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Actual for You - Profiting From a Stock You Don't Even Own
Graduates - You Need To Consolidate Your Student Loans Soon! ce you sold at and what price you "covered" at and as you get better at the
mechanics, then try your first one using real money.Next month, July 1st 2006 marks the largest changes the US has seen to date in the history of the Lending Industry when it comes to the interest rates that will be offered for student loans as well as to consolidate your student loans. The highest rate changes will be felt for college loans more than any other loan institution. For that reason, you need to understand that time is running out in order to secure the lowest rates to consolidate your student loans this country will see for some time to come.it is vital for you to take action now and following some simple steps can make it a much smoother and more profitable transaction. The most important decisions you will make when consolidating your student loans is which lender to choose. I can't give you that exact answer, as everyone's needs are different. But what I can give you are a few pointers that will help you choose the most reputable lender you can find. Being hasty in this department can cost you dearly.One of the ways to determine if a lender is reputable is to choose a well established lender who offers many different loan plans and a variety of discount options to choose from. Be wary of any company who doesn't have a diversified set of consolidation plans.Also, be cautious of any lending companies Now we want to explore the other most common method of capturing profits in a falling stock. There are options available that are called "puts" and puts are used when we think a stock is going to lose value. First what are they? They are options and you do need to know a bit about what they are. In their basic form, an option gives you the right but not the obligation to do something. In the concept of buying a put option, we are buying the right to sell a stock at specific price, within a specific time period. Why is that important? Lets look: Suppose you think the XYZ company is going to fall like a rock. They are trading at $50 a share now (say January), but you think they will be about $45 in no time. Well we can buy a "put" option against it. In our example lets say we buy the January $50 put and they cost us $2 each. (options are bought and sold in blocks called "contracts" with 100 "shares" to the contract, so we would be buying one contract of puts, for $200) that means we are indeed betting the stock will fall and if it d Link Building - The Basics Many people even in this "enlightened" era, do not realize that you can
make a lot of money if the market is falling. Well the fact is that you can,
and there are 2 good ways to do it. One is to "sell short" and
the other is to buy options called "puts". Today we want to look at the
short selling game and try and give you some advice on how it works.A free link exchange can do wonders to enhance the popularity of a website. In fact, most search engines consider the weightage of the links, among all other things such as keywords, content, etc, to value a website, making link popularity one of the most identifying factors when search engine ranking is the idea.What is a free link exchange? A free link exchange is like linking a website with another through links of the former pasted on the later and vice versa. This usually is done with the help of descriptions, Meta tags, on each other’s website. This is also known as reciprocal linking. However, it should be noted that free link exchange does not bear immediate results. While the idea of finding prospective partner websites may seem easy, there are some things that should be strictly taken into account while opting for a free link exchange.The most important prerequisite for link exchange is relevancy. In other words, only relevant websites should be linked. For example, a website selling musical instruments should ideally be linked to similar sites dealing with musical instruments. Important search engines such as Google, yahoo, consider links only if they are from relevant partners. For example, with a pet store website, you would want to exchange links with a pet Selling short is not a new idea. It has been an acceptable practice since the beginning of the market. In fact after the crash of 1929, there was a remark people would use quite commonly. Have you ever heard the old term "hey don't sell him short"? Its a very old saying and the idea behind it is if you think someone is going to fall short of the mark, or miss the boat, or what have you, you would "short sell him". Why? Because if it comes true and the target did indeed fall or stumble, you were right. Well the term comes from the stock market. If you think the market or an individual stock is going to fall, you can short sell it and if you are correct and the stock falls, you will make money. So, how can you make money on a stock that is falling apart? Quite easily, you simply sell it before it falls, and buy it back cheaper later. The difference between the two is pure profit. Suppose you think the XYZ company is ripe for a fall. They have been running up too fast and you feel that one of these days it's going to really see a pullback. You would call your broker and say something like this: "I would like to sell 500 shares of XYZ short please". Now let us suppose that XYZ is trading at $75 when you "sell it". Now lets also say you were right and it falls down to $65 the next week. At that point you would want to "cover your short sale". How? By buying the stock back at the lower price. So you call the broker and say: " I would like to cover my short sale in XYZ at this time." The broker would then buy back the shares you sold on the open market and the difference between where you sold the shares at and what you bought them back for (in this case $10 per share) is your profit on the trade. Thats it! Where did we get the shares to sell in the first place?? Your brokerage literally "loans" them to you. When you called to say I want to sell the shares, they take their own stock holdings and loan them to you. So when you sold them, you were selling something you did not own. But because you borrowed them, eventually they will have to be replaced and that is what happens when you "cover". Basically you are replacing them. So the way to look at short selling is this: You borrow the shares at the current market price and sell them, basically saying to the brokerage, IOU 500 shares of XYZ. In our example XYZ was at $75 when we sold them so we took in $37,500. Then when XYZ fell to $65 a share we decided that was as far as as it would fall so we literally "bought them back" on the open market. So it cost us $32,500 to buy them back and replace what we borrowed, but there is a difference of $5,000 dollars between the two transactions and that money is yours! You sold shares you did not own, took in money, bought them back lower and made a very healthy profit doing it. Well like everything there is risk involved. The risk in shorting a stock is that it might not fall like you thought. In fact it could go up! That is the problem. When you borrow the shares from the brokerage, they have to be replaced, and if the stock rises instead of falling, you are going to have to buy them back for replacement to the broker at a higher price than you sold them at meaning you lost money. This has to be avoided so it is important that the stock you short has every reason to fall. Shorting is indeed a useful tool. Every day, stocks go up and stocks go down and only playing the upside limits your profit potential. To keep your risks at a minimum, remember these points: First, keep your short sales very quick in duration, do not sell a stock short and forget about it like its a long term hold. Try and align a poor market day with your short sales. In other words do not short a tech stock when the NASDAQ is gaining 50 points every day. Wait for the overall market to go into a dive and chances are your individual stock will fall too. If you can align a stock that has a "reason" to fall with a very poor market day, its possible to put many dollars in your account even on a one day trade. With a run up in the market there are definitely going to be days when traders lock in profits and the market will be pulling back. Going short on a day like that, in a stock that is weak, or just missed earnings or what have you, will net you very good returns. Learn how to use this tool, and if you are not sure abut it, try "paper trading" for a while. Write down what price you sold at and what price you "covered" at and as you get better at the mechanics, then try your first one using real money. Now we want to explore the other most common method of capturing profits in a falling stock. There are options available that are called "puts" and puts are used when we think a stock is going to lose value. First what are they? They are options and you do need to know a bit about what they are. In their basic form, an option gives you the right but not the obligation to do something. In the concept of buying a put option, we are buying the right to sell a stock at specific price, within a specific time period. Why is that important? Lets look: Suppose you think the XYZ company is going to fall like a rock. They are trading at $50 a share now (say January), but you think they will be about $45 in no time. Well we can buy a "put" option against it. In our example lets say we buy the January $50 put and they cost us $2 each. (options are bought and sold in blocks called "contracts" with 100 "shares" to the contract, so we would be buying one contract of puts, for $200) that means we are indeed betting the stock will fall and if it do Know Your Client - The First Rule of Business Coaching r later. The difference
between the two is pure profit. Suppose
you think the XYZ company is ripe for a fall. They have been running up too fast
and you feel that one of these days it's going to really see a pullback. You would call
your broker and say something like this: "I would like to sell 500 shares of
XYZ short please". Now let us suppose that XYZ is trading at $75 when
you "sell it". Now lets also say you were right and it falls down to
$65 the next week. At that point you would want to "cover your short sale".
How? By buying the stock back at the lower price. So you call the broker
and say: " I would like to cover my short sale in XYZ at this time." The
broker would then buy back the shares you sold on the open market and the difference
between where you sold the shares at and what you bought them back for (in this
case $10 per share) is your profit on the trade. Thats it!Whilst the very best coaches have undertaken independently accredited training and or have years of experience with clients, new self-assessment questionnaires are coming available which is evolving coaching into a far more focused activity. And that is to the benefit of coach/client relationships for the following reasons:- Key Areas Results from assessments enable the coach and client to understand key areas for development and the client can then choose which will be most beneficial.Focus Assessments focus the coaching conversation on where it best adds value both to the individual and the organisation.Build on Success As well as areas when underperformance might be an issue, strengths are also identified and can be utilised to improve areas needing attention. Thus making progress easier.Starting Point With an initial assessment process, there is a ‘stake in the ground’ for where the client is starting from. This can be reassessed later in the development process to show development is happening.Cost-Effective Focusing on just where need is greatest means that value is created most cost-effectively for both the client and the organisation.Quick Progre Where did we get the shares to sell in the first place?? Your brokerage literally "loans" them to you. When you called to say I want to sell the shares, they take their own stock holdings and loan them to you. So when you sold them, you were selling something you did not own. But because you borrowed them, eventually they will have to be replaced and that is what happens when you "cover". Basically you are