Stock Market Winning Formula: Secret Stock Market Investing Tips You Wish You Knew (How to Make Money in Stock Market)
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Now Revealed the Secret Tips to Stock Market Investing You Wish You Knew
Choosing the stock market as the avenue to make you achieve wealth and prosperity is a great way to go. The stock market has been the nexus between companies and investors - the ones who put money to work and those who have idle cash for generations. The stock market is the ideal juxtaposition in the flow of cash and the cycle of economic theory.
The basics of the stock market will form the fundamental foundation to grab the opportunities for profiting from the vast potential of the stock market. As you can see, the stock market has provides away for individuals to make money from their daily analysis global, national and industrial rise and climbs throughout the course of time.
Most of us know that in our careers, that statement bears absolute truth.
In the investment world, however, the people who are creating wealth ever day say it differently.
“Making money work is hard.”
While to many this phrase is believed to be true, but after you read this book you won’t be so sure. While investment is sometimes considered to be a higher form of gambling, risking today’s savings for a chance at a little bit more tomorrow, this book demystifies the process and sheds light on easy tips that will open your future with brilliance.
From easy tips that make every trade count just a little better, to insight that is in plain sight that is simply overlooked, this book will give you the keys to your own financial future.
Here Is A Preview Of What You'll Learn Inside
- How to Get Off to the Right Start: A Practical Guide to Choosing an Investment Account
- How to Save Tens of Thousands of Dollars In Taxes, Without Opening an Offshore Bank Account (or Doing Anything Unethical)
- Getting Organized: How to Form Your Own Personal Investing Plan
- How to Painlessly Implement Your Target Asset Allocation Using ETFs
- How to Manage for the Long-Term With a Lockbox (and a Sandbox)
- Much, much more…
What are you waiting for?
Take Action Right Away and Start to Have a Rich Life!
Just one click to get better income than before…
Michael W. Kirst
Ann Preston-Jones has an extensive knowledge of the county’s archaeology, with over thirty years’ experience working for Historic England and Cornwall Archaeological Unit. Her experience is mostly in the care, conservation and management of those sites which make Cornwall special and she has a particular passion for sculptured stone monuments.
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Book preview
Stock Market Winning Formula - Michael W. Kirst
Introduction
Choosing the stock market as the avenue to make you achieve wealth and prosperity is a great way to go. The stock market has been the nexus between companies and investors - the ones who put money to work and those who have idle cash for generations. The stock market is the ideal juxtaposition in the flow of cash and the cycle of economic theory.
Most of us know that in our careers, that statement bears absolute truth.
In the investment world, however, the people who are creating wealth ever day say it differently.
Making money work is hard.
While to many this phrase is believed to be true, but after you read this book you won’t be so sure. While investment is sometimes considered to be a higher form of gambling, risking today’s savings for a chance at a little bit more tomorrow, this book demystifies the process and sheds light on easy tips that will open your future with brilliance.
From easy tips that make every trade count just a little better, to insight that is in plain sight that is simply overlooked, this book will give you the keys to your own financial future.
Chapter 1: The Basic Principles of Economics
Laying A Solid Foundation: How to Make Sense of the Investment World
At its most basic level, an investment represents an exchange between two parties - one who needs money now in order to build something that will generate money in later years, and another who has money now but would like to postpone using it until the future. Stocks and bonds represent two different ways of structuring this kind of across-time agreement. Secondary markets like the New York Stock Exchange allow investors to trade
their initial investments to others in exchange for cash. The intrinsic value of any investment is just the future income stream that it will produce, discounted back to the present to account for the time value of money.
What an Investment Really Is
In a modern world complete with a litany of complicated investment options, it is easy to lose sight of what an investment in the financial markets actually represents. It can be instructive to imagine what things would have been like in a simpler time and place - an ancient town where Ted
and Bill
are two farmers and neighbors.
In our scenario, Ted's farm is in the land of plenty. He has had several good farming years and has more food stockpiled than his family will be able to eat. He would like to be able to exchange food today for food in the future, when he might not be as lucky in his harvest, or as able to work.
Bill is just starting out, and would like to spend time working on enlarging the farm and building a new barn so that he can expand his operation in future years in order to be more like Ted. However, if he spends his time enlarging the farm he will not be able to harvest his crops this year. This would not make Bill's hungry wife and kids very happy.
Since Bill needs to obtain extra food now in order to produce more food later, and Ted has extra food now and would like to get more food later, it seems that a mutually beneficial trade should be possible. But the problems in structuring this trade are significant, since it is taking place across time. Ted wants to be sure that he will get as much or more food in the future as he is giving up now. Otherwise he could grind or dry his corn, put it into storage, and lock it away from Bill's hungry children. Ted also naturally worries that Bill will just run off with the extra food and never deliver on his end of the deal. Finally, Ted wonders whether there are other farmers like Bill, in towns far away, who might give him a better deal.
For all their complexity, the modern financial markets evolved to solve precisely these kinds of age-old problems. In the next section, we will look at how stocks and bonds represent two different ways that Bill and Ted could have structured a mutually beneficial agreement.
Explaining Stocks and Bonds
The first way that Ted and Bill might have decided to structure their arrangement is a simple pay you back later
agreement, equivalent to saying Can I borrow your car? I promise I will bring it back in two hours.
To make the deal attractive for Ted, Bill might offer to give him an additional three bushels of corn at the end of every year until the debt has been paid off ( Can I borrow your car? I'll fill it up with gas before I bring it back
). So Ted would receive yearly corn payments in addition to the return of his initial investment at the end of the loan term.
If Ted and Bill had structured the arrangement in this way, they would have created something similar to a bond. Today, bonds are a type of debt that represents an IOU from a user of money (the debtor
) such as a company or government, to a provider of money (the creditor
) such as an investor. In exchange for immediate use of the creditor's money, the debtor agrees to make a periodic interest payment, as well as to return the full amount owed at the end of a fixed term. Creditors can make a positive return over the course of the investment because they get their initial investment back at the end of the term, and they receive interest payments in the mean time. For our example of Bill and Ted, let's say the term is three years. Table 1 shows the two farmers' actions over that time.
Table 1 - Ted and Bill's exchanges under a bond
arrangement. Image from Flicker by Justin
Ted and Bill could have also structured their arrangement another way. Ted could provide Bill with 100 bushels of corn in exchange for a portion of the ownership of the new farm, say 10%. This way, Ted would be entitled to 10% of the future production of Bill's farm. If the improvements to the farm were successful, Ted could receive much more corn than he initially gave up, earning a positive return on his investment. If the improvements were unsuccessful, he might end up receiving less than he initially gave Bill. This kind of arrangement allows Ted and Bill to share in the risk of the project, and is similar to a stock. Table 2 shows each man's actions in a stock-like agreement, where Ted is investing in Bill's company.
Table 2 - Ted and Bill's actions under a stock
arrangement. Image from Flicker by Henry
There are a couple reasons Bill and Ted might prefer the stock
arrangement to the bond
arrangement. If the farm improvements Bill was planning were relatively risky - for instance, if he was building a new kind of production machinery and there was a chance it would not work as planned - he might prefer the stock arrangement since the payments he would have to make to Bill would vary with the success of the project, eliminating his personal risk of not being able to make a payment. For his part, Ted might also prefer the stock arrangement since it gives him the potential for a greater return if the project goes well. With the bond, Ted had the security of knowing that he would at least get his money back (we will assume for now that Bill will not default on the loan) plus some small interest payments, but with the stock arrangement he has the upside potential of earning much more corn than he invested.
Today, stocks are certificates issued by companies when they do not have the cash on
