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investing
Investing in Your Own Customers: a Neglected Skill
By Mark Ramirez
Most businesses spent time attracting customers to a product or service, trying to win their trust and then ending the whole process with a sale.
What Is Value Investing?
By Geoff Gannon
Different sources define value investing differently. Some say value investing is the investment philosophy that favors the purchase of stocks that are currently selling at low price-to-book ratios and have high dividend yields.
Stock Trading - What Every Investor Should Know
By Panikkarson
Every investor has his own take on "wise" investing. These suggestions come from experience, and are meant for the momentum investor rather than those who "buy and forget".
Investing Googles $10 Billion
Recently, CNN.com ran an article titled "What should Google do with its $10 billion war chest?" It mentioned that Google's $10 billion coffer is predicted to grow to $12 billion by the end of 2006.
Higher Returns With Entrepreneurial Investing
By Francis Kier
Long-term investing in the stock market can offer a passive return around 5-8% if you remain invested for 30 years; but, unfortunately, that return is before taxes and inflation.
Primer on Socially Responsible Investing
By Thomas Lau
Socially responsible investing (SRI), or sometimes known as ethical investment, is an investment strategy combining financial with social, environmental or other ethical criteria that satisfy both the financial goals and personal values of the investor.
Understanding Fixed Income Investing: Expectations
I've come to the conclusion that the Stock Market is an easier medium for investors to understand (i.e., to form behavioral expectations about) than the Fixed Income Market.
Parachute Investing
By Al Thomas
Ever jumped out of an airplane? It's OK if you have on a parachute. Pretty dumb if you don't. Every buy any stocks, mutual funds or Exchange Traded Funds? It's OK if you know how much you are willing to risk. Pretty dumb if you don't.
Penny Stock Investing
By Peter Leeds
The Nature of Penny Stocks
For anyone new to investing in penny stocks, you should first be made aware of the differences between these micro-cap stocks and the more conventional blue-chip and mid-cap investments. Unlike buying shares in a large, stable company like Ford or IBM, you are dealing with speculative investments.
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