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NoShow -> RE: Newbie in financial investments. (4/23/2008 11:22:11 AM)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Tall_One Ok I have a question for all the experts in this forum. My Uncle used to play the stock market with penny stock. He would buy stocks at a penny a share and then sit back and wait to see if they would grow over long periods of times. Sometimes he would hit it big and they would grow to 1000's of dollars and then sometimes he would lose by a negative amount depending on the market and the business he had chosen to invest his penny stock in. Actually, he probably rarely got stocks at a penny a share. Anything under $5 a share is considered a penny stock. Penny stocks are typically the riskiest of stock. Understand the true meaning of risk, the likelihood of loss. The presence of increased risk does not insure increased reward, increased reward is usually required to encourage one to take increased risk. quote:
Here's my question ... I have thought of doing this for fun myself. I would ask him but he died a few years back. Does anyone know how I could start into this? How much initial investment I need and would I need to find myself an online broker? If I use a broker, how much does the broker get paid for helping me with my penny hobby? How much would it cost me over the long haul to do this other than my penny investments? I think it would be "foolish" to pursue penny stocks, just for the sake of their "penniness". You would be much better off, investing in undervalued quality stocks. If you can't, with all of the information that is available, identify a quality stock (company) that is currently undervalued; than it's unrealistic to think that you can identify a good penny stock investment with it's limited information. As for using a penny stocker broker, they're known for churning-and-burning accounts. On top of that, they usually have a minimum requirement, to buy into a penny stock offering, that will run you $1,000-$5,000 per stock. You won't fact that buying "regular" stocks. You can open an online account and pay $10-$20 a transaction (on top of the price of the stock), but you don't get the assistance of a broker. I've known probably a dozen full-service brokers over the years and in all honesty, only one of them was more than a salesperson\order-taker. Read The Intelligent Investor (Benjamin Graham) to understand technical analysis and read One Up on Wall Street (Peter Lynch) for fundamental analysis. If you don't want to put in the time and effort, than you'll be way better off buying an Index fund, than giving your money to a broker to put into penny stocks.
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