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- From: noreply@invest-faq.com (Christopher Lott)
- Newsgroups: misc.invest.misc,misc.invest.stocks,misc.invest.technical,misc.invest.options,misc.answers,news.answers
- Subject: The Investment FAQ (part 14 of 20)
- Followup-To: misc.invest.misc
- Summary: Answers to frequently asked questions about investments.
- Should be read by anyone who wishes to post to misc.invest.*
- Organization: The Investment FAQ publicity department
- Keywords: invest, finance, stock, bond, fund, broker, exchange, money, FAQ
- URL: http://invest-faq.com/
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- Archive-name: investment-faq/general/part14
- Version: $Id: part14,v 1.61 2003/03/17 02:44:30 lott Exp lott $
- Compiler: Christopher Lott
-
- The Investment FAQ is a collection of frequently asked questions and
- answers about investments and personal finance. This is a plain-text
- version of The Investment FAQ, part 14 of 20. The web site
- always has the latest version, including in-line links. Please browse
- http://invest-faq.com/
-
-
- Terms of Use
-
- The following terms and conditions apply to the plain-text version of
- The Investment FAQ that is posted regularly to various newsgroups.
- Different terms and conditions apply to documents on The Investment
- FAQ web site.
-
- The Investment FAQ is copyright 2003 by Christopher Lott, and is
- protected by copyright as a collective work and/or compilation,
- pursuant to U.S. copyright laws, international conventions, and other
- copyright laws. The contents of The Investment FAQ are intended for
- personal use, not for sale or other commercial redistribution.
- The plain-text version of The Investment FAQ may be copied, stored,
- made available on web sites, or distributed on electronic media
- provided the following conditions are met:
- + The URL of The Investment FAQ home page is displayed prominently.
- + No fees or compensation are charged for this information,
- excluding charges for the media used to distribute it.
- + No advertisements appear on the same web page as this material.
- + Proper attribution is given to the authors of individual articles.
- + This copyright notice is included intact.
-
-
- Disclaimers
-
- Neither the compiler of nor contributors to The Investment FAQ make
- any express or implied warranties (including, without limitation, any
- warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose or
- use) regarding the information supplied. The Investment FAQ is
- provided to the user "as is". Neither the compiler nor contributors
- warrant that The Investment FAQ will be error free. Neither the
- compiler nor contributors will be liable to any user or anyone else
- for any inaccuracy, error or omission, regardless of cause, in The
- Investment FAQ or for any damages (whether direct or indirect,
- consequential, punitive or exemplary) resulting therefrom.
-
- Rules, regulations, laws, conditions, rates, and such information
- discussed in this FAQ all change quite rapidly. Information given
- here was current at the time of writing but is almost guaranteed to be
- out of date by the time you read it. Mention of a product does not
- constitute an endorsement. Answers to questions sometimes rely on
- information given in other answers. Readers outside the USA can reach
- US-800 telephone numbers, for a charge, using a service such as MCI's
- Call USA. All prices are listed in US dollars unless otherwise
- specified.
-
- Please send comments and new submissions to the compiler.
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Stocks - Researching the Value of Old Certificates
-
- Last-Revised: 27 Feb 2000
- Contributed-By: Ellen Laing (elaing at asu.edu), Jeff Kiss, Chris Lott (
- contact me )
-
- If you've found some old stock certificates in your attic, and the
- company is no longer traded on any exchange, you will need to get help
- in determining the value of the shares and/or redeeming the shares. The
- basic information you need is the name of the company, the date the
- shares were issued, and the state (or province in the case of Canadian
- companies) in which the company was incorporated (all items should all
- be on the certificate).
-
- The most basic question to resolve is whether the company exists still.
- Of course it might have changed names, been purchased by another
- company, etc. Anyhow, a good first attempt at answering this question
- is to call or write the transfer agent that is listed on the front of
- each certificate. A transfer agent handles transfers of stock
- certificates and should be able to advise you on their value.
-
- If the transfer agent no longer exists or cannot help you, you might try
- to contact the company directly. The stock certificates should show the
- state where the company was incorporated. Contact the Secretary of
- State in that state, and ask for the Business Corporations Section.
- They should be able to give you a history of the company (when it began,
- merged, dissolved, went bankrupt, etc.). From there you can contact the
- existing company (if there is one) to find out the value of your stocks.
-
- Here are some additional resources for researching old certificates.
- * You might want to start gathering information on old securities
- from Bob Johnson's web site, Goldsheet.
- http://www.goldsheetlinks.com/obsolete.htm
- * Scripophily.com operates an old company research service. They
- will research a company for a $39.95 fee, but if they do not find
- any information, there is no charge.
- http://www.oldcompany.com/
- * Old certificates may not represent ownership in any company, but
- they can still have considerable value for collectors. See the
- collection of old stock and bond certificates at Scripophily.com,
- which is the Internet's largest buyer and seller of old stock and
- bond certificates.
- http://www.scripophily.com
- * You can consult the Robert D. Fisher Manuals of Valuable and
- Worthless Securities. This is published by the R.M. Smythe
- company, and should be available for use in a good reference
- library. For expert assistance, contact R.M. Smythe in New York.
- They specialize in researching, auctioning, buying, and selling
- historic paper, and will find out if your stock has any value. But
- of course this is not a free service; they charge $75 per issue.
- Write them at 26 Broadway, Suite 271, New York, NY, 10004-1701 or
- visit their web page.
- http://www.rm-smythe.com
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Stocks - Reverse Mergers
-
- Last-Revised: 14 July 2002
- Contributed-By: The SmallCap Digest (www.smallcapdigest.net)
-
- A reverse merger is a simplified, fast-track method by which a private
- company can become a public company. A reverse merger occurs when a
- public company that has no business and usually limited assets acquires
- a private company with a viable business. The private company "reverse
- merges" into the already public company, which now becomes an entirely
- new operating entity and generally changes name to reflect the newly
- merged company's business. Reverse mergers are also commonly referred
- to as reverse takeovers, or RTO's.
-
- Going public (in any way) is attractive to companies because after going
- public, the company can use its stock as currency to finance
- acquisitions and attract quality management; capital is easier to raise
- as investors now have a clearly defined exit strategy; and insiders can
- create significant wealth if they perform.