replacing them. So the way to look at short selling is this: You borrow the shares at the current market price and sell them, basically saying to the brokerage, IOU 500 shares of XYZ. In our example XYZ was at $75 when we sold them so we took in $37,500. Then when XYZ fell to $65 a share we decided that was as far as as it would fall so we literally "bought them back" on the open market. So it cost us $32,500 to buy them back and replace what we borrowed, but there is a difference of $5,000 dollars between the two transactions and that money is yours! You sold shares you did not own, took in money, bought them back lower and made a very healthy profit doing it. Well like everything there is risk involved. The risk in shorting a stock is that it might not fall like you thought. In fact it could go up! That is the problem. When you borrow the shares from the brokerage, they have to be replaced, and if the stock rises instead of falling, you are going to have to buy them back for replacement to the broker at a higher price than you sold them at meaning you lost money. This has to be avoided so it is important that the stock you short has every reason to fall. Shorting is indeed a useful tool. Every day, stocks go up and stocks go down and only playing the upside limits your profit potential. To keep your risks at a minimum, remember these points: First, keep your short sales very quick in duration, do not sell a stock short and forget about it like its a long term hold. Try and align a poor market day with your short sales. In other words do not short a tech stock when the NASDAQ is gaining 50 points every day. Wait for the overall market to go into a dive and chances are your individual stock will fall too. If you can align a stock that has a "reason" to fall with a very poor market day, its possible to put many dollars in your account even on a one day trade. With a run up in the market there are definitely going to be days when traders lock in profits and the market will be pulling back. Going short on a day like that, in a stock that is weak, or just missed earnings or what have you, will net you very good returns. Learn how to use this tool, and if you are not sure abut it, try "paper trading" for a while. Write down what price you sold at and what price you "covered" at and as you get better at the mechanics, then try your first one using real money. Now we want to explore the other most common method of capturing profits in a falling stock. There are options available that are called "puts" and puts are used when we think a stock is going to lose value. First what are they? They are options and you do need to know a bit about what they are. In their basic form, an option gives you the right but not the obligation to do something. In the concept of buying a put option, we are buying the right to sell a stock at specific price, within a specific time period. Why is that important? Lets look: Suppose you think the XYZ company is going to fall like a rock. They are trading at $50 a share now (say January), but you think they will be about $45 in no time. Well we can buy a "put" option against it. In our example lets say we buy the January $50 put and they cost us $2 each. (options are bought and sold in blocks called "contracts" with 100 "shares" to the contract, so we would be buying one contract of puts, for $200) that means we are indeed betting the stock will fall and if it d Join Who Loves Money wed them, eventually they will have to be replaced
and that is what happens when you "cover". Basically you are replacing them.
So the way to look at short selling is this: You borrow the shares at the current
market price and sell them, basically saying to the brokerage, IOU 500 shares
of XYZ. In our example XYZ was at $75 when we sold them so we took in
$37,500. Then when XYZ fell to $65 a share we decided that was
as far as as it would fall so we literally "bought them back" on the open market.
So it cost us $32,500 to buy them back and replace what we borrowed, but there
is a difference of $5,000 dollars between the two transactions and that money is yours!
You sold shares you did not own, took in money, bought them back lower and made a
very healthy profit doing it.Brace yourselves! For those of you who are even a little bit interested in internet marketing, and even for those who are veteran marketers, it would behoove you to pay close attention to the two guys at Wealthy Affiliates. Pay attention on May 1, 2007. Kyle and Carson are unveiling some innovative techniques that will help the newbie as well as the seasoned marketing professional. Why get on and join Who Loves Money bandwagon? Just check out their forum. The members there are supportive, polite and extremely knowledgeable. And, get this, Kyle and Carson give their one-on-one support when you need it. They get back to your questions! How refreshing!How refreshing? These guys know that there is enough money and abundance in the world for everyone, and it is really only personal greed that keeps people in a consciousness of poverty and lack. They do not promise riches but they do promote the value of constant striving, moving forward, following a plan and sticking with the plan.We don't have to reinvent the wheel! Making money on the internet does not have to be a gamble! It does take a lot of work. But oh how satisfying! When you take tried and proven principles of marketing and see how they manifest in terms of income, a Well like everything there is risk involved. The risk in shorting a stock is that it might not fall like you thought. In fact it could go up! That is the problem. When you borrow the shares from the brokerage, they have to be replaced, and if the stock rises instead of falling, you are going to have to buy them back for replacement to the broker at a higher price than you sold them at meaning you lost money. This has to be avoided so it is important that the stock you short has every reason to fall. Shorting is indeed a useful tool. Every day, stocks go up and stocks go down and only playing the upside limits your profit potential. To keep your risks at a minimum, remember these points: First, keep your short sales very