Big Moving Stock

1
2
3
4
5


Personal Finance
Credit and Debt
Employment Contract
Retirement
Financial Planning
Public Finance

Stock Market
Foreign Exchange Market
Derivatives Market
Commodity Market
Money Market
Spot Market
OTC Market
Real Estate Market
Private Equity
Market Participants

The stock market, individual investors, and financial risk. Riskier long-term saving requires that an individual possess the ability to manage the associated increased risks. Stock prices fluctuate widely, in marked contrast to the stability of (government insured) bank deposits or bonds. This is something that could affect not only the individual investor or household, but also the economy on a large scale. The following deals with some of the risks of the financial sector in general and the stock market in particular. This is certainly more important now that so many newcomers have entered the stock market, or have acquired other 'risky' investments (such as 'investment' property, i.e., real estate and collectables). With each passing year, the noise level in the stock market rises. Television commentators, financial writers, analysts, and market strategists are all overtaking each other to get investors' attention. At the same time, individual investors, immersed in chat rooms and message boards, are exchanging questionable and often misleading tips. Yet, despite all this available information, investors find it increasingly difficult to profit. Stock prices skyrocket with little reason, then plummet just as quickly, and people who have turned to investing for their children's education and their own retirement become frightened. Sometimes there appears to be no rhyme or reason to the market, only folly. This is a quote from the preface to a published biography about the long-term value-oriented stock investor Warren Buffett. Buffett began his career with $100, and $105,000 from seven limited partners consisting of Buffett's family and friends. Over the years he has built himself a multi-billion-dollar fortune. The quote illustrates some of what has been happening in the stock market during the end of the 20th century and the beginning of the 21st century.
Derivative instruments The behavior of the stock market Swing Trading Market Participants William J. O'Neil Stock Market Stochastic Oscillator Margin buying Short selling fibonacci History The stock market individual investors and financial risk Moving Average Aroon Investment strategies MACD Stock market index Irrational behavior Chart Pattern Trading Elliott Wave Bear Market Nasdaq Composite Taxation Head And Shoulders Importance of stock market Bull Market Trend Following Day Trading Technical Analysis Stock Crashes Function and purpose Nasdaq New York Stock Exchange CANSLIM Jesse Livermore AMEX