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- التسجيل
- 14 أبريل 2005
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By Seth Jayson (TMF Bent)
January 24, 2006
We get lots of interesting email here at the Fool. Just ask anyone who writes about Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) or Sirius Satellite Radio (Nasdaq: SIRI), two companies with some of the most vocal fans out there.
Last week, I got an interesting message from someone not about an individual stock, but about my preferred investing method. Simply put, I look to buy companies cheap -- often when they're down -- and then sell them when others decide they're worth more, and bid up the shares accordingly.
This crazy school of investing has a name. We call it (please envision my finger quotes) "Value Investing." It's made billions for guys like Buffett, and it's done fine for small fish like me. Ask me about Nokia (Nasdaq: NOK), PetroKazakhstan, or ATI Technologies (Nasdaq: ATYT), to name just a few of the big gainers I've picked out of the market's trash bin over the past couple years.
But this guy had an even better idea: Ignore the company; watch the market. Here it is, in his words.
"If you are disciplined, you can make money by ONLY looking for 3% returns -- as long as you do 15 of those a month, you'll make 50% on your money MONTHLY. If you a little better, with 5% per trade, you'll double your money. Follow the chart."
Seems like a pretty good deal, no? Follow the chart; double your money every month. Of course, it ignores realities like losing a third or more of each gain to taxes, but we can assume a tax-free Roth IRA, can't we?
Let's.
And let's take a look at just how great those returns would be. If you started with just a thousand bucks and doubled it that first month, you'd have two grand. Not too shabby. Double it again next month? Four grand. And so on.
My, how fast that money piles up.
In month 12, your Nest Egg would already be at $2,048,000. If you think that's great, wait until year three is up. By then, you'd have $34 trillion, or twice the value of all the stocks listed on the NYSE and the Nazz.
Oddly enough, this farcical "system" is suggested to me with surprising frequency, usually from folks trading in the likes of hot tamales like Travelzoo (Nasdaq: TZOO) or Ipix (Nasdaq: IPIX). Every one of these folks thinks they're smarter, faster, or meaner than the rest of the sharks in the lagoon. Each one thinks he's got the system that will let him see just enough of the future to eke out those tiny little gains every day and double that money time and time again.
Of course, if these people could trade like this, why would they bother trying to sell the know-how to you, much less give it away for free? Why don't they just collect their trillions and retire to their tropical islands?
عليكم الترجمة
January 24, 2006
We get lots of interesting email here at the Fool. Just ask anyone who writes about Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) or Sirius Satellite Radio (Nasdaq: SIRI), two companies with some of the most vocal fans out there.
Last week, I got an interesting message from someone not about an individual stock, but about my preferred investing method. Simply put, I look to buy companies cheap -- often when they're down -- and then sell them when others decide they're worth more, and bid up the shares accordingly.
This crazy school of investing has a name. We call it (please envision my finger quotes) "Value Investing." It's made billions for guys like Buffett, and it's done fine for small fish like me. Ask me about Nokia (Nasdaq: NOK), PetroKazakhstan, or ATI Technologies (Nasdaq: ATYT), to name just a few of the big gainers I've picked out of the market's trash bin over the past couple years.
But this guy had an even better idea: Ignore the company; watch the market. Here it is, in his words.
"If you are disciplined, you can make money by ONLY looking for 3% returns -- as long as you do 15 of those a month, you'll make 50% on your money MONTHLY. If you a little better, with 5% per trade, you'll double your money. Follow the chart."
Seems like a pretty good deal, no? Follow the chart; double your money every month. Of course, it ignores realities like losing a third or more of each gain to taxes, but we can assume a tax-free Roth IRA, can't we?
Let's.
And let's take a look at just how great those returns would be. If you started with just a thousand bucks and doubled it that first month, you'd have two grand. Not too shabby. Double it again next month? Four grand. And so on.
My, how fast that money piles up.
In month 12, your Nest Egg would already be at $2,048,000. If you think that's great, wait until year three is up. By then, you'd have $34 trillion, or twice the value of all the stocks listed on the NYSE and the Nazz.
Oddly enough, this farcical "system" is suggested to me with surprising frequency, usually from folks trading in the likes of hot tamales like Travelzoo (Nasdaq: TZOO) or Ipix (Nasdaq: IPIX). Every one of these folks thinks they're smarter, faster, or meaner than the rest of the sharks in the lagoon. Each one thinks he's got the system that will let him see just enough of the future to eke out those tiny little gains every day and double that money time and time again.
Of course, if these people could trade like this, why would they bother trying to sell the know-how to you, much less give it away for free? Why don't they just collect their trillions and retire to their tropical islands?
عليكم الترجمة