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  1. What Are Stocks?
  2. What are the advantages of Stocks?
  3. Disadvantages of owning a stock
  4. Different kinds of Stock
  5. Different categories of Stock
  6. How and where do Stocks trade?
  7. What causes stock price to change?
  8. Bulls and Bears
  9. How to open a brokerage account
  10. What are DRIPs?
  11. How to place orders to buy and sell Stocks
  12. How to read stock quotes
  13. FAQ's on Stocks

Stocks: What are Stocks?

Stocks are one of the greatest tools ever invented for building wealth. Stocks are a part, if not the cornerstone, of nearly any investment portfolio. When you start on your road to financial freedom, you need to have a solid understanding of stocks and how they trade on the stock market. Here is question to think about! Wouldn't you love to be an owner of a business without ever having to show up at work or having to deal with all the headaches of running a company? Well you can. How? By owning stocks because behind every stock is a business, company or corporation. Look around your neighborhood and you'll see all kinds of stocks. McDonald, for example is in the fast food industry. Disney is in the entertainment business and Best Buy is in retail. You can own a piece of those company and enjoy the profit they generate by investing in their stocks.

Holding a company's stock means that you are one of the many owners, shareholders or stockholders of a company, and, as such, you have a claim to everything the company owns. This means that technically you own a tiny sliver of every piece of furniture, every trademark, and every contract of the company. As an owner, you are entitled to your share of the company's earnings as well as any voting rights attached to the stock. As you acquire more stock, your ownership stake in the company becomes greater.

A stock is represented by a stock certificate. This is a fancy piece of paper that is proof of your ownership. In today's society, you can choose to keep your stocks in "street name" instead of a stock certificate. Your brokerage will keep your ownership record electronically. This is done to make the shares easier to trade. In the past when a person wanted to sell his or her shares, that person physically took the certificates down to the brokerage. Now, you can trade with a click of the mouse or a phone call makes life easier for everybody.

A stock certificate

Being a shareholder of a public company does not mean you have a say in the day-to-day operation of the business. Instead, shareholders elect board of directors at annual meetings which in turns make decisions on major company issues and controls when dividends will be paid to stockholders. That is the extent to which you have a say in the company. For instance, being a Microsoft shareholder doesn't mean you can call up Bill Gates and tell him how you think the company should be run. Also just because you are a shareholder of Best Buy doesn't mean you can walk into the store  and grab a free CD or a DVD!

Why invest in stocks?
Your money and your retirement savings are sacred, so you don't want to take crazy risks. But that doesn't mean you should rely solely on such safe investments as bank CDs and money-market funds. To build a nest egg large enough to see you through retirement, which may last 30 years or more, you'll need the growth that stocks provide.

Over the past 200 years, stocks have posted an average annual return of just over 11 percent versus just over 5 percent for bonds. Given stocks' superior returns, some financial advisers recommend that if your retirement is still 20 years or more away put a large share of your portfolio in stocks and stock funds. Of course, a 100 percent stock portfolio can give you some hair-raising moments. In the 1973-74 bear market, for example, U.S. stocks lost 43 percent of their value and took three-and-a-half years just to get back to where they started. And who knows when stocks will get back to the highs reached in early 2000? But history has shown that, it eventually comes back up and more. It just takes time, that's why when you invest in stocks it must be for the long-term. Otherwise, volatility will kill you.

If you don't have the stomach for such a steep downturn, a more prudent course is to throw some bonds into the mix. Putting 70 percent of your portfolio into stocks and 30 percent into bonds, for example, will let you capture most of the long-term growth of stocks while sheltering your investments somewhat during meltdowns. As you approach retirement age, the idea is to shift more into bonds. But even in retirement, which can last 20 or 30 years (or more), it pays to maintain a healthy dose of stocks (maybe upwards of 50 percent in your seventies, and up to 30 percent in your eighties).

The chart below to compare the return on investment with the long-term growth of your initial investment.

If you would have invested $10,000 for 25 years or 40 years:

  You'll Have This Much
Return On Investment In 10 Years In 25 Years In 40 Years
0% (Mattress) $10,000 $10,000 $10,000
3% (savings account) $13,494  $21,150  $33,151
5% (bond) $16,470  $33,863  $70,399
11% (stocks and real estate) $29,891 $154,478 $798,345
***You can't earn good returns on your money if you keep your money under the mattress.  When you do invest in growth investments such as stocks and real estate, don't follow new investment after another trying to beat the market average returns.  Put your money in the market (Especially mutual funds) and just let it grow.  Don't try to beat the market.***
(See how much you'll have Financial Calculator)

Next -->> What are the benefits of owning a stock?

Other Related Article on Stocks

What is an ADR?

American depositary receipt or ADR  is a stock that trades in the United States but represents a specified number of shares in a foreign corporation. Shares of hundreds of major overseas-based companies, including well-known names such as British Petroleum, Gucci Group, Sony, and Toyota, are traded as ADRs on US stock markets in US dollars. ADRs are actually receipts issued by US banks that hold actual shares of the companies' stocks. ADRs let you diversify into international markets without having to purchase shares on overseas exchanges or through mutual funds.

 

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   Always keep in mind to:
  1. Spend less than you earn! People who spend every penny they make usually end up going broke.......
  2. Take enough risk on the money you save! Playing safe by putting your money under the mattress or in a savings account will not make you wealthy..

Remember that..... Fully one-fifth of humanity, some 1.3 billion people, struggles to survive on less than $1 per day. About 40% of humanity survives on less than $2 per day. More than a billion people around the world will go to bed hungry tonight. Life expectancy in some 32 countries is less than 40 years. If you have a few extra dollars in your pocket (you don't have to be a millionaire to make a difference), please share some of your financial good fortune with others who are in great need.


Think About It...  Being in the 'now' brings a freedom, unlike living in the past or in the future, which is a kind of imprisonment. This isn't a kind of a denial where you pretend life doesn't have problems. Life is full of problems, but most of those stresses and failures are reliving old hurts or worrying about future concerns. -- Carl Honore

When you 're diagnosed with cancer, you start to bargain with God: "Let me get through this, and I'll take better care of myself. I'll get my priorities in order. I'll learn to live every day to the fullest." Isn't it sad that you have to get sick before giving yourself permission to live life to the fullest? -- Robert Schimmel Look at Life in different & Positive ways