Welcome! This site answers many frequently asked questions about investments and personal finance |
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Investment is a word which is more familiar in corporate as well as in common man world. Investing or Investment is an idiom with numerous closely-related meanings in business administration, economics and finance, interrelated to saving or deferring utilization. 
Investment is a choice of every individual who risks his/her hard earned money saved in the hope to gain maximum worth of the capital input. Gain of more to make life better and better in times ahead is what make the investment more desirable and choice able by every individual.
Rather than to save the money or store the good worth of it, the investor decide to lend that money in exchange of interests or consumer goods or for a share of profits so that it can create durable goods or high amount of money. Read more... |
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Advice |
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These articles offer some basic advice about investing, primarily for beginning investors.
• Beginning Investors
• Buying a Car at a Reasonable Price
• Errors in Investing
• Using a Full-Service Broker
• Mutual-Fund Expenses
• One-Line Wisdom
• Paying for Investment Advice
• Researching a Company
• Target Stock Prices Read more... |
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Stocks versus Funds
This article discusses the relative advantages of holding individual stocks compared to mutual funds.
Question: What advantages do mutual funds offer over stocks?
Here are some considerations.
•A mutual fund offers a great deal of diversification starting with the very first dollar invested, because a mutual fund may own tens or hundreds of different securities. This diversification helps reduce the risk of loss because even if any one holding tanks, the overall value doesn't drop by much. If you're buying individual stocks, you can't get much diversity unless you have $10K or so.
•Small sums of money get you much further in mutual funds than in stocks. First, you can set up an automatic investment plan with many fund companies that lets you put in as little as $50 per month. Second,
the commissions for stock purchases will be higher than the cost of buying no-load funds :-) (Of course, the fund's various expenses like commissions are already taken out of the NAV). Smaller sized purchases of stocks will have relatively high commissions on a percentage basis, although with the $10 trade becoming common, this is a bit less of a concern than it once was.
•You can exit a fund without getting caught on the bid/ask spread.
•Funds provide a cheap and easy method for reinvesting dividends.
•Last but most certainly not least, when you buy a fund you're in essence hiring a professional to manage your money for you. That professional is (presumably) monitoring the economy and the markets to adjust the fund's holdings appropriately.
Question: Do stocks have any advantages compared to mutual funds?
Here are some considerations that will help you judge.
•The opposite of the diversification issue: If you own just one stock and it doubles, you are up 100%. If a mutual fund owns 50 stocks and one doubles, it is up 2%. On the other hand, if you own just one stock and it drops in half, you are down 50% but the mutual fund is down 1%. Cuts both ways.
•If you hold your stocks several years, you aren't nicked a 1% or so management fee every year (although some brokerage firms charge if there aren't enough trades).
•You can take your profits when you want to and won't inadvertently buy a tax liability. (This refers to the common practice among funds of distributing capital gains around November or December of each year. See the article elsewhere in this FAQ for more details.)
•You can do a covered write option strategy. (See the article on options on stocks for more details.)
•You can structure your portfolio differently from any existing mutual fund portfolio. (Although with the current universe of funds I'm not certain what could possibly be missing out there!)
•You can buy smaller cap stocks which aren't suitable for mutual funds to invest in.
•You have a potential profit opportunity by shorting stocks. (You cannot, in general, short mutual funds.)
•The argument is offered that the funds have a "herd" mentality and they all end up owning the same stocks. You may be able to pick stocks better.
Trivia - One-Letter Ticker Symbols on NYSE
Some of the largest companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange have 1-letter ticker symbols, and some relatively unknowns do also. Not all of the one-letter symbols are obvious, nor does a one-letter symbol mean the stock is a blue chip, a US corporation, or even well known.
Originally when the symbol had to be written down on transaction slips, it was faster to write down the real big companies, like T (Telephone), F (Ford), K (Kellogg), G (once Gillette), X (Steel), and Z (once Woolworth). But later just anyone it seems was able to get 1-letter symbols. Yet when Chrysler (C) was absorbed by Daimler to become DCX, note that Citicorp (which had just merged Citibank with Travelers) jumped to claim the C for themselves.
This page shows all of the one-letter ticker symbols listed on the NYSE. Since the US exchanges avoid overlaps, this means that
only the NYSE uses one-letter ticker symbols. This list was current as of the last-revised date (above), but due to changes it may be out of date by the time you read it.
In the following list, the ticker links will take you to the appropriate page at Yahoo! Finance with a current quote and price chart.
Ticker |
Company |
A |
Agilent Technologies Inc. (formerly Astra AB) |
B |
Barnes Group Inc. |
C |
Citigroup Inc. (formerly Chrysler) |
D |
Dominion Resources Inc. |
E |
Ente Nazionale Idrocarburi SpA (ADR) |
F |
Ford Motor Company |
G |
None (formerly Gillette) |
H |
Realogy Corporation |
I |
None (formerly First Interstate Bancorp), but see below |
J |
None (formerly Jackpot Enterprises) |
K |
Kellogg Co. |
L |
None (formerly Liberty Media) |
M |
None (formerly M-Corp), but see below |
N |
None (formerly Inco) |
O |
Realty Income Corp |
P |
None (formerly Phillips Petroleum) |
Q |
Qwest Communications International Inc. |
R |
Ryder System Inc. |
S |
Sprint Nextel Corp (formerly Sears, Roebuck & Company) |
T |
AT&T Inc, from merger of SBC and old ATT |
U |
None (formerly US Airways) |
V |
Visa Inc. (formerly Vivendi Universal) |
W |
None (formerly Westvaco) |
X |
United States Steel |
Y |
Alleghany Corp. |
Z |
None (formerly Woolworth) |
The Chairman of the New York Stock Exchange has publicly said that he is holding the symbols "M" and "I" for two companies he hopes to convince to switch from Nasdaq to the NYSE -- Microsoft and Intel.
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