The Unemotional Investor: Simple System for Beating the MarketAtria Books, 1999 M04 13 - 240 páginas Investing in Stocks -- Without Investing in Time, Tears, or Terror When Robert Sheard decided to bite the bullet and get into the market, he wasn't the typical Wall Street player, didn't have years of trading experience, and didn't have an M.B.A. What he did have was the know-how. As one of the top stock researchers for The Motley Fool -- the widely popular and fiercely irreverent financial site that launched the bestselling The Motley Fool Investment Guide and The Motley Fool's You Have More Than You Think -- Sheard developed mechanical, emotion-free formulas for analyzing stocks. Now he shares his insights to help you earn gains that will crush market averages. The Unemotional Investor teaches you: * How to evaluate stocks * What numbers to look for and how to compare them * When to buy and when to sell * How to manage the portfolio you create * Two investing models you can use -- one of which requires no math, no experience, and about fifteen minutes of work per year! Like other books created by The Motley Fool, The Unemotional Investor presents an easygoing approach to a subject often shrouded in mystery, making it easy for even rank beginners to take the first steps toward reaping the rewards of a low-maintenance, high-profit portfolio. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 33
Página 65
... percentage terms ) to have the same effect on the Dow Jones Industrial Average . Suppose J. P. Morgan stock rises $ 2 a share . That's a percentage gain for J. P. Morgan shareholders of only 2 percent . But a $ 2 rise in Wal - Mart ...
... percentage terms ) to have the same effect on the Dow Jones Industrial Average . Suppose J. P. Morgan stock rises $ 2 a share . That's a percentage gain for J. P. Morgan shareholders of only 2 percent . But a $ 2 rise in Wal - Mart ...
Página 146
... percentage points above its rate of growth in previous decades , I think critics who go on and on about an unprecedented market explosion are confusing point growth with percentage growth . A gain of 100 points on the S & P 500 when it ...
... percentage points above its rate of growth in previous decades , I think critics who go on and on about an unprecedented market explosion are confusing point growth with percentage growth . A gain of 100 points on the S & P 500 when it ...
Página 150
... percentage on the spread between the bid and the ask price , so the trading costs on an aggressively updated model like this one will lower the model's hypothetical returns a few percentage points per year , depending on the size of ...
... percentage on the spread between the bid and the ask price , so the trading costs on an aggressively updated model like this one will lower the model's hypothetical returns a few percentage points per year , depending on the size of ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Unemotional Investor: Simple Systems for Beating the Market Robert Sheard Sin vista previa disponible - 1998 |
Términos y frases comunes
20 percent annualized return bear market Beating the Dow better calculate cash dividend cheapest stock Cisco Systems commission companies course decade deep-discount brokers dividend yield dollar Dow Approach Dow Dividend Approach Dow Four Dow Industrials Dow Jones Industrial Dow stocks earnings per share equal-dollar amounts example Exxon five stocks Foolish Four four-stock going growth rate Growth stocks High-Yield index fund individual investor Investing for Growth Investor's Business Daily Ivan Ivan's J. P. Morgan JLG Industries Jones Industrial Average keep long-term look loss margin month monthly Motley Fool mutual funds overall PeopleSoft percent gain performance PMTC portfolio value position ranking system retirement Roth IRA savings screen sell-stop order shareholders simply split stock market stock price strategy there's thirty Dow thirty stocks timeliness rankings total portfolio total value trading costs Unemotional Value approach update Value Line volatility Wall Street worth