thx for replies
...as to what which way Ill go that's to be decided, but me being me id say id be leaning towards fundamental, that's in my limited knowledge, at the moment.... in saying that id wager a guess youd need to know both to be at the top of your game
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getting started in shares for dummies
stock market wizards - jack d schwager
learn more about shares - n.e. renton
starting to read the financials in paper, watch on foxtel the reports, get on to asx /commsec sites and do the courses and looking online to find share courses to gain a better understanding ...
If there is one thing this forum taught me, its to actually develop a system to support a strategy of investment in shares thats aligned with your personality. That sounds sort of self evident, but having the discipline to really follow a system for a strategy is harder than it sounds. I found for myself that writing down my thought processes on share selection helped.
You'll probably find much of what you're looking for on the ASX website:im after books that explain how the stock market works all the abreviations of terms etc
and courses for the same im trying to gain a better understanding of the basic fundamentals of different words there meanbings etc before I dive in whole heartedly coz when I do something I do it properly !!
You'll probably find much of what you're looking for on the ASX website:
http://www.asx.com.au/
Go to the Education link which then has multiple sub-sections, including a glossary.
First thing is to decide your basic approach.
Use Technical Analysis (looking at charts etc) with the intent of buying at a low price today and selling at a higher price in the future?
Use Fundamental Analysis to find stocks that are undervalued based on the fundamentals of the business?
Or just buy into a sound business for the dividends it pays and keep holding the stock regardless of short term price movements?
Personally, my approach is a combination. I aim to invest in sound businesses that are likely to stay around and keep making profits. Ideally I want to buy in at a low price, and use very basic TA to spot reasonable entry points. I continue holding the stock unless something changes with the business itself which gives me reason to sell, in which case I use very basic TA to make the exit. Amongst other things, I don't buy any stock which doesn't have a 10+ year history of rising profits and dividends.
That's just my approach, others will do things very differently. Someone who bases their trades solely on TA may not have a clue what the company does, or even what the proper name of the company is. They just know that the stock code is xyz and the chart looks attractive. They might happen to know those other things of course, but it's not a requirement of such a strategy. In contrast, I know exactly what the company does and that it is profitable etc - then I have to look up the stock code in order to make a trade. Very different approaches there and both can be profitable.
Then there's things like the broader economy. Not really much of an issue if you're basing everything on TA - just because the economy fell in a heap or boomed doesn't prevent an individual company's stock from doubling or halving in price.
But if the broader economy falls in a heap then that's bad news in some ways but it also presents opportunities. As a random example, consider the Commonwealth Bank. CBA shares traded as low as $24 in early 2009, down from about $62 a year earlier, amidst the financial crisis and concerns about banks going bust. But whilst many overseas banks may have struggled or even gone broke, CBA survived quite nicely and the shares are now trading at about $72. And on top of that, they've paid over $15 worth of fully franked (tax already paid) dividends per share over that time too. So bad economic circumstances certainly do present opportunities to buy into a sound business at a cheap price.
Fundamental approaches may well have lead you to CBA shares at the time, but then Technical Analysis could also have arrived at that point but for different reasons. One sees a sound business being sold cheaply. The other sees opportunity in the charts. Note that I am not recommending that you do (or don't) buy CBA shares - it's just a well known stock that I've used as an example.
Whatever you do, I strongly recommend that you trade "on paper" (that is, without real money involved) until you're comfortable with it. Don't use real money until you have a strategy (TA, Fundamentals, whatever) worked out and know how to implement and monitor it.
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