-
- The reverse merger is an alternative to the traditional IPO (initial
- public offering) as a method for going public. Many people don't
- realize there are numerous other ways for private company to become
- publicly traded outside of the IPO. One widely used method is the
- "Reverse Merger".
-
- The reverse-merger method for going public is more prevalent than many
- investors realize. One study estimates that 53% of all companies
- obtaining public listings in 1996 did so through the "Reverse Merger".
- The same study concluded about 30% of newly publicly listed companies
- got there through Reverse Mergers in 1999. Percentages have recently
- dropped because Wall Street Investment Banking firms have had a huge
- appetite for IPOs in the late 90s. This led to many marginal companies
- receiving enormous financial windfalls.
-
- In a reverse merger, the original public company, commonly known as a
- "shell company," has value because of its publicly traded status. The
- shell company is generally recapitalized and issues shares to acquire
- the private company, giving shareholders and management of the private
- company majority control of the newly formed public company.
-
- The RTO (reverse take over) method for going public has numerous
- benefits for the private company when compared to the traditional IPO:
- * Initial costs are much lower and excessive investment banking fees
- are avoided.
- * The time frame for becoming public is considerably shorter.
-
- There are also several disadvantages of going public through the RTO as
- compared to an IPO:
- * There is no capital raised in conjunction with going public.
- * There is limited sponsorship for the stock.
- * There is no high powered Wall Street Investment Banking
- relationship.
- * The stock generally trades on a low exposure exchange.
-
- Many highly successful companies have become public through the RTO
- process. However, there some important negatives investors should be
- aware of.
-
- There is a much higher failure rate amongst RTO companies versus the
- traditional IPO. Much smaller and less successful companies are able to
- become public through the RTO, and many are badly undercapitalized.
- Often these stocks trade very inefficiently in the absence of any
- sponsorship or following.
-
- There is a cottage industry of merchant bankers and entrepreneurs who
- specialize in orchestrating reverse mergers. Unfortunately, there are
- no barriers to entry in this field. Therefore, scams are common place.
-
- Through various methods, scam artists manage to accumulate large
- positions in the free trading shares of the shell company. An RTO is
- consummated with a marginal private company, and the scam artists put
- together a massive publicity campaign designed to create activity in the
- stock. Unrealistic promises and absurd claims of corporate performance
- find their way to the public. The enhanced trading volume allows the
- scam artist to dump his shares on the unsuspecting public, most of whom
- eventually lose their money once the newly formed public company fails.
- This scam is commonly known as a "Pump and Dump".
-
- Alternatively there a hundreds of examples of highly successful
- companies which have yielded millions in profits for investors that have
- gone public through the RTO. Many of these companies deserve exposure
- to investors. Initial valuations can be reasonable, providing excellent
- opportunities for individual investors to accumulate positions ahead of
- Wall Street institutional money.
-
- Here are some high-profile and successful RTOs:
- * Armand Hammer, world renowned oil magnate and industrialist, is
- generally credited with having invented the "Reverse Merger". In
- the 1950s, Hammer invested in a shell company into which he merged
- multi decade winner Occidental Petroleum.
- * In 1970 Ted Turner completed a reverse merger with Rice
- Broadcasting, which went on to become Turner Broadcasting.
- * In 1996, Muriel Siebert, renown as the first woman member of the
- New York Stock Exchange, took her brokerage firm public by reverse
- merging with J. Michaels, a defunct Brooklyn Furniture company.
- * One of the Dot Com fallen Angels, Rare Medium (RRRR), merged with a
- lackluster refrigeration company and changed the entire business.
- This was a $2 stock in 1998 which found its way over $90 in 2000.
- * Acclaim Entertainment (AKLM) merged into non operating
- Tele-Communications Inc in 1994.
-
- For more insights into finance and the world of small-cap stocks, please
- visit the SmallCap Network at:
- http://www.smallcapnetwork.net
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Stocks - Shareholder Rights Plan
-
- Last-Revised: 3 Jun 1997
- Contributed-By: Chris Lott ( contact me ), Art Kamlet (artkamlet at
- aol.com)
-
- A shareholder rights plan basically states the rights of a shareholder
- in a corporation. These plans are generally proposed by management and
- approved by the shareholders. Shareholder rights are acquired when the
- shares are purchased, and transferred when the shares are sold. All
- this is pretty straightforward.
-
- The interesting question is why such plans are proposed by management.
- This is probably best answered with an example. One example is rights
- to buy additional shares at a low price, rights that first become
- exercisable when a person or group aquires 20% or more of the common
- shares of the company. In other words, if a hostile takover bid is
- launched against the company, existing shareholders get to buy shares
- cheaply. This serves to dilute the shares held by the unfriendly
- parties, and makes a takeover just that much more difficult and
- expensive.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Stocks - Splits
-
- Last-Revised: 26 Oct 1997
- Contributed-By: Aaron Schindler, E. Green, Art Kamlet (artkamlet at
- aol.com)
-
- Ordinary splits occur when a publicly held company distributes more
- stock to holders of existing stock. A stock split, say 2-for-1, is when
- a company simply issues one additional share for every one outstanding.
- After the split, there will be two shares for every one pre-split share.
- (So it is called a "2-for-1 split.") If the stock was at $50 per share,
- after the split, each share is worth $25, because the company's net
- assets didn't increase, only the number of outstanding shares.
-
- Sometimes an ordinary split is referred to as a percent. A 2:1 split is
- a 100% stock split (or 100% stock dividend). A 50% split would be a 3:2
- split (or 50% stock dividend). Each stock holder will get 1 more share
- of stock for every 2 shares owned.
-
- Reverse splits occur when a company wants to raise the price of their
- stock, so it no longer looks like a "penny stock" but looks more like a
- self-respecting stock. Or they might want to conduct a massive reverse
- split to eliminate small holders. If a $1 stock is split 1:10 the new
- shares will be worth $10. Holders will have to trade in their 10 Old
- Shares to receive 1 New Share.
-
- Theoretically a stock split is a non-event. The fraction of the company
- that each share represents is reduced, but each stockholder is given
- enough shares so that his or her total fraction of the company owned
- remains the same. On the day of the split, the value of the stock is
- also adjusted so that the total capitalization of the company remains
- the same.
