Agreed.Well that's just blatantly false.
To OP, never ever invest in anything you don't fully understand. Website you stated seems like the typical internet scam.
Agreed.Well that's just blatantly false.
Year 9 commerce made you an expert?I have been in the market for 3 years
Started trading in year 9
I hope you weren't trying to insult me.Year 9 commerce made you an expert?
Why so much sarcasm ? I honestly do not understand your motives.Year 9 commerce made you an expert?
ThanksLooks like we have the next Warren Buffet here guys.
Eh, Stock is the HIGHEST return investment currently for people...
No point investing with only 500 in the stock market... Minimum is roughly 10000 to 20000 dollar to gain good return.
Just go put the money in the NAB UBank or something.
But that's why technical analysis can work to your advantage.. you are as you put it, riding the waves.Funny you should mention "sheer volume" because well that is what hedge funds do.
Personally I think trading shares to make money is a real waste of time unless you have hedge fund / trader at an investment bank level funds and all day to watch the market and make trades.
The amount of professional and institutional traders in the market are like a sea, and all you really are as a small investor is a dingy. All you can do is ride the waves that all these other people make. By the time a share value is rising or dropping enough for you to trade it, the institutions have already made there money and are off to the next share.
So it is sort of like gambling, the odds are really just stacked against you. Shares are good if you really want to INVEST in a company.
Does anybody actually believe in the Random Walk Hypothesis, or for that matter, the EMH anymore? They seem more riddled with holes than Swiss cheese.If the stock market does indeed follow a random walk (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random_walk_hypothesis), then it is indeed impossible to use technical analysis (moving averages, bolinger bands etc) to guarantee positive yield from short-term swings. Trading tens of thousands of stocks frequently relative to small percentage points movements is then in essence gambling.
If by then the best we can do is to use a little fundamental analysis (macroeconomic indicators etc) to forecast stock prices, it's like skilled gambling.
The stock market is however different from the casino and regular gambling, in that over time the average stock appreciates, whereas your returns in the casino remain constant (and your expected returns are negative).