quick in duration, do not sell a stock short and forget about it like its a long term hold. Try and align a poor market day with your short sales. In other words do not short a tech stock when the NASDAQ is gaining 50 points every day. Wait for the overall market to go into a dive and chances are your individual stock will fall too. If you can align a stock that has a "reason" to fall with a very poor market day, its possible to put many dollars in your account even on a one day trade. With a run up in the market there are definitely going to be days when traders lock in profits and the market will be pulling back. Going short on a day like that, in a stock that is weak, or just missed earnings or what have you, will net you very good returns. Learn how to use this tool, and if you are not sure abut it, try "paper trading" for a while. Write down what price you sold at and what price you "covered" at and as you get better at the mechanics, then try your first one using real money. Now we want to explore the other most common method of capturing profits in a falling stock. There are options available that are called "puts" and puts are used when we think a stock is going to lose value. First what are they? They are options and you do need to know a bit about what they are. In their basic form, an option gives you the right but not the obligation to do something. In the concept of buying a put option, we are buying the right to sell a stock at specific price, within a specific time period. Why is that important? Lets look: Suppose you think the XYZ company is going to fall like a rock. They are trading at $50 a share now (say January), but you think they will be about $45 in no time. Well we can buy a "put" option against it. In our example lets say we buy the January $50 put and they cost us $2 each. (options are bought and sold in blocks called "contracts" with 100 "shares" to the contract, so we would be buying one contract of puts, for $200) that means we are indeed betting the stock will fall and if it d Effective Media Relations Tips- What To Do After The Media Interviews You! . This has to be avoided so it is important that the stock you
short has every reason to fall.Effective Media Relations Tips - What To Do After The Media Interviews You! By Thomas Murrell MBA CSP, International Business Speaker You've done all the hard work - prepared a media kit, engaged with a reporter and they've listened to your message and asked questions.What now?Well, effective media relations doesn't just stop once you have been interviewed.There are many ways to leverage your media experiences to help build your brand, reputation and image management skills.Here are five tips on what to do after the media has interviewed you.1. Implement a Professional Media Monitoring Service How will you know what media coverage you are getting if you don't monitor it?Media monitoring collecting and evaluating all press featuring your company or industry. The media however can involve print press, radio, websites, TV and even blogs and it is wise to enlist a professional media monitoring service. These services use keywords to search all media outlets and email summaries immediately to the company with links to the full articles. Often media monitors can break down searches to specific geographical areas. These services provide a far more precise and detailed evaluation of your company's media with less chance of missing something that Shorting is indeed a useful tool. Every day, stocks go up and stocks go down and only playing the upside limits your profit potential. To keep your risks at a minimum, remember these points: First, keep your short sales very quick in duration, do not sell a stock short and forget about it like its a long term hold. Try and align a poor market day with your short sales. In other words do not short a tech stock when the NASDAQ is gaining 50 points every day. Wait for the overall market to go into a dive and chances are your individual stock will fall too. If you can align a stock that has a "reason" to fall with a very poor market day, its possible to put many dollars in your account even on a one day trade. With a run up in the market there are definitely going to be days when traders lock in profits and the market will be pulling back. Going short on a day like that, in a stock that is weak, or just missed earnings or what have you, will net you very good returns. Learn how to use this tool, and if you are not sure abut it, try "paper trading" for a while. Write down what price you sold at and what price you "covered" at and as you get better at the mechanics, then try your first one using real money. Now we want to explore the other most common method of capturing profits in a falling stock. There are options available that are called "puts" and puts are used when we think a stock is going to lose value. First what are they? They are options and you do need to know a bit about what they are. In their basic form, an option gives you the right but not the obligation to do something. In the concept of buying a put option, we are buying the right to sell a stock at specific price, within a specific time period. Why is that important? Lets look: Suppose you think the XYZ company is going to fall like a rock. They are trading at $50 a share now (say January), but you think they will be about $45 in no time. Well we can buy a "put" option against it. In our example lets say we buy the January $50 put and they cost us $2 each. (options are bought and sold in blocks called "contracts" with 100 "shares" to the contract, so we would be buying one contract of puts, for $200) that means we are indeed betting the stock will fall and if it d It's In The List! That's Where It Is! ce you sold at and what price you "covered" at and as you get better at the