-
- In practice, an ordinary split often drives the new price per share up,
- as more of the public is attracted by the lower price. A company might
- split when it feels its per-share price has risen beyond what an
- individual investor is willing to pay, particularly since they are
- usually bought and sold in 100's. They may wish to attract individuals
- to stabilize the price, as institutional investors buy and sell more
- often than individuals.
-
- After a split, shareholders will need to recalculate their cost basis
- for the newly split shares. (Actually, this need not be done until the
- shares are sold, but in the interest of good record-keeping etc., this
- seems like a good place to discuss the issue.) Recalculating the cost
- basis is usually trivial. The shareholder's cost has not changed at
- all; it's the same amount of money paid for the original block of
- shares, including commissions. The new cost per share is simply the
- total cost divided by the new share count.
-
- Recalculating the cost basis only becomes complicated when a fractional
- number of shares is involved. For example, an investor who had 33
- shares would have 49.5 shares following a 3:2 split. The short answer
- for calculating cost basis when a fractional share enters the picture is
- .. it depends. If the shares are in some sort of dividend reinvestment
- plan, the plan will credit the account holder with 49 1/2 shares.
- Fractional shares are very common in these sort of accounts. But if
- not, the company could do any of the following:
- * Issue fractional certificates (extremely unusual).
- * Round up, and give the shareholder 50 shares (rare).
- * Round down, and give the shareholder 49 shares. This happens among
- penny stocks from time to time.
- * Sell the fractional share and send the shareholder a check for its
- value (perhaps taking a small fee, perhaps not). This is far and
- away the most common method for handling fractional shares
- following a split. Accounting for the cost basis of the first
- three methods is trivial. However, accounting for the most common case,
- the last one, is the most complicated of the options.
-
- Let's continue with the example from above: 33 shares that split 3:2.
- The original 33 shares and the post-split 49.5 shares have exactly the
- same cost basis. To make it easy, assume the 33 shares cost a total of
- $495. So the 49.5 post-split shares have a cost basis of $10 per share,
- or $5 for the half share that is sold. The cash received "in lieu of"
- the fractional share is the sales price of that fractional share. Say
- the company sent along $8 for it.
-
- The capital gain (long term or short, depending on the holding period of
- the original shares) is $8 - $5 = $3. To account for this properly, the
- following would be required.
- * File a schedule D listing 0.5 shares XYZ Corp and use the original
- acquisition date and date it was converted to cash and sold;
- usually the distribution date of the split but the company will
- tell you. Use $5 as cost basis and $8 as sales price and voila,
- there is a $3 gain to declare.
- * Reduce the cost basis of the remaining 49 shares by the cost of the
- fractional share sold. ($5)
- * The cost basis of the $49 shares becomes $495 - $5 = $490 (still
- $10 per share).
-
- Hopefully the preceding discussion will help with recalculating the cost
- basis of shares following a split.
-
- Now we'll go into some of the mechanics of splitting stock. The average
- investor doesn't have to care about any of this, because the exchanges
- have splits covered - there is absolutely no danger of an investor
- missing out on the split shares, no matter when he or she buys shares
- that will split. The rest of this article is meant for those people who
- want to understand every detail.
-
- Often a split is announced long before the effective date of the split,
- along with the "record date." Shareholders of record on the record date
- will receive the split shares on the effective date (distribution date).
- Sometimes the split stock begins trading as "when issued" on or about
- the record date. The newspaper listing will show both the pre- split
- stock as well as the when-issued split stock with the suffix "wi."
- (Stock dividends of 10% or less will generally not trade wi.)
-
- Some companies distribute split shares just before the market opens on
- the distribution date, and others distribute at close of business that
- day, so there's not one single rule about the date on which the price is
- adjusted. It can be the day of distribution if done before the market
- opens or could be the next day.
-
- For people who really are interested, here is what happens when a person
- buys between the day after the T-3 date to be holder of record, and the
- distribution date. (Aside: after a stock is traded on some date "T",
- the trade takes 3 days to settle. So to become a share holder of record
- on a certain date, you have to trade (i.e., buy) the shares 3 days
- before that date. That's what the shorthand notation "T-3" above
- means.) Remember that the holder of record on the record date will get
- the stock dividend. And of course the price doesn't get adjusted until
- the distribution date. So let's cover the case where a trade occurs in
- between these dates.
- 1. The buyer pays the pre-split price, and the trade has a "Due Bill"
- atttached. The due bill means the buyer is due the split shares
- when they are issued. Sometimes the buyer's confirmation slip will
- have "due bill" information on it.
- 2. In theory, on the distribution date, the split shares go to the
- holder of record, but that person has sold the shares to the buyer,
- and a due bill is attached to the sale.
- 3. So in theory, on the distribution date, the company delivers the
- split shares to the holder of record. But because of the due bill,
- the seller's broker delivers on the due bill, and delivers the
- seller's newly received split shares to the buyer's broker, who
- ultimately delivers them to the buyer. The fingers never left the
- hand, the hand is quicker than the eye, and magic happens. In practice
- no one really sees any of this take place.
-
- In some cases, the company may request that its stock be traded at the
- post-split price during this interval, or the market itself might decide
- to list the post-split stock for trading. In such cases, the due bills
- themselves are traded, and are called "when issued" or for spinoff
- stock, "when distributed" stock. The stock symbol in the financial
- columns will show this with a "-wi" or "-wd" suffix. But in most cases
- it isn't worthwhile to do this.
-
- Here are two sites that offer information about past, current, and
- upcoming stock splits.
- * http://www.street-watch.com
- * http://www.e-analytics.com/splitd.htm
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Stocks - Tracking Stock
-
- Last-Revised: 21 Jan 2000
- Contributed-By: Chris Lott ( contact me )
-
- A tracking stock is a special type of stock issued by a publicly held
- company to track the value of one segment of that company. By issuing a
- tracking stock, the different segments of the company can be valued
- differently by investors.
-
- For example, if an old-economy company trading at a P/E of about 10
- happens to own a wildly growing internet business, the company might
- issue a tracking stock so the market could value the new business
- separately from the old one (hopefully at a P/E of at least 100). Those
- high-flying stocks are awfully useful for making employees rich, and
- that never hurts recruiting. Here's a real-world example. The stock
- for Hughes Electronics (ticker symbol GMH) is a tracking stock. This
- business is just the satellite etc. division of General Motors (ticker
- symbol GM).
