Quote from txheart0711:
Hi ya'll,
I actually started thinking about getting into the markets game when I watched a WizeTrade infomercial. Don't worry, I popped that into the search bar and found this website. I don't think I'll be going that route.
However, it did get me thinking. I'm in my middle 30's with no money saved for retirement or otherwise. I have only recently "gotten on my feet" financially and actually have quite a bit more than I need coming in now.
This is the time for me to seriously start thinking of investing and trading. I've thought about this many times in the past but never went through with actually learning and doing the trading.
I couldn't even tell you the most basic term or concept or strategy in trading. I know absolutely nothing. There is no way I'd put a dime into the market right now. I will be studying everyday for the next six months. I have made my birthday this year my target date to actually start doing something.
Doing what? As I stated, I know absolutely nothing. I know that I will need to do quite of bit of high risk so that I can start putting away some money but, even knowing that, I don't know what that means.
Yes, I will be studying my little heart out but I wanted to ask ya'll, where do I start? What do ya'll recommend for a beginner? I will have less than 10g to start.
All advice welcome!
Thanks much,
Texas Heart
[edited to add] BTW, my first stop is the "Training" link on this website
Here's my two cents ...
For $10K, stick with stocks. For starters, unlike futures, options and forex, stocks are not strictly a zero-sum game. The market boom of the nineties was generated by stocks, not futures, options or forex. You can just hold on to stocks and still make money. Can't do that with futures, options or forex.
Next, stock data is
free (both price and volume; charts and historical; even a few built-in indicators):
http://finance.yahoo.com/
There are other free stock-data sources as well, like MSN. Good luck trying to find free futures or options data.
There are discount brokers where you can do stock trades for a few bucks a roundtrip.
Options are sucker plays for most traders:
http://www.rb-trading.com/q_a.html
You can trade ETFs just like stocks, if you really crave diversification. Otherwise, use a valid trading strategy to find and stick with the best stocks. Not that large a number to keep track of; you can do it with a modern spreadsheet.
Day-trading is a sucker play for most who try it. Also, since you have a job, you'll want to do position trading with EOD data anyway. The good news is that you can make more money than most day-traders by staying with extended trends.
Check out this website for some advice on short-term/position trading:
http://members.aol.com/davetrends/
I don't buy everything he says but there's some good nuggets there.
Volume matters. Anybody who says it doesn't, doesn't know what the hell he's talking about. I don't care how "successful" he is with his price-only strategy, leaving out volume anaysis is leaving money on the table. And you can bet some of those price-only advocates are themselves also doing volume analysis. They just don't want
you to realize that.
For stocks, be wary of anything with an average daily volume under 50,000 shares unless you've thoroughly researched the stock and assured yourself of its integrity. You want to be able to get in when you want in, and get out when you want out. Liquidity is your friend. Illiquidity is your enemy.
Finally, read everything you can about trading, but with a grain of salt. Verify every bit of advice you see for yourself. There are some real nice people in these forums but there are also some of the nastiest sociopaths you never wanted to meet. Don't ask for names; read and you'll soon be able to tell for yourself which is which.
Remember: you are "the competition", and some people here (and elsewhere) take that ruthlessly serious. They are predators, and they see you as a new fish to be filleted. There's some great advice in these forums but there's also a lot of ignorant blatherings as well as a lot of deliberately misleading pure crap. Some people here like to help, some others like to play headgames for their own amusement and hopeful profit ... at
your expense. Verify everything you read and hear.
Good trading.