mechanics, then try your first one using real money.Have you noticed the marketing frenzy? Have you felt the growing pains? Everyone who has an online business seems to be getting in the marketing fray, making it a busy and very competitive field. If you’re one of them, you’re probably on a whirlwind ride. Marketers are looking high and low for the most profitable ways to spend their hard earned money to keep their online business in the red.And don’t forget the time involved in every venture taken. You know about the FFA and free advertising and subscription services. It’s not much money to use these services out of pocket, but if you figure in your time, the cost is huge. Yes, it can be a way to pick up a few subscribers and visitors and buyers here and there, but do you want to settle for a few when the payoff doesn’t match your efforts? How long can your business survive at such a slow pace?I’ve been there and am still working on it. It’s an ongoing learning experience. New products and services pop up all the time to distract you from what you really need to be doing.And what should you be doing? It’s the one thing that hasn’t changed from the get go of the online business. The List! The money is in the list, either your list or someone else’s. and eventually it should be your list.S Now we want to explore the other most common method of capturing profits in a falling stock. There are options available that are called "puts" and puts are used when we think a stock is going to lose value. First what are they? They are options and you do need to know a bit about what they are. In their basic form, an option gives you the right but not the obligation to do something. In the concept of buying a put option, we are buying the right to sell a stock at specific price, within a specific time period. Why is that important? Lets look: Suppose you think the XYZ company is going to fall like a rock. They are trading at $50 a share now (say January), but you think they will be about $45 in no time. Well we can buy a "put" option against it. In our example lets say we buy the January $50 put and they cost us $2 each. (options are bought and sold in blocks called "contracts" with 100 "shares" to the contract, so we would be buying one contract of puts, for $200) that means we are indeed betting the stock will fall and if it does we will be rewarded. So how do we get rewarded? Like this: Remember with a put option you are buying the right (but not the obligation) to SELL a stock at a particular price. We have bought the right to sell XYZ for $50 per share until the 3rd Friday of January (all options expire on the 3rd Friday of the given month). Well, if we are right and XYZ is only trading at $44 by that Friday, we have an interesting situation here. We can sell XYZ for $6 more than they are trading for on the open market. We bought the right to do so, but that isn't the fun part. The fun part is that those options that we paid 2 dollars each for could be worth $7 or $8 each at that point! This is the beauty of option trading, the huge returns you can get if you're correct in your assumptions. So, buying a put on a falling stock is a very good thing to do because if it keeps falling, your put option that you just bought is going to be worth a lot more shortly. Then you simply sell the option that you bought and pocket the profit. We know that one day there is going to be a pull back and knowing how to short the market or buy puts becomes extremely profitable. More on Shorting When the market is going through some major convulsions, the concept of shorting individual stocks naturally comes to mind. One thing that must be kept in mind and that is, you have to be very very careful when you are going to short something simply because companies are so aware of their stock prices now. Years ago a company could let their stock "ride" but now shareholders are quick to instigate lawsuits if a stock underperforms. So we like to see long trend down turns in the overall market before we short individual stocks simply because a company can and often does release news just to prop up its price. If the news is significant enough, it can quickly turn a falling stock into a rallying stock and that gets ugly if you are short. So, one thing to take into account is that you should monitor your short sales very closely. One thing that often works as a timing indicator for when to short a stock is the exact opposite of the "10AM" rule, Or "gapout" rule. Here is how it works: If a stock opens weak and falls for a while, at some point it will settle out and probably turn back up for a while. Then if it is indeed going to be weak on the day, it will start falling again. We have found that if the stock falls below the price level it fell to during that first half hour, it will probably fall further. For example, let's say we think ABC is going down today and sure enough it opens at 50 and slides to 47 by 9:45. then it bounces up a bit to say 48 1/2 , but it cannot hold and back down it goes. If it falls below that first half hour low of 47, even by 1/2 a point, chances are great that it will continue to fall on the day. If you were considering shorting ABC that would be about the safest time to try it because it obviously couldn't even hold the first plunge price. Does this method always work? No, nothing in the market is ever a guarantee, but as far as a "safe" way to try, it's as good as it gets. One other note we would like to express is that we often like to do short sales on a "daytrading basis" or in other words, if we are profitable on our short sale, we take the profit home that same afternoon. Again the thinking being that overnight they can brew up a decent press release and the next day the stock could gap up a bunch and leave you with no profit. Years ago, CEO's didn't take nearly as much notice of their stock price, but things have certainly changed. Now they need a strong stock price for a multitude of reasons. One is lawsuits, but they also leverage their stock price as a way of generating usable capital for expansion or rebuilding. So, we find it safest to treat shorts as a daytrade or a very short term hold at the very least. Naturally there are companies that just swan dive and keep going down, but if you watch, for the most part you will see them doggedly try their best to reverse back to the upside. Play your shorts quick and consider the downside "gapout" as a good entry point, we think you will find it useful.
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