-
- A company has many good reasons to issue a tracking stock for one of its
- subsidiaries (as opposed to spinning it off to shareholders). First,
- the company gets to keep control over the subsidiary (although they
- don't get all the profit). Second, they might be able to lower their
- costs of obtaining capital by getting a better credit rating. Third,
- the businesses can all share marketing, administrative support
- functions, a headquarters, etc. Finally, and most importantly, if the
- tracking stock shoots up, the parent company can make acquisitions and
- pay in stock instead of cash.
-
- When a tracking stock is issued, the company can choose to sell it to
- the markets (i.e., via an initial public offering or IPO) or to
- distribute new shares to existing shareholders. Either way, the newly
- tracked business segment gets a longer leash, but can still run back to
- the parent corporation if times get tough.
-
- All is not perfect in this world. Tracking stock is a second-class
- stock, primarily because holders usually have no voting rights.
-
- The following resources offer more information about tracking stocks.
- * The Motley Fool wrote about tracking stocks on 7 September 1999.
- http://www.fool.com/specials/1999/sp990907tradingstocks.htm
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Stocks - Unit Investment Trusts and SPDRs
-
- Last-Revised: 13 Jun 2000
- Contributed-By: Chris Lott ( contact me )
-
- A unit investment trust is a collection of securities (usually stocks or
- bonds) all bundled together in a special vehicle that happens to be a
- trust. Investors can buy tiny little pieces of the trust ("units"). So
- although a UIT looks a bit like a mutual fund in that it bundles things
- together and sells shares, the units are listed on an exchange and trade
- just like stocks. The most well-known example is the Standard & Poors
- Depositary Receipt (SPDR). These are also known as exchange-traded
- funds (ETFs).
-
- Below is a list of some of the common UITs/ETFs out there. All of these
- are created by large financial institutions, and usually (but not
- always) charge modest annual expenses to investors, commonly 0.2% (20
- basis points) or less. (Any commissions paid to buy or sell them are
- due to the broker, of course.)
- * UIT that mimics the S&P 500. Named a Standard & Poors Depositary
- Receipt (SPDR), commonly called a Spider or Spyder. Trades as SPY
- on the AmEx and has a value of approximately 10% of the S&P 500
- index. As of this writing, the trust has nearly $18 billion.
- * UIT that mimics the NASDAQ 100 Index, commonly called a Qube.
- Trades as QQQ on the AmEx and has a value of approximately 2.5% of
- the NASDAQ 100 index. As of this writing, the trust has about $12
- billion.
- * UIT that mimics the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Named the Dow
- Industrial Average Model New Depositary Shares, commonly called
- DIAMONDS. Trades as DIA on the AmEx and has a value of
- approximately 1% of the DJIA.
- * Select sector SPDRs - these slice and dice the S&P 500 in various
- ways, such as technology companies (symbol XLK), utilities (XLU),
- etc. All are traded on the AmEx.
-
- A UIT that mimics some index is in many ways directly comparable to an
- index mutual fund. Like an index fund, it's diversified and always
- fully invested. Like a stock, you can buy or sell a UIT at any time
- (not just at the end of the trading day like a fund). And for the
- serious traders out there, you can short many UITs on a downtick, which
- you cannot do with stocks.
-
- The following resources offer more information about UITs and SPDRs.
- * The AmEx, where these securities trade, has some information. Look
- in their "ETF" category.
- http://www.amex.com/
- Here is a direct link to their list of frequently asked questions
- about ETFs:
- http://www.amex.com/etf/FAQ/et_etffaq.htm
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Stocks - Warrants
-
- Last-Revised: 3 Jun 1997
- Contributed-By: Art Kamlet (artkamlet at aol.com)
-
- There are many meanings to the word warrant.
-
- The marshal can show up on your doorstep with a warrant for your arrest.
-
- Many army helicopter pilots are warrant officers, who have received a
- warrant from the president of the US to serve in the Army of the United
- States.
-
- The State of California ran out of money earlier this year [1992] and
- issued things that looked a lot like checks, but had no promise to pay
- behind them. If I did that I could be arrested for writing a bad check.
- When the State of California did it, they called these thingies
- "warrants" and got away with it.
-
- And a warrant is also a financial instrument which was issued with
- certain conditions. The issuer of that warrant sets those conditions.
- Sometimes the warrant and common or preferred convertible stock are
- issued by a startup company bundled together as "units" and at some
- later date the units will split into warrants and stock. This is a
- common financing method for some startup companies. This is the
- "warrant" most readers of the misc.invest newsgroup ask about.
-
- As an example of a "condition," there may be an exchange privilege which
- lets you exchange 1 warrant plus $25 in cash (or even no cash at all)
- for 100 shares of common stock in the corporation, any time after some
- fixed date and before some other designated date. (And often the issuer
- can extend the "expiration date.")
-
- So there are some similarities between warrants and call options for
- common stock.
-
- Both allow holders to exercise the warrant/option before an expiration
- date, for a certain number of shares. But the option is issued by
- independent parties, such as a member of the Chicago Board Options
- Exchange, while the warrant is issued and guaranteed by the corporate
- issuer itself. The lifetime of a warrant is often measured in years,
- while the lifetime of a call option is months.
-
- Sometimes the issuer will try to establish a market for the warrant, and
- even try to register it with a listed exchange. The price can then be
- obtained from any broker. Other times the warrant will be privately
- held, or not registered with an exchange, and the price is less obvious,
- as is true with non-listed stocks.
-
- For more information about stock warrants, you might visit
- http://www.stockwarrants.com/ .
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Strategy - Dogs of the Dow
-
- Last-Revised: 10 Jul 1998
- Contributed-By: Raymond Sammak, Chris Lott ( contact me ) Ralph Merritt
-
- This article discusses an investment strategy commonly called "Dogs of
- the Dow."
-
- The Dow Jones Industrials represent an elite club of thirty titans of
- industry such as Exxon, IBM, ATT, DuPont, Philip Morris, and Proctor &
- Gamble. From time to time, some companies are dropped from the Dow as
- new ones are added. By investing in stocks from this exclusive list,
- you know you're buying quality companies. The idea behind the "Dogs of
- the Dow" strategy is to buy those DJI companies with the lowest P/E
- ratios and highest dividend yields. By doing so, you're selecting those
- Dow stocks that are cheapest relative to their peers.
