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On Thu, 21 Aug 2008 07:32:30 -0400, John H.
salmonremovebait@gmaildotcom wrote: On Thu, 21 Aug 2008 06:56:30 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote: "John H." salmonremovebait@gmaildotcom wrote in message . .. So what are the companies which have done well? I'm assuming you continue to hold them because you believe they'll continue to do well. Our largest holdings are in Corning (GLW). We bought at a serious dip, shortly after telecom blew up at under 3 bucks. It recovered to the high 20's, now has pulled back a bit to the low 20's. The others are in related technology areas. I pick and choose myself, based on my knowledge of the technology and what I believe it has as a future. Optical stuff, mostly. And yes, we will hold them. I really don't fret or worry about them. It seems that you, like most people, are hesitant about giving out the names of companies that are doing well. I've wondered about that. If you told folks the names, and the folks went out and bought the stock, then the demand for the stock, and therefore the price, would go up. No? So it would seem to be in a holder's best interests to always divulge the name of a stock that's doing well for them. It's personal - Eisboch could give you the list and it wouldn't work for you - different circumstances, different people. For me, over the years, I've made a ton bying, holding and taking profits from IBM. My strategy has been to keep my base number of shares and buy and sell above and beyond that. I take ten percent of any profit and reinvest it at the dips into IBM keeping that stake seperate from the original holdings. I've never touched the original holdings - ever. I've borrowed against them to start the process, but once the ball got rolling, that has stayed steady state. Now I've done that with other stocks of major industrials and technology also with one notable exception - Yahoo. I dumped Yahoo two days before Cuban dumped his stake and the stock started tanking. It worked out very well. Here is the real secret to actually making money in the stock market - or any financial venture - you need to do your homework, you need to purchase stocks that you have some familiarity with (look around your house and see what you use the most, then look up the parent company for instance), don't listen to the folks who tell you about their latest killing in the stock market because it's probably bull****, you need to design a strategy that works for you over the long term - what works for Wayne, Eisboch or me may not necessarily work for you - we're all different people. There are certain principles in common, but overall, utilizing the stock market as a short term play is for traders who are plugged into a whole different data set than long term equity holders - you need to create a strategy that makes the most sense to you and in concert with a financial advisor (not a broker - a broker is not a financial advisor - broker's are salesmen) excute the plan and stick to it. Lastly, get to the library and read Jim Cramer's three most excellant books, read them twice, then ignore the advice and do what works for you. :) ~~ That's just a way of saying get a clue before you do anything ~~ |
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