Tuesday, 17 July 2012

Daily trading tips - Gold Silver Copper tips

Commodity market update: 17july 2012 100% accuracy

Commodity type: Gold
Transaction: Sell
Target: T1-29190 T2-29140
Stop/Loss: 19315

Commodity type: Silver
Transaction: Buy
Target: T1-53050 T2-53250
Stop/Loss: 52450

Commodity type: Copper
Transaction: Buy
Target: T1-428 T2-430
Stop/Loss: 423

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Monday, 25 June 2012

Daily trading tips - Gold Silver Tips - Copper updates on mobile

Commodity market update: 25th June 2012


Commodity type: Gold
Transaction: Sell
Target: T1-29780 T2-29730
Stop/Loss: 29930


Commodity type: Silver
Transaction: Sell
Target: T1-52400 T2-52100
Stop/Loss: 53050


Commodity type: Copper
Transaction: Sell
Target: T1-413.50 T2-411.50
Stop/Loss: 418.50


Source: Profit.biz
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Thursday, 7 June 2012

Final chance to survive europe on euro crisis

Since the eurozone crisis started more than two years ago, skeptics have been quick to dismiss the simmering problem as much ado about nothing.
Shoot, they're just a bunch of socialists getting their comeuppance, right? And the Greek economy is insignificantly small, at around $300 billion. That's worth just 2% of the U.S. gross domestic product.
While the financial markets have been jumpy over the issue since it started, the slow, drip-drip deterioration of the situation across the Atlantic has started to bite in very real ways. The unemployment rate is rising again here at home, factory activity has stalled around the world, and much of Europe has fallen into a new recession.
According to Bank of America Merrill Lynch economist Ethan Harris, there are "growing signs of a synchronized global slowdown." From China to India, Hong Kong and Australia, GDP forecasts are being slashed as global trade slows. Harris sees "a significant risk of a global recession" later this year or in early 2013.
As a result, something that once seemed innocuous and maybe a little funny has assumed a deadly seriousness. There's a key date to mark on your calendar: June 17. That's the date of the next parliamentary election in Greece. And without substantial action between now and then, the situation gets much worse for everyone.

Europe divided

In the context of all of this, the political fabric that binds the eurozone together is fraying badly, as countries and institutions group themselves into two corners.
Troubled nations including Spain and Greece -- supported by Italy, France and the European Commission -- want more leniency and help as they try to rebalance their economies, address structural inefficiencies, pay down debt, close budget deficits, recapitalize banks and return to growth -- all at the same time.
This pro-growth bloc is pushing hard for things like a eurozone bank deposit insurance program (ending bank runs via a eurozone version of the FDIC, the deposit insurance program in the U.S.) using eurozone bailout funds to recapitalize weak banks (instead of making Spain's government help its banks, which would take pressure off of its budget deficit); and the issuance of "eurobond" debt backed by the entire eurozone (to push down borrowing costs for troubled nations). They also want the European Central Bank to step up its stimulus efforts.

The pro-austerity bloc, including Germany and the Netherlands, wants progress on things like economic reforms, constitutional commitments to balanced budgets and state asset sales before any of this happens. The worry is that cheap money, in the form of ECB loans to the financial system, could unleash dangerously high inflation.

Salvos are being exchanged, and positions are hardening. The ECB is caught somewhere in the middle, with its executive board dominated by pro-growth nationals while the German Bundesbank still wields enormous influence.
You can see who is ahead in this debate in the results of the recent French presidential election, which replaced pro-austerity Nicolas Sarkozy with pro-growth François Hollande. This has changed the balance of power and has emboldened the pro-growth faction.
What we have now is an epic game of chicken spiced with daily doses of rumor and conjecture about who will win.