-
- So here is the Dogs of the Dow strategy in a nutshell: at the beginning
- of the year, buy equal dollar amounts of the 10 DJI stocks with the
- highest dividend yields. Hold these companies exactly one year. At the
- end of the year, adjust the portfolio to have just the current "dogs of
- the Dow." What you're doing is buying good companies when they're
- temporarily out of favor and their stock prices are low. Hopefully,
- you'll be selling them after they've rebounded. Then you simply buy the
- next batch of Dow laggards.
-
- Why does this work? The basic theory is that the 30 Dow Jones Industrial
- stocks represent well known, mature companies that have strong balance
- sheets with sufficient financial strength to ride out rough times. Some
- people use 5 companies, some use 10, some just one. You might call this
- a contrarian's favorite strategy.
-
- A 12/13/93 Barron's article discussed "The Dogs of the Dow." Barron's
- claimed that using this strategy with the top 10 highest yielding Dow
- stocks returned 28% for 1993, which was 2x the overall DJIA, 2x the
- NASDAQ, 4x the S&P500 and better than 97% of all general US equity funds
- (including Magellan). In the last 20 years, this strategy has lost
- money in only 3 years, the worst a 7.6% drop in 1990. In the last 10
- years, it has returned 18.26%.
-
- Merrill Lynch offers a "Select 10 Portfolio" unit trust, which invests
- in the top 10 yielding Dow stocks. Smith Barney/Shearson, Prudential
- Securities, Paine Webber, and Dean Witter also offer it. It has a 1%
- load and a 1.75% annual management fee, and they are automatically
- liquidated each year (cash or rollover into next year, but capital gains
- are realized/taxed). Minimum investment is $1,000.
-
- A listing of the current "DOGS of the DOW" is updated every day on the
- "Daily Dow" page that is part of the Motley Fool web site:
- http://www.fool.com/DDow/DDow.htm
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Strategy - Dollar Cost and Value Averaging
-
- Last-Revised: 11 Dec 1992
- Contributed-By: Maurice Suhre
-
- Dollar-cost averaging is a strategy in which a person invests a fixed
- dollar amount on a regular basis, usually monthly purchase of shares in
- a mutual fund. When the fund's price declines, the investor receives
- slightly more shares for the fixed investment amount, and slightly fewer
- when the share price is up. It turns out that this strategy results in
- lowering the average cost slightly, assuming the fund fluctuates up and
- down.
-
- Value averaging is a strategy in which a person adjusts the amount
- invested, up or down, to meet a prescribed target. An example should
- clarify: Suppose you are going to invest $200 per month in a mutual
- fund, and at the end of the first month, thanks to a decline in the
- fund's value, your $200 has shrunk to $190. Then you add in $210 the
- next month, bringing the value to $400 (2*$200). Similarly, if the fund
- is worth $430 at the end of the second month, you only put in $170 to
- bring it up to the $600 target. What happens is that compared to dollar
- cost averaging, you put in more when prices are down, and less when
- prices are up.
-
- Dollar-cost averaging takes advantage of the non-linearity of the 1/x
- curve (for those of you who are more mathematically inclined). Value
- averaging just goes in a little deeper when the value is down (which
- implies that prices are down) and in a little less when value is up.
-
- An article in the American Association of Individual Investors showed
- via computer simulation that value averaging would outperform dollar-
- cost averaging about 95% of the time. "Outperform" is a rather vague
- term. As best as I remember, whatever the percentage gain of dollar-
- cost averaging versus buying 100% initially, value averaging would
- produce another 2 percent or so.
-
- Warning: Neither approach will bail you out of a declining market with
- all of your monies intact, nor get you fully invested in the earliest
- stage of a bull market.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Strategy - Hedging
-
- Last-Revised: 12 Dec 1996
- Contributed-By: Norbert Schlenker
-
- Hedging is a way of reducing some of the risk involved in holding an
- investment. There are many different risks against which one can hedge
- and many different methods of hedging. When someone mentions hedging,
- think of insurance. A hedge is just a way of insuring an investment
- against risk.
-
- Consider a simple (perhaps the simplest) case. Much of the risk in
- holding any particular stock is market risk; i.e. if the market falls
- sharply, chances are that any particular stock will fall too. So if you
- own a stock with good prospects but you think the stock market in
- general is overpriced, you may be well advised to hedge your position.
-
- There are many ways of hedging against market risk. The simplest, but
- most expensive method, is to buy a put option for the stock you own.
- (It's most expensive because you're buying insurance not only against
- market risk but against the risk of the specific security as well.) You
- can buy a put option on the market (like an OEX put) which will cover
- general market declines. You can hedge by selling financial futures
- (e.g. the S&P 500 futures).
-
- In my opinion, the best (and cheapest) hedge is to sell short the stock
- of a competitor to the company whose stock you hold. For example, if
- you like Microsoft and think they will eat Borland's lunch, buy MSFT and
- short BORL. No matter which way the market as a whole goes, the
- offsetting positions hedge away the market risk. You make money as long
- as you're right about the relative competitive positions of the two
- companies, and it doesn't matter whether the market zooms or crashes.
-
- If you're trying to hedge an entire portfolio, futures are probably the
- cheapest way to do so. But keep in mind the following points.
- * The efficiency of the hedge is strongly dependent on your estimate
- of the correlation between your high-beta portfolio and the broad
- market index.
- * If the market goes up, you may need to advance more margin to cover
- your short position, and will not be able to use your stocks to
- cover the margin calls.
- * If the market moves up, you will not participate in the rally,
- because by intention, you've set up your futures position as a
- complete hedge.
-
- You might also consider the purchase out-of-the-money put LEAPS on the
- OEX, as way of setting up a hedge against major market drops.
-
- Another technique would be to sell covered calls on your stocks
- (assuming they have options). You won't be completely covered against
- major market drops, but will have some protection, and some possibility
- of participating in a rally (assuming you can "roll up" for a credit).
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Strategy - Buying on Margin
-
- Last-Revised: 19 Dec 1996
- Contributed-By: Andrew Aiken (aiken at indy.net)
-
- I have used margin debt to leverage my returns several times this year,
- with successful results. At no time did my margin debt exceed 25% of my
- net account equity. This is my personal comfort level, but yours may be
- higher or lower depending on your risk tolerance, your portfolio return
- vs. the interest rate on your debt, and your degree of bullishness
- about your investments and general market conditions.
