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AtricleZine - Ways To Keep You In A Fast Moving Stock Safely And How To Protect Yourself From Disasters
It's Not What You Know, It's Who You Know: Truth or Rumor? what? The stock got sold out after hitting your stop order. First, DO NOT chase it. Figure out what the problem is first. If it is just that the
market tone is really nasty and everything is falling, let it fall. Don't try and guess the bottom. Eventually the market tone will firm and the stock will
start back up. You will be able to buy it back then at that cheaper price if you really like it still. But if it is falling because it did something wrong,
you need to be out any way. If it missed earnings or got sued or what have you, it could fall a long long way.It’s all about who you know, not what you know.How many times have you heard this phrase?In other words, the rumor is that if you don’t know the right people, you can’t get anywhere.Don’t buy into this rumor.Sure, there might be instances where you have to know the right person to get your foot in the door and there are certainly times when knowing someone might be the only way you can get hired with a particular company.Certainly there are instances where a new manager gets rid of existing staff and brings “their own people” (ie. their friends) in to replace them. Fortunately this tends to be the exception rather than the rule.I’ve often found that the “it’s not what you know it’s who you know” rumor gets started by underachieving people who look to make excuses for their own lack of succ What do you do if it hits your stop order and sells you out and then pops back up another point? Here it gets tricky. Something brought it down that far in the first place so you have to determine what it was. Lets say it was the overall market tone, but now things are improving, do you buy it again? Here is where you are going to have to put all your thinking together. Was that the end? Is the market really healing or is it a fakeout? We have found the safest way to determine it is like this: if WE thought something was good enough to own at $100 but we got stopped out at $95 during a bad market day, now that it is back to $96 is it any less attractive than at $100? Probably not. Again, we are SEO Keyword Placement Strategies Ways to keep you in a fast moving stock safely and how to protect yourself from disasters.Have you ever questioned why some highly relevant websites show very poor ranking in the search results? The answer might as well lie in bad keyword placement decisions. See, there are many places on your website where you can place your keywords - and they differ in the effectiveness with which they help you achieve higher ranking positions.The major keyword placement locations usually are:1. Title TagSearch engines usually give the most weight to the page's title, because it tells them what the web page is about. Therefore you should place your most important keywords between the tags. For best results, it is advised that you keep it within 5 - 10 keywords and to-the-point. If you make the title too long, you risk that part of the title will be cut out by some search engines and won't get displayed. Also, s We will start off with protecting your down side risks and that starts with defense number one, the stop loss order. They can protect you from a massive loss by limiting how far a stock falls before you sell it. When you buy a stock, you have the ability to attach something to your stock called a stop loss. This simply means that if your stock starts falling an electronic program will sell it for you at a predetermined price. For instance let's say you buy ABC for $100 per share and you know that in the course of a typical day it may move around about 2 points up or down. Now you say to yourself "if this thing falls more than 5 points, there is something wrong and I want to be out". So, you click on "stop loss" and enter a price when trading online or call your broker and say "I want to attach a stop loss order to ABC at $95." (He should ask if that is for the day only or a GTC or "good til canceled" order? GTC just means that for about the next 60 days your order stays on the books). Then, no matter what you are doing or where you are, if the stock falls to the $95 range, your sell order will fire off and you are out of the stock. Next, you have to consider this. Did you just buy the stock or have you already made money in it? This is very important because when you enter a stock you should be very quick to bail out if it is falling. But, if you have made 10 points in it, you might not mind letting it back up a little more during a down period. So, we recommend that on entering a stock, if all your research and "hunch" tells you this thing is going up and the minute you buy it it starts backing up, you should probably sell. Something is wrong. Keep that initial stop VERY close. Maybe only a couple points, depending on your capital. If you are comfortably up, then the stop can be a bit "relaxed", but never place a stop at less than your initial entry point if you are up on the trade. For instance if you buy ABC at $100 and by the close its $103, your stop becomes $100. If the next day it is 105, adjust your stop to say $102. This way even if you get stopped out you still have a $2 profit per share. This is called a "trailing stop" and you simply adjust it higher as the stock moves higher. Why are they important? Because when the selling really hits, if you don't have a stop order on your stocks, you may come home to find a very unpleasant thing has occurred. The stock you owned at $100 is now $72. A stop would have prevented that. (note: you may not get sold at the exact price you specify because a stop order is automatically a market order and if the issue is falling fast it may blast right down past your $95 and you don't get sold until $94.50 or even $94) So, unless you can monitor the action all day from home in real time, having a stop order attached is a form of insurance against a big loss. How many times have you seen a stock fall to your stop point, get sold and then take off again the next day? A lot we're afraid. That is indeed a problem. It hurts and it is humiliating to watch that same stock fall right to your stop, get sold and rocket back up. But for as many times as it hurts to get hit like that, it generally doesn't hurt nearly as much as when "the big one hits". It's like house insurance: you hate to pay for it every year, but if the big one hits, you are saved from total destruction. Is there anything you can do to keep from getting stopped out so much? Yes, one thing that you can do is get familiar with the stocks daily price swings. For instance every stock "moves" up and down during the course of a day. You can average how much by looking at a daily chart. If the average swing is say 2 points, you have to give it that and then some. But some stocks are extremely volatile. They may move 8 points in a day. Accordingly, you should give it that room and then some. The next thing that you can do is this, Remember you can take your stops off again too! What good is that? Suppose you are in the ABC company and you paid $95 for it and it is now at $100 and have a $95 stop, then the market gets a bit nasty and it falls to $96. You still own it but you aren't far from getting sold out. The next morning the market looks weak again, such as the futures being down a bit. It seems like everything is going to open a bit lower than it closed. Sometimes its wise to cancel that stop order because if the market opens and the stock gaps down 1 dollar to 95 and you get sold out, it may have been that opening gap that got you. As you know, the first 1/2 hour of trading can be a real roller coaster and nothing is worse than getting stopped out on a gap down opening only to see it rising 15 minutes later. So, removing your order temporarily gives you some control. If the market opens down but very quickly settles out and starts back up, chances are you just saved yourself from getting sold out. If the market tone seems to deteriorate even more, you can sell it yourself after being relatively sure the bottom hasn't been found at the initial opening. Now what? The stock got sold out after hitting your stop order. First, DO NOT chase it. Figure out what the problem is first. If it is just that the market tone is really nasty and everything is falling, let it fall. Don't try and guess the bottom. Eventually the market tone will firm and the stock will start back up. You will be able to buy it back then at that cheaper price if you really like it still. But if it is falling because it did something wrong, you need to be out any way. If it missed earnings or got sued or what have you, it could fall a long long way. What do you do if it hits your stop order and sells you out and then pops back up another point? Here it gets tricky. Something brought it down that far in the first place so you have to determine what it was. Lets say it was the overall market tone, but now things are improving, do you buy it again? Here is where you are going to have to put all your thinking together. Was that the end? Is the market really healing or is it a fakeout? We have found the safest way to determine it is like this: if WE thought something was good enough to own at $100 but we got stopped out at $95 during a bad market day, now that it is back to $96 is it any less attractive than at $100? Probably not. Again, we are Applying The Identity for Proper Website Aesthetics just buy the stock or have you already made money in it? This is very important because when you enter a stock you should be very quick to bail out if it is falling. But, if you have made 10 points in it, you might not mind letting it back up a little more during a down period. So, we recommend that on entering a stock, if all your research and "hunch" tells you this thing is going up and the minute you buy it it starts backing up, you should probably sell. Something is wrong. Keep that initial stop VERY close. Maybe only a couple points, depending on your capital. If you are comfortably up, then the stop can be a bit "relaxed", but never place a stop at less than your initial entry point if you are up
on the trade. For instance if you buy ABC at $100 and by the close its $103, your stop becomes $100. If the next day it is 105, adjust your stop to say $102. This way even if you get stopped out you still have a $2 profit per share. This is called a "trailing stop" and you simply adjust it higher as the stock moves higher.I received a guitar for my birthday last month, and this was my favorite gift. The only problem is that I've never played the guitar, and while I'm sure I have all the talent and potential to become the next Jimmy Page, effortlessly strumming Stairway To Heaven is not in the near future. So I decided to hop on Google and start searching for a guitar teacher to help initiate the learning processI typed "Guitar Teachers" in the query window and Google returned with a number of helpful results. The link that I clicked on led to an aggregator's website called Harmony Central that provided a huge list of links to guitar teachers' websites. I followed a number of links to websites that had online instructions, guitar sales, and other promotions. I also looked up a number of retail music stores and online stores where I could bu Why are they important? Because when the selling really hits, if you don't have a stop order on your stocks, you may come home to find a very unpleasant thing has occurred. The stock you owned at $100 is now $72. A stop would have prevented that. (note: you may not get sold at the exact price you specify because a stop order is automatically a market order and if the issue is falling fast it may blast right down past your $95 and you don't get sold until $94.50 or even $94) So, unless you can monitor the action all day from home in real time, having a stop order attached is a form of insurance against a big loss. How many times have you seen a stock fall to your stop point, get sold and then take off again the next day? A lot we're afraid. That is indeed a problem. It hurts and it is humiliating to watch that same stock fall right to your stop, get sold and rocket back up. But for as many times as it hurts to get hit like that, it generally doesn't hurt nearly as much as when "the big one hits". It's like house insurance: you hate to pay for it every year, but if the big one hits, you are saved from total destruction. Is there anything you can do to keep from getting stopped out so much? Yes, one thing that you can do is get familiar with the stocks daily price swings. For instance every stock "moves" up and down during the course of a day. You can average how much by looking at a daily chart. If the average swing is say 2 points, you have to give it that and then some. But some stocks are extremely volatile. They may move 8 points in a day. Accordingly, you should give it that room and then some. The next thing that you can do is this, Remember you can take your stops off again too! What good is that? Suppose you are in the ABC company and you paid $95 for it and it is now at $100 and have a $95 stop, then the market gets a bit nasty and it falls to $96. You still own it but you aren't far from getting sold out. The next morning the market looks weak again, such as the futures being down a bit. It seems like everything is going to open a bit lower than it closed. Sometimes its wise to cancel that stop order because if the market opens and the stock gaps down 1 dollar to 95 and you get sold out, it may have been that opening gap that got you. As you know, the first 1/2 hour of trading can be a real roller coaster and nothing is worse than getting stopped out on a gap down opening only to see it rising 15 minutes later. So, removing your order temporarily gives you some control. If the market opens down but very quickly settles out and starts back up, chances are you just saved yourself from getting sold out. If the market tone seems to deteriorate even more, you can sell it yourself after being relatively sure the bottom hasn't been found at the initial opening. Now what? The stock got sold out after hitting your stop order. First, DO NOT chase it. Figure out what the problem is first. If it is just that the market tone is really nasty and everything is falling, let it fall. Don't try and guess the bottom. Eventually the market tone will firm and the stock will start back up. You will be able to buy it back then at that cheaper price if you really like it still. But if it is falling because it did something wrong, you need to be out any way. If it missed earnings or got sued or what have you, it could fall a long long way. What do you do if it hits your stop order and sells you out and then pops back up another point? Here it gets tricky. Something brought it down that far in the first place so you have to determine what it was. Lets say it was the overall market tone, but now things are improving, do you buy it again? Here is where you are going to have to put all your thinking together. Was that the end? Is the market really healing or is it a fakeout? We have found the safest way to determine it is like this: if WE thought something was good enough to own at $100 but we got stopped out at $95 during a bad market day, now that it is back to $96 is it any less attractive than at $100? Probably not. Again, we are Venture Capital Negotiating Issues you may not get sold at the exact price you specify because a stop order is automatically a market order and if the issue is falling fast it may blast right down past your $95 and you don't get sold until $94.50 or even $94) So, unless you can monitor the action all day from home in real time, having a stop order attached is a form of insurance against a big loss.When companies enter into negotiations with venture capital firms, there are several issues which need to be defined and agreed upon. This article describes the key issues.Valuation. Valuation is the most prominent negotiating issues. Valuation is the price of the company in which the venture capitalist invests. Valuation determines what percent of the company the investor is buying for their capital.Timing of the Investment. Many investors will commit a large amount of capital, but will contribute that capital to the companies in installments. Often, these installments are only made when pre-designated milestones are met.Vesting of Founders' Stock. Like capital, investors often prefer that stock is given to company founders and key employees in installments. This is known as vesting.Modifying the Management T How many times have you seen a stock fall to your stop point, get sold and then take off again the next day? A lot we're afraid. That is indeed a problem. It hurts and it is humiliating to watch that same stock fall right to your stop, get sold and rocket back up. But for as many times as it hurts to get hit like that, it generally doesn't hurt nearly as much as when "the big one hits". It's like house insurance: you hate to pay for it every year, but if the big one hits, you are saved from total destruction. Is there anything you can do to keep from getting stopped out so much? Yes, one thing that you can do is get familiar with the stocks daily price swings. For instance every stock "moves" up and down during the course of a day. You can average how much by looking at a daily chart. If the average swing is say 2 points, you have to give it that and then some. But some stocks are extremely volatile. They may move 8 points in a day. Accordingly, you should give it that room and then some. The next thing that you can do is this, Remember you can take your stops off again too! What good is that? Suppose you are in the ABC company and you paid $95 for it and it is now at $100 and have a $95 stop, then the market gets a bit nasty and it falls to $96. You still own it but you aren't far from getting sold out. The next morning the market looks weak again, such as the futures being down a bit. It seems like everything is going to open a bit lower than it closed. Sometimes its wise to cancel that stop order because if the market opens and the stock gaps down 1 dollar to 95 and you get sold out, it may have been that opening gap that got you. As you know, the first 1/2 hour of trading can be a real roller coaster and nothing is worse than getting stopped out on a gap down opening only to see it rising 15 minutes later. So, removing your order temporarily gives you some control. If the market opens down but very quickly settles out and starts back up, chances are you just saved yourself from getting sold out. If the market tone seems to deteriorate even more, you can sell it yourself after being relatively sure the bottom hasn't been found at the initial opening. Now what? The stock got sold out after hitting your stop order. First, DO NOT chase it. Figure out what the problem is first. If it is just that the market tone is really nasty and everything is falling, let it fall. Don't try and guess the bottom. Eventually the market tone will firm and the stock will start back up. You will be able to buy it back then at that cheaper price if you really like it still. But if it is falling because it did something wrong, you need to be out any way. If it missed earnings or got sued or what have you, it could fall a long long way. What do you do if it hits your stop order and sells you out and then pops back up another point? Here it gets tricky. Something brought it down that far in the first place so you have to determine what it was. Lets say it was the overall market tone, but now things are improving, do you buy it again? Here is where you are going to have to put all your thinking together. Was that the end? Is the market really healing or is it a fakeout? We have found the safest way to determine it is like this: if WE thought something was good enough to own at $100 but we got stopped out at $95 during a bad market day, now that it is back to $96 is it any less attractive than at $100? Probably not. Again, we are Avoiding A Debt Laced With Emotion Comes At A High Cost They may move 8 points in a day. Accordingly, you should
give it that room and then some.When emotional baggage associated with debt hinders our ability to deal with it, we pay the price. In many cases, we avoid dealing with the debt to avoid our emotions. How do we get an handle on such debts? Almost everyone has paid, or is paying debts, which have significant emotions attached to them: some good, some bad. This article addresses when negative emotions dictate how we handle a debt. Some examples of debts which carry emotional baggage are debts incurred by others in our name without our knowledge, debts incurred in our name by an "ex", debts associated with a bad point in our personal history, and debts we incurred ourselves that we know are foolish. By allowing the emotions which triggered these types of bills to hinder sound decision making, we hurt our credit with not only these creditors, but future creditors as well. The next thing that you can do is this, Remember you can take your stops off again too! What good is that? Suppose you are in the ABC company and you paid $95 for it and it is now at $100 and have a $95 stop, then the market gets a bit nasty and it falls to $96. You still own it but you aren't far from getting sold out. The next morning the market looks weak again, such as the futures being down a bit. It seems like everything is going to open a bit lower than it closed. Sometimes its wise to cancel that stop order because if the market opens and the stock gaps down 1 dollar to 95 and you get sold out, it may have been that opening gap that got you. As you know, the first 1/2 hour of trading can be a real roller coaster and nothing is worse than getting stopped out on a gap down opening only to see it rising 15 minutes later. So, removing your order temporarily gives you some control. If the market opens down but very quickly settles out and starts back up, chances are you just saved yourself from getting sold out. If the market tone seems to deteriorate even more, you can sell it yourself after being relatively sure the bottom hasn't been found at the initial opening. Now what? The stock got sold out after hitting your stop order. First, DO NOT chase it. Figure out what the problem is first. If it is just that the market tone is really nasty and everything is falling, let it fall. Don't try and guess the bottom. Eventually the market tone will firm and the stock will start back up. You will be able to buy it back then at that cheaper price if you really like it still. But if it is falling because it did something wrong, you need to be out any way. If it missed earnings or got sued or what have you, it could fall a long long way. What do you do if it hits your stop order and sells you out and then pops back up another point? Here it gets tricky. Something brought it down that far in the first place so you have to determine what it was. Lets say it was the overall market tone, but now things are improving, do you buy it again? Here is where you are going to have to put all your thinking together. Was that the end? Is the market really healing or is it a fakeout? We have found the safest way to determine it is like this: if WE thought something was good enough to own at $100 but we got stopped out at $95 during a bad market day, now that it is back to $96 is it any less attractive than at $100? Probably not. Again, we are Your Road To Relaxation - Ten Business Continuity Benefits what? The stock got sold out after hitting your stop order. First, DO NOT chase it. Figure out what the problem is first. If it is just that the
market tone is really nasty and everything is falling, let it fall. Don't try and guess the bottom. Eventually the market tone will firm and the stock will
start back up. You will be able to buy it back then at that cheaper price if you really like it still. But if it is falling because it did something wrong,
you need to be out any way. If it missed earnings or got sued or what have you, it could fall a long long way.People's views on business continuity planning vary from: "business..what?” "just common sense isn’t it?" "oh god where do we start!" So let’s bring these views into line with a simple list of how business continuity planning can benefit your business: # 1 Survival.The harsh but simple fact is that there are a hundred and one things that can disrupt a business. A well thought out, practical plan can mean the difference between coping with a disaster and going bust.# 2 Revealing inefficiency.A business under threat can be viewed like a patient on an operating table. The priorities are clear; maintain the blood supply (like cash flow), oxygen (like communication links) and at all costs protect the vital organs (like the staff, or premises).Business continuity planning starts with a thorough What do you do if it hits your stop order and sells you out and then pops back up another point? Here it gets tricky. Something brought it down that far in the first place so you have to determine what it was. Lets say it was the overall market tone, but now things are improving, do you buy it again? Here is where you are going to have to put all your thinking together. Was that the end? Is the market really healing or is it a fakeout? We have found the safest way to determine it is like this: if WE thought something was good enough to own at $100 but we got stopped out at $95 during a bad market day, now that it is back to $96 is it any less attractive than at $100? Probably not. Again, we are talking about the overall market that was the culprit. We would probably buy it back (if we still liked it of course). But if we got stopped out while the overall market was doing fine, we wouldn't touch it again. The reason? Why did it fall the first time? There was something wrong.
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