Investing Adventures

Saturday, July 21, 2007

List of Investing Resources

Filed under: Financial Website, Investing Resources — Jorge @ 4:00 am

Throughout the learning process of equity trading, there’s bound to be a huge list of resources such as books, websites, and CDs to draw from. I’ll start compiling a list of those resources as I come across them. I’ll try and review each one as best as I can in a series I like to call Investing Resources and Reviews. Let’s kick off this series by listing a few of the resources I’ve had direct contact with.

Resources – Equities

Websites – Commentary

Websites – Educational Materials

Websites – Research

Books

  • Jim Cramer’s Mad Money: Watch TV, Get Rich – James Cramer
  • Jim Cramer’s Real Money: Sane Investing in an Insane World – James Cramer
  • Getting Started in Options – Michael C. Thomsett
  • The Essays of Warren Buffett: Lessons for Corporate America – Warren E. Buffett

Newspapers

Magazines

Software

Friday, July 20, 2007

Investing in the Stock Market – The Start of My Adventure (Part 1)

Filed under: Adventure Series, Jim Cramer — Jorge @ 6:40 am

About three months ago, I was flipping through the DirecTV guide when I noticed a show on CNBC titled Mad Money. It is a catchy way of stopping a channel surfer. First impressions of the show? A middle-aged bald lunatic yelling and screaming on the set, randomly pushing buttons which make sounds and splash graphics on the screen, tossing books and stress relief toys, and outright odd gestures. I thought to myself, “Self… how can someone like that have their own TV show, let alone on the largest business channel in the country?” So what do people in my generation do nowadays when they see something they do not understand? You wiki it of course.

Mad Money Wikipedia

Mad Money is an American financial investing television program hosted by Jim Cramer that began airing on CNBC on March 14, 2005. Mad Money was a departure from the programming then offered by CNBC, as it offers investment strategy and stock-picking advice in an entertainment format.

Investing as entertainment? Nah. I used to put CNBC on at night in order to help fall asleep after a rough day. As a college student, anything that involves being fun and entertaining and making money, since most of us have very little, is always a positive. Of course, who the heck is Jim Cramer?

James Cramer Wikipedia

After reading his bio, I’m thinking to myself, again, “So you’re telling me that a law student turned journalist who lived out of his car became one of the most successful investors in the past 30 years?”

On April 25, 2007, I became a Mad Money viewer.

Now, I knew very little about investing. I received a degree in Nuclear Engineering along with a Masters in Nuclear Engineering Sciences, so I have some concept of numbers, supply and demand, and overall basic economic knowledge. All I needed now was some kind of guide or instruction manual on how the stock market works. Well if Cramer managed to make it, he must have done something right, right? I went ahead and purchased his newly released book that same day, Cramer’s Mad Money: Watch TV, Get Rich.

Jim Cramer's Mad Money: Watch TV, Get Rich

 

Two days… that’s how long it took to finish his book. The concepts seemed so simple and the explanations used little to no market jargon. I had to jump into the market right away. It actually took longer to find an online broker (someone who acts as a vehicle for trading stocks and other investments) than to read Mad Money. I decided last minute to go with a newly founded company called Zecco Trading (a review of Zecco Trading can be found in my brokerage review section). I had recently sold my four-year-old laptop for $500. That would be my starting balance in my investment account.

(Note: Before starting an investment account, make sure you’re debt free. There’s nothing like making great gains in the stock market but having them offset by high credit card interest rates or loans.)

Fast forward to today. I’ve slowly saved up what I call “tuition money” for investing in the stock market. I’m a college student. We don’t have great streams of income. Simulation, or paper, stock trading involves no risk since no money is involved. I don’t feel that a simulation is normally the best way to learn some things and investing is one of them. Folks normally take larger risks with simulation trading because it’s fairly easy to start over. Once real capital’s involved, the game changes quite a bit. At the time of this post, I’m actually down $3 from my initial deposits. But the knowledge I’ve gained from getting my feet wet is invaluable.