-
- If I am using margin, I have tighter stop-loss limits. How much tighter
- is determined by the amount of debt, the interest rate on the debt, and
- the historical volatility of the stock.
-
- Here are a few more suggestions:
- * Never use margin unless you follow the market and your investments
- on a daily basis, and you consider yourself well-informed about the
- factors that could influence your asset value.
- * Do not use margin debt as a long-term investment strategy.
- * Have a clear idea of how long you plan to maintain the margin debt.
- * Always have cash reserves outside of your brokerage account that
- exceed your margin debt, so that you could pay off the debt at any
- time, if necessary.
- * If you maintain the debt for more that a few weeks, contribute cash
- to your account on a monthly basis, so that you are paying off the
- debt the same way one would pay off a credit card.
- * Start with a small amount of debt relative to your account (5 -
- 10%), and use this as a benchmark for future actions.
- * Have a stop-loss limit and a target sell price for all of the
- investments in your leveraged account. Stick with your targets!
- * Do not let the chance of a margin call exceed 5%. The assessment
- of this probability should be made and adjusted regularly.
- * Learn the techniques that the professional hedge fund managers use
- in maintaining leveraged investments. This information is
- available for free at the library. If this seems like too much
- work, then do not use margin. These are just my opinions as an
- individual investor. Whether or not you decide to use margin is a
- personal decision.
-
- I consider margin debt to be a tactic rather than a strategy. It is not
- suitable for a long-term, buy-and-hold investor. The tactic has worked
- for me so far, but I know several bright individuals who have been
- burned by it.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Strategy - Writing Put Options To Acquire Stock
-
- Last-Revised: 22 Aug 2000
- Contributed-By: Michael Beyranevand (mlb2 at Bryant.edu)
-
- Is there a stock that you would like to purchase at a cheaper price than
- its current quote? Would you be interested in receiving premiums months
- before you have to purchase the stock? If these propositions sound
- attractive to you, then writing puts to acquire stock is a strategy you
- should consider in the future. This article explains the entire
- procedure, as well as the associated risks and rewards.
-
- When you write a put option you are giving the buyer of that option the
- right (but not the obligation) to sell their stock to you at a
- predetermined price at any time until a certain date. For giving the
- buyer this luxury, he or she will in turn pay you a premium at the time
- you write (i.e., sell) the option. If the buyer decides to exercise the
- option then you must purchase the stock; conversely, if the option
- expires unexercised then you still have the premium as your profit.
-
- Let's work through an example. Let's say that you are bullish on
- Ebay.com for the long-term with the current value of the stock at $52.
- One option would be to fork over $5,200 and purchase 100 shares of the
- stock and just hold on to them. Another option however would be to
- write a Jan 01 45 put option, which is trading at about $8.50. This
- means that at anytime between now and the third Saturday in January, you
- might have to purchase 100 shares of E-Bay at $45 a share. For doing
- this you are compensated $850 upfront (100 shares times $8.50).
-
- Come January, one of two situations will occur. If the option has not
- been exercised by then, your obligation is over and you have a profit of
- $850. If the option is exercised (if you are put, to use the jargon),
- you would pay $4,500 to own the 100 shares of the stock. After taking
- into consideration that you were already paid a premium of $850, the
- true cost for the 100 shares of E-Bay is only $3,650 or $36.50 a share.
- You would in essence be purchasing the shares at a 30% discount to what
- you would have normally paid had you just bought the 100 shares at the
- market price.
-
- Doesn't it seem too good to be true? You end up with either free money
- or buying the stock at a discount. Well, there are some risks involved,
- of course.
-
- There are two significant risks in implementing this options strategy.
- These situations occur if the stock shoots up or comes way down. No
- matter how high the stock price goes up, the initial profits are limited
- to just the premium received. So the upside potential is very much
- limited in that sense. One way to combat this is to make sure that you
- will be receiving a high enough premium to still be satisfied if the
- stock soars before you purchase it.
-
- The second risk is the situation if the stock plummets. Reversing your
- position (i.e., buying back the option) is one possibility but an
- expensive one at that. Your only other choice is to follow through with
- your obligation: you purchase the stock at a premium to the current
- market price. This loss can be offset by the fact that you were bullish
- on the stock for the long run and you picked a price that you were
- comfortable paying for the stock. If your intuition was correct than
- it's only a matter of time before the stock rebounds to the price you
- paid or beyond. But if something awful like accounting irregularities
- are announced, you might incur significant losses.
-
- This strategy is ideal for volatile stocks that you are interested in
- holding for 5 or more years. They pay higher premiums because of their
- volatility, and having a long-term horizon will minimize your risks.
- Companies like Yahoo, E-Bay, AOL, EMC, Intel and Oracle would be ideal
- for writing puts on.
-
- Finally, please note that this strategy is not for everyone, and does
- not guarantee anything. Speak with your broker to learn more about
- writing puts and especially to learn if this strategy would fit with
- your investment goals.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Strategy - Socially Responsible Investing
-
- Last-Revised: 23 Mar 2001
- Contributed-By: Chris Lott ( contact me ), Ritchie Lowry (goodmoney1 at
- aol.com), Reid Cooper (reid_cooper at hotmail.com)
-
- Investors who pursue a strategy of socially responsible investing (SRI)
- are making sure that their capital is used in a manner that aligns with
- their personal ethical values--taking responsibility for what their
- money is doing to the world around them. There are many different
- definitions of what it means for an investment to be socially
- responsible, but basically the strategy is to avoid companies that
- damage the environment (either by treating nature or people poorly), and
- to favor companies that provide positive goods and services. SRI is not
- in any way a new idea. Adam Smith himself was concerned about the
- issue, and the anti-trust and 19th century child labor debates hinged on
- the same basic issues.
-
- One of the simplest examples of a socially responsible investment is a
- mutual fund that avoids so-called "sin" investments, namely companies
- that are involved with liquor, tobacco, or gambling. However, the term
- is sometimes applied to banks and credit unions based on their lending
- practices, etc.
-
- Does it work? This is a multi-faceted question. If the question is
- whether a strategy of SRI achieves a good return on investment, the
- answer seems to be that it does (see below for more details). If the
- question is whether companies that are shunned by a SRI strategy have
- difficulty in raising capital in the markets, I think the answer is no.
