I have found that by creating an end goal keeps investing interesting and fun. Your goal could be a vacation, new big TV, pay off or buy a car, or some new expensive item. Having a purpose as to why you invest will help you stay focused. I have found without the end goal I start to lose interest in my portfolio. I would recommend leaving “filthy rich”* off the list, it’s too generic. Make your goal specific and give yourself a reasonable deadline. This tip works best for short term investing, for long term investing make your goal a specific number.
My goal is to pay off my family’s van with my short term stock portfolio.
* I have met a rich person and I have met a filthy person, but I have yet to meet a filthy rich person.
Like all valuable lessons, this one cost me money. I did my research and bought my stock. This was the one (aren’t they all). I set my alerts to notify me if it dropped below 5% of my buy point. I even went as far as to set an automated Sell Limit to take profits when the stock would hit (because I knew it would!).
All was well, except!
Meanwhile at my day job (I don’t trade professionally), I was in a meeting and my cell phone was going nuts (I was losing money). I couldn’t leave, I couldn’t sell, I was stuck. Once I got back to my computer, I sold the stock for (yikes!) an 8% loss instead of the 5% that I originally planned (just in case). Moral of the story, I need to set automated Stop Loss and Sell Limits to both protect and profit.
Another reason to automate is to protect from the greed voice. That little voice that whispers, “What if it goes higher?” or “It’ll go back up, really!”. It’s rarely right.
I learned my lesson and hopefully you too won’t make my mistake.
This is a horror story of making and losing money in one hour. One hour!
I bought my stock, set my alerts for my sell price and my loss price (not all are winners and I’m ready to cut my losses after a certain point). Cell phone was charged and ready. The stock was bought on Monday and I knew (yes KNEW!) it would hit my sell point within a few days. I was right. It hit the next day. My cell was buzzing with anticipation of profit! It sang and cheered! It vibrated all over my desk, SELL SELL SELL!
I didn’t sell. No I wasn’t breaking my rules for greed. I didn’t know. I didn’t have my cell phone with me. An hour later, I picked up my cell phone to see the alert! Yes! Profit!
No!!! The price had dropped to just above my loss sell point. The stock peaked where I expected it too (sometimes I get it right). So, the profit that I was expecting turned to a loss and the stock kept dropping. Fortunately, I kept with my rules and sold at the loss limit.
If you are like me and can’t monitor your stocks at the pace that they change, learn from my mistake. Keep your cell phone with you when you expect an alert and always set a Sell Limit. It’s the difference between profit and loss.
Tip:
Set to automatically sell at your expected sell point. No emotions and you get to walk away with the profits without the worry.
This is a free service offered by Yahoo!. To get the most out of the service is best to have a Yahoo! account which will include free e-mail.
This service offers:
• News
• Stock quotes (opening and closing amounts, 52-week range and day’s range, last trade amount)
• Charts
• Company fundamentals (dividend, EPS, P/E, etc.)
• Investing information (stocks, bonds, ETF’s, etc.)
• Personal finance
• Personal portfolio tracking
Stock research
This is a good resource to research new stocks. Yahoo finance gives current news about the company from respectable sources like the Wall Street Journal, Fools, and Investment Business Daily (among others). The charts have a variety of settings including daily, three-month, six-month, year-to-date and max date ranges. You can compare stocks, show events (stock splits, dividend, etc.), and use a variety of technical indicators (simple moving average, volume, etc.).
Portfolio
The service allows you to create different stock portfolios. You can create one for your holdings and one for your watch list. The portfolio page gives a nice grid layout of your stocks with a variety of information like last trade amount, percent change, volume and details about your shares (number of shares, priced paid, gain/loss, etc.). The downside of this service is that the stock price has a 20 minute delay.
This is an excellent resource to use when you’re getting started investing. I have personally used the service for several years and would recommend it to anyone just starting out.
The only way to make money investing is to start investing. If you know nothing about investing then you can begin by learning. Read a book about investing, magazine, website, or listen to an investing podcast.
Subscribe to the RSS feed or check back to my website for reviews on all of these options.