Originally posted by RedMirrorBall
Thanks for your reply trdrmac.
I guess the question is what is a good strategy with very low risk?
There is NO low risk strategy for trading stocks PERIOD.
But you can manage your risk via diversification and discipline.
First I would find a broker that charges very little commission.
Think a penny per share.
Next I would define what my trading strategy is. Are you doing this full time or part time? What is your personality? Do you want to sit at the computer 10 hours a day holding your bladder. Or do you want to be able to walk away?
Finally, if you have to play cheap stocks do a screen on yahoo for ones that pay dividends. After the screen get a quote on each one under HISTORICAL PRICES and make sure the dividend is being paid. I say this because many screeners will turn up a yield on a company that has stopped paying the dividend. The reason I look for the dividend is that most companies can't fake a dividend payment.
Find 10 of these in your price range. Here is one I own, just a 100 shares. PMID, they make beer and pay about 8% in divs. The stock has been in a channel from 2.25 to 2.50 since about November. Avoid a downtrending stock. Then buy at 2.30 or so and sell at 2.45 or so. If you are daytrading, buy on the bid and sell on the ask. (Just an example, don't use it on my recommendation alone)
Assuming you have $10,000 I think it is more important to get your technique down than to TIE up all your capital. So you find your 10 stocks, buy 100 of each. You have $2500 tied up. When you are starting to make money then increase your size.
Always pay cash, NO MARGIN.
There are faster ways to make money, but look at Barron's report on hedge funds. These guys are supposed to be the master traders. Most of the returns are pitiful, just like most mutual funds. So the risk is that there are faster ways to lose money as well.
When I quit my job and started trading full time I was a pig and a genius. Now I am a chicken and an idiot.
Finally, there is a series of books by Justin Mamis "When to Buy, When to Sell and The Nature of Risk" I would highly recommend them at about $15 each it would be hard to do better.
Hope this gives you some ideas and feel free to shoot your own back. I spend way too much time at this computer so these diversions are good at times.