Discussion Board
Watch this board

Total 27 messages Pages | 1 | 2 | 3   Older >
help!
by saurabh on Apr 27, 2006 10:38 PM  Permalink 

I have the same problem. There are many courses being offered on stock trading. Any suggestions about the extent they might be useful?

    Forward  |  Report abuse
Information Needed on Stock Markets
by Jatin Bahl on Aug 27, 2005 05:43 PM  Permalink 

Hi Pavan ,

I am very much new to stock market and mutual funds. I am presently working in a software firm in Delhi. Please advice me , if there are any courses offered on stock trading. where do i start from ?

Or
Is There is any Study material that i can refer to/buy
to become a Equity Market Analyst. Be it books or monthly Study Material for Step-By-Step learning
to become a Expert in Equity Markets.

Thanks & Regards
JATIN BAHL

    Forward  |  Report abuse
investment
by gahan sadhu on Jul 01, 2005 05:52 PM  Permalink 

A good article

    Forward  |  Report abuse
Some tips
by Sujith on Jun 28, 2005 09:08 AM  Permalink 

For guys who are just waiting to jump into stock market, I have some suggestions.Please do not enter the market without doing your home work.What I meant by home work is to start learning the basics instead of blindly looking the up and down movements of the share prices. Grab the business/investment magazines, read them and understand the effect of news in the market. Check out money portals. Once you get a clear understanding of the stock market watch CNBC.There is a good program called Your Stocks.See that and understand what is happening. Listen to expert advices but never follow them blindly.Just lean understand and analyze. I would recommend you to jump into market only after doing all these.Now decide whether you want to trader or an invester.If you are an investor, dont go by ups and downs in share price. Use share as an instrument to invest in great businesses. If you want to be a trader you should track momentum stocks and carefully analyze news that can affect the share prices.I am not an expert but still I manage to make some money.I believe that if you invest after doing all ground work and with discipline you can make money without much risk.

    Forward  |  Report abuse
everybody can make money-buy units of sensex periodically
by ASHIT THAKER on Apr 11, 2005 08:57 PM  Permalink 

the article is very intelligent. the observations and practice are great. it is the best way to follow/invest who is not a full timer.
there is one more thing learn to hedge/balance trade positions in the F & O SEGMENT---in this you dont asssume any one direction but the volatility and momentum is taken advantage of. one will loose money in 1 or 2 months in a year, but the succes in the rest of the months overrides the loss many times.


    Forward  |  Report abuse
Which companies do u think r better investing for SIP
by Arvind Malhan on Apr 11, 2005 08:07 PM  Permalink 

Sir
u article is too good for investment ,i am thinking foe investment through SIP ,Sir if u can tell which companies u think better to invest.


    Forward  |  Report abuse
good
by hadis khan on Apr 07, 2005 08:35 PM  Permalink 

sir the colown is good,
an good for person interested who wish to jump in this market. can u send me some tips. to start

hadis khan

    Forward  |  Report abuse
Good Article Indeed
by Rajendra on Mar 30, 2005 04:57 PM  Permalink 

I never believe in Words of the articles. However the detailed calculations and real example shown by the author needs no further elaboration. Really Good Explanation. Hats off!!!

    Forward  |  Report abuse
good article
by venkkat on Mar 30, 2005 04:28 PM  Permalink  | Hide replies

dear sir,

article is good and very clear. just one clarification- i wish to know how you calculated annualised return of 34%. 67.15% overallreturn for five years (not four i suppose). is there any formula for calculating this return.

    Forward  |  Report abuse
RE:good article
by Anusya on Apr 05, 2005 02:45 AM  Permalink

I think the formulae is

Annualised return = 100 * ((1 + (mean return/100)) to the power of (1/period expressed in years) - 1)

e.g.,

Annualised return = 100 * ((1 + (67.15/100)) power of (1/2) - 1)

=> Annualised return = 100 * ((1.6715) power of (0.5) - 1)

=> Annualised return = 100 * (1.292865 - 1)

Therefore Annualised return = 29.2865%

   Forward   |   Report abuse
Total 27 messages Pages: | 1 | 2 | 3   Older >
Write a message