can't bear the thought of hanging up, ask for material to be
sent by mail.

Don't invest in anything you don't understand.

There were horror stories of people who had lost fortunes by being
short puts during the 87 crash. I imagine that they had no idea of
the risks they were taking. Also, all the complaints about penny
stocks, whether fraudulent or not, are partially a result of not
understanding the risks and mechanisms.

If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is [too good to be true].

Also stated as ``There ain't no such thing as a free lunch
(TANSTAAFL).'' Remember, every investment opportunity competes with
every other investment opportunity. If one seems wildly better
than the others, there are probably hidden risks or you don't
understand something.

If your only tool is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail.

Someone (possibly a financial planner) with a very limited
selection of products will naturally try to jam you into those
which s/he sells. These may be less suitable than other products
not carried.

Don't rush into an investment.

If someone tells you that the opportunity is closing, filling up
fast, or in any other way suggests a time pressure, be very leery.

Very low priced stocks require special treatment.

Risks are substantial, bid/asked spreads are large, prices are
volatile, and commissions are relatively high. You need a broker
who knows how to purchase these stocks and dicker for a good price.