seremify007
Junior Member
I rely on volume to make money, and I don't follow broker recommendations.
How do you pick stocks then? Do you read any other recommendations, i.e any particular source of info?I rely on volume to make money, and I don't follow broker recommendations.
Depends what it is relative to your net worth, and how much you are willing to lose. My minimum trade size now is much larger than that. My Orica holdings are worth like $500 more in capital alone, plus I received Dulux Group shares when they demerged (before the shares were bought back) and I think both entities have paid dividends over the years. I guess it's not too bad given it only cost me like $3.5k to buy in the first place but it was more out of laziness that I never sold such a small parcel.How much are they worth now?
Is 30k to much
The only news I read (for investing) is the live Reuters/Bloomberg updates which I receive from my dealers which is FX oriented but you can still create links with shares/equities. Once in a while I'll read a trading report/update from a bank or something. I tend to avoid mainstream news has already been read and reacted to on the mainstream so I tend not to use that at all- particularly editorial pieces.How do you pick stocks then? Do you read any other recommendations, i.e any particular source of info?
Guys, you'd be really stupid to miss this offer.I'm looking to trade my lvl 52 pikachu.
It has adamant nature and good IVs and EVs.
Hit me up.
1. You're young, I'm old. I started small too but then over time I realised that buying 1000-5000 shares at a time means that if something moves by even a small amount such as 50c which is quite easy on the ASX20 stocks, then I'm already making enough pocket change to buy something to eat for no capital outlay thanks to T+3You trade <30k minimum. You must be loaded.
But you do volume so I guess you would have to.
30k is everything I have. It's in a savings account at the moment
For someone still in school you are doing very well. Congratulations. You seem careful with your money. Should get far financially.I do have a term deposit. I meant to say my term deposit has 20k in and my bank had 10k in it. (matures next week so I'll bump my term despoit to 30k since I am under 18 and can't do much)
What kind of investment products are there?
My term deposit makes ~$1,500 a year so I might use that to buy stocks next year when they can be in my name
Not sure where you got that from but I thought it was 5% from January 1, 2012 onwards > http://www.ato.gov.au/individuals/content.aspx?menuid=0&doc=/content/00291063.htm&page=30&H30 . But this is when repaying HECS debt through the tax system rather than with the university. I remember receiving a letter from the ATO about it and deciding to repay my balance in full before my compulsory instalment last year.^as of 1/1/12 HECS discount rate reduced from 20% to 10%.
Just don't become complacent. A lot of people are great at being thrifty when they are young and not earning much but suddenly when money comes in their habits change significantly. I admit mine did too (coincided with when I realised I like cars) but I always ensured I saved at least a quarter of every dollar I earned.Thanks
I am lazy at spending, never really wanted anything big. I mostly spend small amounts if money on junk food after work. Then again I would only spend a few dollars on junk per shift
I'm talking about up-front payment, not repaying HECS debt.Not sure where you got that from but I thought it was 5% from January 1, 2012 onwards > http://www.ato.gov.au/individuals/content.aspx?menuid=0&doc=/content/00291063.htm&page=30&H30 . But this is when repaying HECS debt through the tax system rather than with the university. I remember receiving a letter from the ATO about it and deciding to repay my balance in full before my compulsory instalment last year..