Search

 

 

New Page 1 New Page 1

Informative Articles

How To Start Investing For Financial Independence, Part 1
Today, I am going to start a multi-part series about how to go from being a beginning investor to being “financially independent” in a steady and predictable way. At our website, we get tons of e-mails about how do I start, how do I start with...

How To Start Investing For Financial Independence, Part 2
Last week, we started a multi-part series about how to go from being a beginning investor to being “financially independent” in a steady and predictable way. Many, many people want to overly complicate this process so let's briefly, let's recap...

Investing in the Stock Market – 9 Power Packed Tips
You have permission to this article either electronically or in print as long as the author bylines are included, with a live link, and the article is not changed in any way. Please provide a courtesy e-mail to charles@thestockopolyplan.com...

Take Away Power For Real Estate Investing
As a real estate entrepreneur, you must decide to learn the secret power associated with the takeaway. Maybe, you've already used it before. You may have used it and didn't even know it. Regardless, this method is a powerful trigger that will...

The Investing Power Behind Randomizers
Reader, Let's give out the definition of a 'RANDOMIZER': "A 'profits randomizer' is an electronic investing mechanism, that divides wealth with absolute justice." George Papazoglou - Greece / 2004. Let me ask you a question... Can you name...

 
15 Common Investing Pitfalls

We touched briefly about common investing pitfalls here. Here is a more comprehensive list. Some of it may happen to the more experienced investors as well. This serves as a guide for Novice Investors:

Investing with debt. You should not invest when you still owe a lot of money in your credit card. Credit card interest can run to as high as 20% while in the long run, investing in the market indices can give a 10.1 % return historically.

Not Starting Now. By now, you should have known that compounding works its magic in longer time frame. The sooner you start, the longer time you let compounding do its magic and the larger your savings will be at retirement age.

Investing based on stock tips. Stock tips are just that, tips. It is supposed to help you invest but not giving you a shortcut. Doing your own due diligence is an absolute must even when you get stock tips from the so-called professional.

Investing for the short-term. The easy access of internet makes it cheaper for small investors to buy stocks online. However, short-term trading is not going to work, no matter how small your commission is. It is extremely hard to predict short-term movement of stocks. Traders come and go and those that stay seldom beat the market in the long run. Furthermore, what do you prefer? Spending a few hours each week and making a 14% return on your investment? Or spending 8 hours a day where the odd of beating the market is slim? I would prefer to spend just a few hours a week, of course.

Buying stocks because the price is 'low'. Yeah. That's right. It is tempting for a lot of people. They figure, if a $ 1 stock can rises a few cents, they will make 20 or even 50 % of their investments !! Sure, you can. But the reverse holds true as well. With a few cents of movement, you can lose 20 or even 50% of your investment !

Investing in sectors you have no clue of. Biotechnology and RFID sounds cool. However, unless you are really really familiar with it, there is no reason to invest in it. You may know how Voice Over IP works, but do you know how does the company make money? If you don't, then you should stay away from it. There are hundreds of other companies that are easier to understand than how gene works.

Checking your stock price often. You read today's newspapers and you go straight to the stock price section. You arrive at the office and the first thing you do is going to Yahoo! Finance website. You went home and the first thing you do is turn on CNBC and check your stock price. Get the idea here? While you may check your stock quote anytime you want, but your time may be best served by doing other things. Finding the next best investment opportunity is one such thing.

Paying Too Much Attention to Past Result. A stock just drop 20% in a week and you figure, hey it is cheap. It has a P/E (Price over Earning) ratio of 7 ! Isn't that cheap? Err...it depends. If you were talking about forward P/E, then of

Associated Websites

Associated Websites

 

Our Blogs are on UK small business and being a UK freelancer or contractor as well as website marketing and web design. If you are a biker we can help with your motor bike insurance.

 

We have a site for contractors  and sites for HomeloansUK and PR-Help. We provide Branding help and offer Free-Marketing-Help and help for IT contractors. For E-commerce information, visit Small-Business-Web. We offer Page Rank Web Links and Cheap Home Loans Direct plus 0-BadDebtLoans and more Cheap Home Loans Direct. Our sites also help with Negotiation of any Personal-Secured-Loans. Our site called Management-Today can help you Innovate-Today, but for more loans go to 1st4HomeLoans.

 

Our HomeLoansUK site is affiliated with Branding and TrafficBuilding sites and Sales technique site. Also on offer is Beauty-Online and FreeNetDesign. If you are a  contractor and need help with a Small-Business-Web then our E-Commerce site is great. If you want Easy-Mortgages or even 1st-4-Tenant-Loans go to 5-Star-Mortgages. We help find Cheap Kitchen Appliances and Low Rate Home Loans. For the IT contractor, EstuaryFinance can refer you to our Online IR35 Compliance site for help with IR35.


course the stock is cheap. But if you were talking about trailing P/E while your analysis shows that this company will never turn a profit ever again, then the stock is not cheap. An example would be looking at a type-writer company during 1980s.

Lack of Diversification. Investing in one single stock can make you rich. Imagine if you have put all your money on Yahoo! in 1997. It can also break you. What if you have bought into Enron stock instead? I believe your most important investing goal is capital preservation, not capital appreciation. Once you have picked a solid company, capital appreciation will follow.

Over diversification. Contrary to lack of diversification, Over diversification will give your portfolio a mediocre return. Furthermore, having 500 different stocks on your portfolio will cost a significant amount of commission. The ideal portfolio in my opinion should consist of between 7 to 15 different stocks.

Ignoring Insider's Activity. Insiders are generally people with ownership of a company and who know the inside working of a company. While insider selling may not be negative signs, a spike in this insider selling may spell trouble. Insider buying on the other hand signals a vote of confidence for the company.

Buying Stocks On Margin. While using margin can enhance your return in a rising market environment, the reverse occurs when your stock price drops. As always, the most important goal of an investor is capital preservation, not chasing the highest return.

The Desire to Be Fully Invested. While having all your portfolio fully invested is a good thing, sometimes keeping cash is a better thing. I would prefer my money to earn a 0% return rather than buying a stock that lost 50% in value. Therefore, if you cannot find a good stock to invest, keep the cash.

Investing without knowing technical analysis. We believe in investing for the long haul. However, it does not mean that we blindly buy any stocks that look undervalued. Supposed a stock A is undervalued at $15. If technical analysis predicts a steeper fall, would you still buy it? Of course not. We would rather buy the stock A at a lower price if all else remains equal.

Unrealistic Investing Goals. You heard somewhere that TravelZoo (TZOO) rises 20 fold in 2004. That's right. 2000% in a year. So, you figure, if you can pick 9-10 stocks and one of them rises 20 fold, then 50% annual return for your portfolio is a conservative goal. Well, not really. Think about this. Let's say you start investing early with $ 1000 investment. If you can maintain 50% annual return for the next 35 years, your $ 1000 will grow to $ 1.46 Billion. Sure, you can have a good winning streak of 50% return for several years. But the odd is, you won't achieve that for 35 years in a row.


About the Author

For free investing idea, you can visit our commentary section regularly at http://www.noviceinvesting.com