Next topic in series: Investing in the Stock Market – How I’ve Learned to Buy, Hold, and Sell (Part 2)

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Google Misses Earnings

Filed under: Earnings Report, Equities — Jorge @ 1:24 pm

Reported by Reuters.com:

SAN FRANCISCO, July 19 (Reuters) – Web search leader Google Inc. (GOOG.O: Quote, Profile , Research) on Thursday reported a 28 percent rise in profits that fell short of consensus expectations, despite rapid international growth and market share gains over rivals.

Net income rose to $925 million, or $2.93 per diluted share, compared with the year-ago quarter’s $721.1 million, or $2.33 per share. However, second quarter net income dropped from the $1 billion reported in the first quarter of 2007.

Gross revenue rose 58 percent to $3.87 billion — matching Wall Street’s consensus forecast.

Wall Street was looking for a net profit, on average, of $3.01 per diluted share, according to Reuters Estimates. Excluding one-time items and stock option expenses, the consensus analyst forecast was $3.59 per share.

Google [[GOOG]] is down 33 points, or 6% in after hour trading according to my Zecco platform. The rest of the tech industry seems to be feeling some of the effects from this. LVLT’s down about 0.03 in AH trading as well. It’s a great time to be diversified!

Update: Google’s now down 43 points in after hours trading. I can see Google go below $500 tomorrow morning. I may end up picking some up if that’s the case. I think it’s an overreaction to good, but not great news.

I’ve been blessed!

Filed under: Equities, Jim Cramer, Portfolio Progress — Jorge @ 10:03 am

I asked the members of Stockpickr.com for comments regarding my portfolio restructure. I recieved an answer back from Sir Cramer, President of Cramerica.

Having some trouble filling a vacancy thanks to BSC and the plague it’s spread in the financial sector. Currently holding the following:

LVLT
XTO

I have BA and either TIE or SPR on order once weakness appears (should be today from all reports). Looking for that last slot to fill to diversify. I was thinking GME but I may have missed the boat on it. One of the four horsemen would work, but I’m already carrying tech with LVLT. GILD was another option but biotechs seem to be oh so volatile. Looking for suggestions to round out my portfolio. I would drop LVLT for one of the four horsemen, but I feel LVLT’s going to at least $7. Any suggestions, even just sector wise, would be helpful. Thanks!

Reply from Jim Cramer
I would not changea thing. If you buy GILD you wont get anythign to happen short-term. I do believe you can buy an AAPL on weakness but i really like what you own…

Use the below link to view the question
http://www.stockpickr.com/members/view/answers/6929/

Update

Filed under: Equities, Market Pulse, Options, Portfolio Progress — Jorge @ 7:28 am

It’s been a long night getting InvestingAdventures up and running. The import process needed some manual editing but nothing terribly difficult. Suggestions on any widgets, scripts, or other items that you would like to see here would be greatly appreciated. Currently, I’ve enabled ticker updates throughout my posts. Let me know if those ticker updates slow the site down much. The sidebar’s mostly complete. Toward the bottom there’s a quick snapshot of the market (delayed 20 minutes). I’m working on optimizing positions of different widgets so bear with me.

In the meantime, DJIA’s holding steady over 14,000. I still wouldn’t jump into any stocks within the financial sector, even with Bank of America’s [[BAC]] good earnings report this morning. Too many people are afraid of what’s called the sub prime mortgage mess. My natural gas play, XTO Energy [[XTO]], has been doing well the past couple of days. Natural gas prices appear to be inching upward, giving it a nice boost. My speculative play, Level 3 Communications [[LVLT]], has started a downward trend the past couple of days. I’ve been buying in lots of 10 as the price drops. I still think LVLT will hit $7 by the end of the year which would result in a nice 20%+ gain. Once I have 100 shares of LVLT, I’ll begin writing covered calls; however, I’m still learning the options market. There’s great reading material out there for both stocks and options. I’ll compile a list later on this week. Thanks for sticking around during the domain name change!

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress