Real Estate | Investing In Real Estate | dr30.com
A fully revised, new edition of one of the bestselling real estate investing guides of all timeThrough its five previous editions, Investing in Real Estate has.
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Real Estate | Investing In Real Estate | dr30.com
Bill Gates Foundation Investing In Monsanto? | Techdirt
August 30, 2010 by Mike Masnick
Filed under Investing
If the Foundation really believes in making people around the globe healthier, it wouldn’t be investing in Monsanto, but working hard to break down the barriers that Monsanto has put up to making people around the world healthy.
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Bill Gates Foundation Investing In Monsanto? | Techdirt
Investing In China: Chinese Banks | Fresh Healthy Body
China’s banking sector has traditionally served as a party-controlled feeding trough for its inefficient, unprofitable state-owned enterprises.
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Investing In China: Chinese Banks | Fresh Healthy Body
Foundation And Endowment Investing
Foundation and Endowment Investing provides a detailed look at the successful investment approaches used by today rsquo s leading foundations and.
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Foundation And Endowment Investing
Foundation And Endowment Investing
Foundation and Endowment Investing provides a detailed look at the successful investment approaches used by today rsquo s leading foundations and.
Here is the original:
Foundation And Endowment Investing
Build America Bond ETFs: Investing in Recovery « ETF Trends
According to Build America Bonds Online, The Investing In American Jobs and Closing Tax Loopholes Act — HR 5893 — would extend BABs for two years. Also, the legislation would gradually reduce the subsidy rate for BABs from the current …
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Build America Bond ETFs: Investing in Recovery « ETF Trends
Starting Out In Real Estate Investing
There have been most people who would similar to to get proposed in genuine estate investing though keep putting it off for a single reason or another. Some people have been intimidated by a suspicion of removing concerned with …
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Starting Out In Real Estate Investing
No Money Down Real Estate Investing – What You Must Know So You …
No money down real estate investing should be just that — you put down nothing at the start.But a lot of people get tricked into thinking they have to.
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No Money Down Real Estate Investing – What You Must Know So You …
The Risk With Popular Option Income Strategies
August 24, 2010 by Donald Scott
Filed under Investing
The biggest difference in trading low-risk option strategies compared to the popular income strategies is that the time to recover from a debacle is very different. For example, over the recent “computer glitch,” those who were trading iron condors as income spreads lost about 50 to 70% over that two-week period. If you think about this, it’ll take about 10 months to a year and a half for them to make back this money. Most option traders will never rebound from such a debacle.
For those of us using low-risk strategies such as the broken wing butterflies, we lost around one to five percent at the worst, if they were done right. I personally experienced a 2.5% drawdown. As you can see, the big difference is that when things go bad for us, it was much worse for those trading the popular income strategies. Calendar Spreads, Iron Condors, Covered Calls, Credit Spreads, and At-The-Money Butterfly Spreads were all annihilated due to the recent “computer glitch”.
Those who were trading broken wing butterflies were much better off. Some Broken Wing Butterfly traders did not have any drawdown whatsoever. Those who did have drawdown, were able to manage the losses so that they could stay in the game. Those of us doing the low-risk strategies were fortunate enough to make back our losses over the following month. Those who were trading the popular income strategies will most likely never make their money back.
The results speak for themselves and are a great example as to why I personally don’t invest too much money into the popular income strategies anymore. That game they play is just a little too risky for my taste. I’d much rather make my money a little at a time while never having to take any of the huge losses that the aggressive income traders face every year. Doesn’t it make more sense to protect what we have and to take whatever the market gives us? In the long-term, I know my option trading plan will work much better this way.
Over the years, I’ve reworked and tweaked these popular option strategies to be low-risk. My trades initiate with lower risk, and my alternative way of doing Iron Condors has proven to be much safer than the popular Iron Condor. I’ve also developed Broken Wing Butterflies and Unbalanced Condors that have become some of my all time favorite trades. I like that I can initiate a trade with about two percent risk, be in the trade, and then remove the risk almost completely in most cases. That’s right; sometimes I actually have trades that are basically risk free. The only way I’d loose on these trades is if the market drops move than seven percent in one day. Think of this though, if I’m loosing money, then those trading the popular option spreads don’t stand a chance and will be left with nothing at all. Even in the most extreme circumstances, my strategies have proven to be much safer than anything I’ve seen out there.
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And The Dow Came Tumbling Down
August 24, 2010 by Donald Scott
Filed under Investing
Look at it go! The Dow dropped 1,000 points and then made a recovery, but still ended up closing 347 points down. I wonder, what brought this about? Some say it was a computer glitch, while some say someone wasn’t paying attention and clicked the 1 Billion button instead of the 1 Million button from their desktop! How is it possible that a $42 stock can sell for one cent for a few minutes during the trading day? Was this really a mistake? Or was this an attempt at stock market manipulation?
Does this call for new rules and regulations in the stock market, or are we going to let this sort of behavior go unpunished and get worse? How can we have any confidence in a stock market with loop holes in the online trading system? Where’s the security when you can lose your life savings because someone made a ‘mistake’?
At one point today that VIX had risen over 66 percent. Online brokerage platforms were down for nearly a full hour. There was nobody to call. There was nothing we could do. Our life savings were completely out of our hands. Billions of dollars were lost by retail investors due to this technological meltdown. Many investors will be forced to sell their homes.
Institutions have the capability of making thousands of trades per second over the internet. With the click of a button somebody can cause the Dow to drop 1,000 points. Is the stock market really that easy to manipulate? What are we going to do about this serious problem? The financial welfare of millions can be devastated by the click of a mouse. I hope new regulations come about immediately so this never happens again. I personally think that all transactions today should be reversed, and that trade should resume based on the final prints of May 5th and only after new regulations have been implemented into the trading system.
May 6, 2010 is definitely a date for the history books as one of the worse days in stock market history. Regardless of it being a software glitch or if it was some type of manipulation allowed by today’s trading technology, this situation must be handled and taken care of if we investors are to continue investing in the stock market with confidence.
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