- At least at the present, there are enough investors who pursue returns
- without worrying about issues like a company's policies. However,
- presumably investors are sleeping better at night knowing that they have
- made a statement, however small, about their beliefs, and that factor
- should not be neglected.
-
- The following list of frequently asked questions was contributed by, and
- is copyright by, Dr. Ritchie Lowry, maintainer of the GoodMoney site
- (URL at end of this article).
-
- 1. What is SRI?
-
- In one sense, SRI is just like traditional investing. Socially
- concerned investors pursue the same economic goals as all
- investors: capital gains, higher income and/or preservation of
- capital for future needs. However, socially concerned investors
- want one additional thing. They don't want their investments going
- for things that cause harm to the social or physical environments,
- and they do want their investments to support needed and
- life-supportive goods and services.
-
-
- 2. What's the history of the movement?
-
- The idea of combining social with financial judgments in the
- investment process is not really that new. The oldest social
- screen around is the sin screen: no tobacco, liquor or gambling
- investments. This screen has been used for over a hundred years by
- universities and churches. However, the current movement really
- began during the Vietnam War when increasing numbers of investors
- did not want their money going to support that war. After the war,
- a number of corporate horror stories (including Hooker Chemicals
- and the controversy concerning Love Canal, Firestone Tire &
- Rubber's exploding 500-radial tires, A. H. Robins and the Dalkon
- Shield, and General Public Utilities and Three Mile Island) added
- fuel to the movement. The issue of American corporations doing
- business in South Africa and with the government of that country
- really pushed SRI into a full-blown social movement. It is
- estimated that around $1 trillion is involved in some type of
- social investing in the U.S. (about 10% of all total investments),
- and the number of socially and environmentally screened funds have
- increased from only a handful in the 1970s to over 100 by 1996.
-
-
- 3. How does one pick SRI stocks?
-
- First, determine your financial goals. Second, pick several social
- issues that are the most important to you. Don't try to solve all
- the problems of the world at once. Next do research on those
- corporations that appear to be the best investments in terms of
- both your financial and social goals. For social information on
- investments, there are a growing number of resources, most of which
- are included in the GoodMoney site's directory.
-
-
- 4. What sorts of judgement calls are involved in the process?
-
- Actually, the judgement calls are not that much different from the
- judgments an investor has to make using only financial factors. No
- investment is perfect in meeting every possible financial criteria.
- If it were, everyone would be a millionaire. In the same way,
- there is no such thing as corporate sainthood. However, you can
- pick what have been called "the best-of-industry" or "the
- try-harders." For example, making pharmaceuticals is a very dirty
- business and pumps large quantities of carcinogens into the
- environment. But, Merck & Company and Johnson & Johnson both have
- pollution-control programs in place that go far beyond government
- requirements, while other pharmaceutical companies do not.
-
-
- 5. What do the critics of SRI say?
-
- Interestingly enough, SRI has been criticized from both the right
- and the left. Wall Street and the traditional investment community
- thinks it is liberal flakiness by people who hate capitalism. The
- left thinks it is a cop-out to capitalism. Both criticisms
- completely miss the point. SRI is about several things. It is
- saying that any economic system, including capitalism, that lacks
- an ethical component is due to destroy itself. In addition, SRI is
- about personal empowerment and economic democracy. A corporation
- doesn't belong to its executives, and money in a retirement fund
- doesn't belong to the managers of the fund. It is time for
- shareholders and others to take control of their money, not only
- for profit but also to resolve some of the major economic and
- social problems the world faces. This is probably why the
- traditional business community, such as Fortune magazine, doesn't
- like SRI.
-
-
- 6. Doesn't Wall Street claim that that an investor and a company
- sacrifices returns and profits by mixing social with economic
- judgments?
-
- That is the traditional view, but on-going research suggests that
- just the opposite may be true --- that doing well economically goes
- hand-in-hand with doing good socially. For example, each year
- Fortune magazine conducts a survey of America's Most Admired
- Corporations. In March of 1997, the Corporate Reputations Survey
- reported on the results for 431 companies. Fortune asked more than
- 13,000 executives, outside directors, and financial analysts to
- rate (from zero for worst to 10 for best) the 10 largest companies
- by revenues in their industry (if there were that many) for each of
- 8 criteria. Interestingly, only 3 of the criteria were purely
- financial -- financial soundness, use of corporate assets, and
- value as a long-term investment. The other 5 involved social
- factors and judgments -- ability to attract, develop, and keep
- talented people; community and environmental responsibility;
- innovativeness; quality of management; and quality of products
- and/or services. The average score for the 8 criteria was then
- calculated. As has been the case in surveys for previous years,
- companies favored by socially and environmentally concerned
- investors did very well. For 1997 survey, 14 (compared to 12 for
- the previous year) such companies finished in the top 50. Eleven
- were repeaters from 1996. In addition, the February 24, 1997,
- issue of Business Week reported on a study by Judith Posnikoff of
- CalState Fullerton that found that the share prices of companies
- whose planned pullouts from South Africa were announced in the
- national press appreciated in the two or three days surrounding the
- announcements. She concluded that the stocks produced "abnormally
- positive" returns.
-
-
- 7. What's the future of SRI?
-
- It is growing exponentially in numbers of individual and
- institutional investors participating, in the amount of invested
- money involved, and, most importantly, in the movement's ability to
- persuade corporations to develop a sense of social responsibility
- in the conduct of their businesses. The German philosopher Arthur
- Schopenhauer put it this way:
-
- There are three steps in the revelation of any truth: in
- the first, it is ridiculed; in the second, resisted; in
- the third, it is considered self-evident.
-
- SRI is somewhere between the second and third steps.
-
- Some resources for more information:
- * The GreenMoney Journal's site
- http://www.greenmoney.com/
- * Dr. Ritchie Lowry's site
- http://www.goodmoney.com/
- * The RCC Group's site
- http://www.inusa.com/srinvest/
- * The Social Investment Forum (US) is a national nonprofit membership
- organization promoting the concept, practice and growth of socially
- responsible investing.
- http://www.socialinvest.org
- * SocialFunds.com has over 1000 pages of strategic content to help
- you make informed investment decisions regarding socially
- responsible investing.
