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Archive for July, 2012

Dave Ramsey on Term Life Insurance and Whole Life Insurance

July 30th, 2012 15 comments

http://www.integritymarketingseo.com Dave Ramsey speaks out onTerm Life Insurance vs. Whole Life Insurance. Check out more personal finance videos and Step by Step Guides about Term Life Insurance, Whole Life Insurance, Debt, Investing, and Financial Planning with Suze Orman, Dave Ramsey, and Greg Olney here at http://www.youtube.com/PersonalFinanceMoney

Suze Orman, Dave Ramsey, Term Life Insurance, Whole Life Insurance, Cash Value, Universal Life Insurance, Variable Life Insurance, Person Finance, Money Management, Life Insurance Tips, Life Insurance Basics, Personal Finance 101, Basics and Tips.

http://www.lifeinsuranceira401kinvestments.com/SanBernardino-ca

Duration : 0:3:0

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Presenting the Personal Finance Olympics! (Win $1000!)

July 30th, 2012 No comments

Learn more and join the Olympics yourself here: http://www.gobankingrates.com/personal-finance-olympics/presenting-the-personal-finance-olympics-2012/

Email your submissions to us at pfolympics [at] gobankingrates [dot] com

FinCon12 and GoBankingRates.com are teaming up to honor the best personal finance experts in the industry. Following the format of the Olympic Games, participants will compete against each other in qualifying heats by submitting articles that address any of 4 topics, selected by Go Banking Rates staff, then move on to the finals for a chance to win a gold, silver or bronze medal and a $1,000, $250 or $100 cash prize, based on garnering the most votes from readers who enjoy their articles.

You may enter one or all of the following 4 categories:
Approaches to Building and Using Credit
Strategies for Getting out of Debt
Best Ways to Earn and Save Money
Cutting-Edge Banking Technology

Please note that all entries should be published work from 2012, or original content.

First, second and third place winners in each category will move on to the finals — at which point we will announce the final topic to be written on. The three winners of the final games will be awarded medals at FinCon during the official Medal Ceremony.
Additionally, the first place winner will receive a $1,000 American Express Gift Card; second place winner will earn a $250 American Express Gift Card; third place winner will collect a $100 American Express Gift Card.

Duration : 0:2:26

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40. How To Determine Where to Put Your Initial Stop Loss Order

July 30th, 2012 21 comments

http://www.informedtrades.com/

A less on how traders determine their initial stop levels when trading the stock, futures, and forex markets.

In our last lesson we looked at the difficulty of overcoming a loss in the market to further emphasize the importance of protecting your trading capital as a critical component of any successful trading strategy. In today’s lesson we are going to start to look at the first and one of the best ways of protecting one’s trading capital, setting your initial stop.

As we learned about in our lesson on the effects of trading losses, 50% or more of the trades made by many successful trading strategies are losers. These trading strategies and traders are successful not because they are highly accurate on a trade by trade basis, but because when they are wrong they cut their losses quickly and when they are right they let their profits run. While the trading strategy that you eventually end up trading for yourself may have a higher success rate than what I mention above, any strategy is going to have loosing trades, so the first key to staying in the game is to have a plan for managing those losses so they do not get out of control and wipe out your chances for success.

With this in mind, what most traders will start with when designing a plan for setting their initial stop loss is the amount they can afford to loose on a per trade basis without having a detrimental affect on their account. While this varies from trader to trader and from strategy to strategy, as Dr. Alexander Elder mentions in his book Trading for a Living, many studies have shown that strategies and traders who risk more than 2% of their overall trading capital on any one trade are rarely successful over the long term. From what I have seen most traders risk way more than this on an individual trade basis, another large contributor to the high failure rate among traders.

Traders who set their per trade risk level at 2% of their trading capital or less, not only put themselves in a situation where a fairly lengthy string of losses will not knock them out of the game, but also put themselves in a situation where any one trade is not going to make or break their account. This is important not only from a money management standpoint but also from a psychological standpoint in that they are not attached to any one trade and are therefore more likely to stick to their strategy.

In order to have a true understanding of what this number should be for a specific strategy you will need to know what the expected accuracy rate is for the strategy, something which will cover in later lessons. For now however it is sufficient to simply understand that you need to have a feel for how much you plan to risk on a per trade basis as a first step in designing a successful money management strategy, and that you should be very wary of any strategy which risks more than 2% of your trading capital on any one trade.

Now that we understand that determining how much to risk per trade is the first step in any successful money management strategy, we can move on to other methods of setting your initial stop which fit within the limit set by the amount a trader is willing to risk on a per trade basis.

As always if you have any questions or comments please leave them in the comments section below so we can all learn to trade together, and good luck with your trading!

