Saturday, February 16, 2008

Making Decisions In The Beginning

Let us return to driving as a reference. When you first start
driving, you will not enter the highway and take the car at speeds of sixty and seventy miles per hour. Instead, you
will stay in residential areas or at least on the access road,
where there is less pressure to maintain such a high speed.
In the stock market, you will also want to stay away from
any expensive stocks or extremely volatile investments until
you have become extremely comfortable with the process of
trading.
There are small investment opportunities referred to as
“penny stocks”, which will help you try out your sea legs and
get a feel for how the stock market works prior to investing
large sums of money and risking a big financial loss. These
particular stocks cost literally pennies or small dollar
amounts and typically only fluctuate fractions of a cent on
any given day, making them extremely safe for those just
starting out.
Once you get the hang of it and can better judge the market
trends, you can comfortably move on to more complicated
and adventurous areas of the market. It is like removing
the training wheels from your bicycle or entering the
freeway the first time at an hour of the day when there is no
traffic to contend with.
Be aware that, just like you may fall off your bike once or
twice and end up with some scrapes and bruises, you may
lose money in an investment here and there. This is very
typical, and investing in the stock market is a lot like

gambling. In poker, you cannot expect to win every hand,
and the same is true in the world of investments. Learning
to watch the market trends, though, is similar to watching
other cars as you join traffic and determining the correct
speed and proximity to other cars for optimal safety. Such
diligent study can help you improve your statistics drastically
in a short time.

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