- http://www.socialfunds.com/
- * The Calvert Group is one of the largest SRI fund managers in the US
- and offers a variety of investment services. It was the first to
- offer a socially-screened global fund. Its web site is focused on
- promoting itself, but it does provide general information on SRI
- issues.
- http://www.calvertgroup.com
- * Kinder, Lydenberg, Domini are the people behind the Domini 400
- Social Index, the SRI equivalent to the S&P 500. Their web site
- not only promotes the organization but also features an
- international list of links to SRI web sites in Europe and North
- America, among other Internet resources.
- http://www.kld.com
- * Russell Sparkes's The Ethical Investor, originally published in
- 1995 by Harper Collins, London. It is out of print, but was once
- available on the net and may survive; please let me know if you
- find a site that has it.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Strategy - When to Buy/Sell Stocks
-
- Last-Revised: 25 Nov 1993
- Contributed-By: Maurice Suhre
-
- This article presents one person's opinions on when to buy or sell
- stocks. Your mileage will certainly vary.
- * Stock XYZ used to trade at 40 and it has dropped to 25. Is it a
- good buy?
- A: Maybe. Buying stocks just because they look "cheap" isn't a
- good idea. All too often they look cheaper later on. (Oak
- Industries, in Cable TV equipment, used to sell in the 40s.
- Lately, it's recovered from 1 to 3. IBM looked "cheap" when it
- went from 137 or so down to 90. You know the rest.) Wait for XYZ
- to demonstrate that it has quit going down and is showing some sign
- of strength, perhaps purchasing in the 28 range. If you are
- expecting a return to 40, you can give up a few points initially.
- Note that this situation is the same as trying to sell at the top,
- except the situation is inverted. See the comments on "base
- building" in the Technical Analysis section of the FAQ.
-
-
- * I'd like to sell a stock since I have a good profit, but I don't
- want to pay the taxes. What should I do?
- A: Sell the stock and pay the taxes. Seriously, if you have
- profits, the government wants their (unfair) share. Their hand
- (via the IRS) is in your pocket. If you don't make any money, then
- you won't owe the government anything.
-
-
- * I have a profit in a stock and I want to sell at the exact top.
- How do I do that?
- A: If anybody knows how, they haven't told me. Some technical
- indicators such as RSI can be helpful in locating approximate local
- maxima. Fundamental valuations such as P/E or P/D can suggest
- overvalued ranges.
-
-
- * What are some guidelines for selling when you have a profit?
- A: Since you can't pick the exact top, you either sell too soon or
- too late. If you sell too soon, you may miss out on a substantial
- up move. If you sell too late, then you will preserve most of the
- last up move (unless you get caught in some sort of '87 type
- crash). One mechanical rule advocated by Jerry Klein (LA area) is
- this: If you have at least a 20 percent profit, use a (mental) stop
- to preserve 80 percent of your profit. The technical analysis
- approach is to determine a prior support level and set a stop
- slightly below there. Marty Zweig's book has an excellent
- discussion of trailing stops, both in setting them and how to use
- them.
-
-
- * It seems like stocks often drop excessively on just a little bit of
- bad news. What gives?
- A: One explanation is the "cockroach theory". If you see one
- cockroach, there are probably a lot more around. If one piece of
- bad news gets out, the fear is that there are others not yet
- public. Similarly, if one stock in a group gets into trouble,
- there is a suspicion that the others might not be far behind.
-
-
- * I saw good news in the paper today. Should I buy the stock?
- A: Not necessarily. Everyone saw the news in the paper, and the
- stock price has already reflected that news.
-
-
- * I don't want to be a short term trader. Can one of these computer
- programs help me for the long term?
- A: Possibly. If you have decided to buy and the stock is still
- declining, a computer could help determine when a local bottom has
- been reached. This sort of technical analysis is not infallible,
- but the computations are somewhat awkward to do by hand calculator.
- These programs aren't free, downloading the data isn't free, and
- you will have to do some study to understand what the program is
- telling you. If you are more or less ready to sell, the program
- may be able to locate a local top. Ask your broker if he is using
- any kind of computer analysis for buy/sell decisions. If you
- already own a PC, then an analysis program might be cost effective.
-
-
- * How does market timing apply to stocks? (I understand about
- switching mutual funds using market timing signals).
- A: Assuming that you think the market is "too high", you might a)
- tighten up your stops to preserve profits, b) sell off some
- positions to capture profits and reduce exposure, c) sell covered
- calls to provide some downside protection, d) purchase puts as
- "insurance", e) look for possible shorting situations, and/or f)
- delay any new purchases. If you think the market is "too low",
- then you might a) commit reserve money for new purchases and/or b)
- take profits from prior shorting.
-
-
- * Explain market action, group action, and individual stock action.
- A: Every day, some stocks go up, some go down, and some are
- unchanged. Market action applies to the general direction of the
- market. Are most stocks going up or down? Are broad averages (S&P
- 500, etc.) going up or down? Group action refers to a specific
- industry group. Biotechs may be "hot", technology may be "hot",
- out of favor groups may be dropping. Finally, not all companies
- within a rising group will be doing equally well -- some individual
- stocks will have risen, some won't, some may even be sliding lower.
-
-
- * How do I use this information (assuming I've got it)?
- A: A strategy is to locate a rising group in a rising market. Look
- for good companies in the group which haven't risen yet and
- purchase one or more of them. The assumption is that the "best"
- companies have already been bid up to full value and that some of
- the remaining will be bid up. Avoid the poorest companies in the
- group since they may not move at all.
-
-
- * Should I look at a chart before I purchase a stock?
- A: Definitely. In fact, raise your right hand and repeat after me:
- "I will never purchase a stock without looking at a chart". Also,
- "I will never purchase a stock in a Stage 4 decline." (See
- technical analysis articles in this FAQ for details.) If you have a
- full service broker, he should send you a chart, Value Line report,
- and S&P report. If you can't get these, you aren't getting full
- service. Value Line and S&P are probably available in your local
- library.
-
-
- * Do I need to keep looking at charts while I am holding my
- positions?
- A: Probably. You don't necessarily need to look a charts on a
- daily basis, but it is difficult to set trailing stops [ref 1]
- without looking at a chart. You can also get information about
- where the price is relative to the moving averages.
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- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Compilation Copyright (c) 2003 by Christopher Lott.
-