Duration : 0:3:16

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What are some great Personal Finance and Investing books you recommend I read?

July 27th, 2012 2 comments

I am 25.

Couple books are really good:

Technical Analysis for Financial Market by John Murphy
Stock Trader’s Almanac by Jeff Hirsch
All About Market Timing
Unexpected Return
The Secrete of US economic indicators

Couple website are really good:
http://www.stockcharts.com

Home


http://www.incrediblecharts.com

You are young, if you learn invest the right way. you will be wealthy. STAY out of DEBT at all cost.

I start saving and investing at your age. about 11 years later, My 401k is about 100k, my Roth Ira is about 21000.00. Cash on hand is about 30,000.00. If I can do it, so can you.

Four main step you should consider investing:
1/ Fundamental analysis
2/ Technical analysis
3/ Sentiment Analysis/ Contrarian Analysis
4/ Seasonal cycle like " Sell in May, Go away", or how Presidential Election cycle affect the financial market.

What can I do to improve my blog http://www.NewMoola.com ?

July 27th, 2012 1 comment

It’s a personal finance website. What type of content would you like to see on it?

So far, I have book reviews, ways to create new sources of income, and more.

http://www.NewMoola.com

you could add a pause feature on the scrolling ads at the top. I tried to click on it and it scrolled to the next pic then took me to read the next article instead of the one I was interested in.
If you are wanting to attract people to the site then you could write about the scams on the internet and lists true sites for work at home and MOM jobs like the marketing jobs you find at www.narms.com .
You could also add a list on the left side for a site map.
I’d like to see real work at home jobs on there, if they even exist. I’ve been through all of them and got scammed every time.
EDIT: you really aren’t getting much feedback. I think you should post this again. People really need to be more educated about money considering the state of affairs dealing with money these days.
Repost it as a general question by saying "what info would be most important for you to learn about money. What do want to know about money that you haven’t yet found out on the internet"
Good Luck

Business and finance – personal finance?

July 27th, 2012 1 comment

2. I think this year I will come under AMT. Do you suggest some tips to avoid ? any best suggestion would be appreciated (Business and finance – personal finance)

If you don’t have a tax guy, get a copy of Turbo tax and run some calculations on various scenarios that can help you minimize AMT.

Has my iPhone been hacked into by SMS?

July 27th, 2012 3 comments

About two days ago, I read something about if you get a text message that just has a single space in it and nothing else, it could mean you possibly got hacked into. Here’s the article:http://ca.finance.yahoo.com/personal-finance/article/forbes/1185/how-to-hijack-every-iphone-in-the-world
I got one from my friend and he says he doesn’t remember sending anything like that, so does that mean I got hacked into or did Apple already fix it up?

It is better to ring your phone company to find out. Their engineers can check it for you. Good luck!

Can an Accountant help with budgeting and personal finance?

July 27th, 2012 5 comments

I’m currently studying accounting at college and plan to be an accountant/financial professional with possibly opening a financial services firm eventually. My question is, besides taxes, can being an accountant serve any advantage with budgeting and smart spending?

Accounting is the basis for all financial matters. For background clients like to see CPA and CFP on your business card. So you would want to start as a tax person at a large CPA firm since taxes are basic to all financial planning and then get into planning and investments.

What is the best personal finance software that can be accessed online and on a mobile device?

July 27th, 2012 2 comments

I have really enjoyed quicken on my desktop, but I would like for both me and my husband to have access, preferably from anywhere, which means it would need to be something we can log into online, and on blackberries. I have tried quicken online but the interface is awful. Mint has a great interface but no way to enter pending transactions…
searched thompson and got a bunch of press releases, but nothing about personal financial software.

Have you looked in to Geezeo? I haven’t tried it myself, but have seen it many times when reading articles about Mint.

I personally use YNAB and even though it isn’t available online, I can’t see myself switching from it anytime soon.

How to buy a car with a loan? I know the basics but…?

July 27th, 2012 1 comment

I want to know if I would actually get approved for financing.

I start my job (out of college) in June. I have the offer that I accepted back in October for $59,000 per year. I am looking to get a car that is somewhere in the price range of $10,000-$15,000. I will have roughly $80,000-$60,000 in student loan debt but I have a credit score of around 750.

Would I get approved for a loan before I start my job or have to wait until after my first paycheck? Would I get approved at all?

What is the lowest amount I can/should put as a down payment?

Should I go to a bank and get a personal loan or just get one through the used car dealer?

Sorry for all the questions! Thanks!!

If you are a first time buyer you’re gonna need at least $3000 to $4000 for down payment. Tell them that you are employed and hope they don’t ask you to show them a paycheck. Otherwise you’re not gonna get a loan. You should better go to the dealer and get a loan through him.