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Three popular mistakes when trading momentum stocks
Retail traders often like momentum stocks, but wait too long to buy them. Odean found that investors are indeed attracted to momentum stocks. However, they tend to wait until these stocks have run for a number of years before they are willing to initiate a position.

Investment guide of preferred shares
A number of reasons are commonly put forward for the issue of preferred shares rather than other forms of financing. In a survey of over 300 issuers of preferred shares over the period 1945 to 1965, one author, H.H. Elsaid, uncovered seven reasons. He asserted that preferred shares are issued to:

Day trading 101 - the mind-set of an online day trader
What exactly do day traders do all day? How do day traders make their money? The answer would surprise most people. Most of the time, it is not the high stakes game of poker that people on the outside think it is. Remember, successful day traders are not gamblers. They understand the nature of risk, but that does not mean they blindly throw their trading capital at each and every stock that comes up on the quote screen. Nor do they base trading decisions entirely on hunches, gut feeling, or instinct.

What are Treasury Inflation Securities
To attract investors during low-interest environments, the federal government introduced a new type of Treasury security that increases in value and payout along with the rate of inflation. The new bonds, technically known as Treasury Inflation-Indexed Securities, are referred to as TIPs (an acronym for Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities). Treasury Inflation Securities are designed to help you maintain the true worth of your investment regardless of the rate of inflation.

What are Treasury Bills (T-bills)
The most widely used of all U.S. Government securities, and a primary instrument of Federal Reserve policy, Treasury Bills, like Treasury Bonds, are issued to the public at a guaranteed rate of interest to pay off maturing debt and to raise more cash for operating the federal government, which backs them with its full faith and credit.

How to buy T-Bonds and Notes
Treasury Notes may be purchased for $1000 or higher in multiples of $1000. Treasury bonds were issued in denominations of $1000, $5000, $10,000, $100,000, and $1 million. Investors pay the face amount for Treasuries ($1000 for a $1000 bond) and receive interest checks every six months. If you wish, you can have your interest payment mailed to you in the form of a check, or deposited automatically in your checking or savings account.

Analysis of stock market trends
This article is devote to a discussion of broad market movements's of common stock prices. It examines three of the interesting long-term stock market cycle theories: the Dow Theory, the Elliot Wave, and the Kondratieff Cycle. It then looks at some of the indicators, such as moving averages, the advance/decline index and odd lot trading, that are used to identify shorter-term market trends.

Buying and selling bonds
Corporate and municipal bonds are traded on a commission basis by most securities brokers and commercial banks. T-bonds can also be bought and sold through banks and securities dealers for a nominal fee, or without paying a fee through Federal Reserve Banks or the government's Bureau of Public Debt, which has setup a Treasury Direct program for investors who find paying commissions too onerous and other sources of buying and selling too much of a hassle.

Investment guide to U.S. Treasury bonds
Treasury bonds and notes are ideal for conservative investors interested in safety, income, and a break on their state and local taxes. But more aggressive investors might also be interest in them because they can help provide diversification for their portfolio. Treasury bonds would not be attractive to investors looking for a high level of income or capital appreciation.

U.S. Treasury Bonds and Notes
Two of the safest and most popular bonds on the market are U.S. Treasury Bonds (T-Bonds) and Treasury Notes (T-notes). In fact, all U.S. Treasury debt securities, including bonds, bills, and notes, are considered to be virtually immune from default because they are backed by the safest entity on earth - the U.S. government. Even if the government doesn't have the funds to pay off its securities, it can simply print more money.


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