Commodity tips | forex tips | stock tips

Tuesday, 17 April 2012

MCX-SX Tips,Copper Tips,Gold Tips,Crude tips,Silver Tips 17apr 2012

Commodity Market update 17Apr 2012

Commodity type: Gold
Transaction: Buy
Target:  T1-28620 T2-28670
Stop/Loss:  28490

Commodity type: Silver
Transaction: Buy
Target: T1-56200 T2-56400
 Stop/Loss:  55600

Commodity type: Crude
Transaction: Buy
Target: T1-5340 T2-5360
 Stop/Loss: 5280

Commodity type: Copper
Transaction: Sell
 Target:  T1-409 T2-407
Stop/Loss: 415.50

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Monday, 16 April 2012

Daily MCX Tips,Copper Tips,Silver,Gold Tips,Crude Tips 16Apr 2012

Commodity Market update

Commodity type: Gold
Transaction: Sell
Target:  T1-28500 T2-28450
Stop/Loss:  28655

Commodity type: Silver
Transaction: Sell
Target: T1-55400 T2-55200
Stop/Loss: 56000

Commodity type: Crude
Transaction: Sell
Target: T1-5240 T2-5220
Stop/Loss: 5320

Commodity type: Copper
Transaction: Sell
 Target:  T1-406.50 T2-405
Stop/Loss: 412.50

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Friday, 13 April 2012

Crude tips - MCX tips - Copper tips - gold silver tips 13Apr 2012

Commodity Market update

Commodity type: Gold
Transaction: Buy
Target:  T1-28800 T2-28850
Stop/Loss:  28670

Commodity type: Silver
Transaction: Buy
Target: T1-57100 T2-57300
Stop/Loss: 56550

Commodity type: Crude
Transaction: Buy
Target: T1-5340 T2-5360
Stop/Loss: 5275

Commodity type: Copper
Transaction: Buy
 Target:  T1-418 T2-420
Stop/Loss: 414

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Wednesday, 11 April 2012

Gold copper tips - Intraday tips - Crude tips - 11Apr 2012

Commodity Market update

Commodity type: Gold
Transaction: Sell
Target:  T1-28480 T2-28430
Stop/Loss:  28600

Commodity type: silver
Transaction: Sell
Target: T1-55850 T2-55650
Stop/Loss: 56450

Commodity type: Crude
Transaction: Sell
Target: T1-5210 T2-5190
Stop/Loss: 5285

Commodity type: Copper
Transaction: Sell
Target:  T1-417 T2-415
Stop/Loss: 422

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Tuesday, 10 April 2012

Copper tips - crude tips - gold market tips - commodity tips 10 apr 2012

Commodity Market update

Commodity type: Gold
Transaction: Buy
Target: T1-28410 T2-28460
Stop/Loss: 28270

Commodity type: silver
Transaction: Sell
Target: T1-55650 T2-55555
Stop/Loss: 56250

Commodity type: Crude
Transaction: Sell
Target: T1-5200 T2-5180
Stop/Loss: 5270

Commodity type: Copper
Transaction: Sell
Target: T1-422 T2-420
Stop/Loss: 426.50

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Monday, 9 April 2012

copper tips - gold trading - crude updates - silver commodity tips 9april 2012

Commodity Market update

Commodity type: Gold
Transaction: Buy
Target: T1-28370 T2-28420
Stop/Loss: 28240

Commodity type: silver
Transaction: Buy
Target: T1-56650 T2-56850
Stop/Loss: 56050

Commodity type: Crude
Transaction: Buy
Target: T1-5285 T2-5300
Stop/Loss: 5210

Commodity type: Copper
Transaction: Sell
Target: T1-428 T2-426.50
Stop/Loss: 433

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Wednesday, 4 April 2012

Copper updates - crude oil - gold trading tips - silver tips 4Apr 2012

Commodity Market update

Commodity type: Gold
Transaction: Sell
Target: T1-28250 T2-28200
Stop/Loss: 28390

Commodity type: silver
Transaction: Sell
Target: T1-56850 T2-56600
Stop/Loss: 57400

Commodity type: Crude
Transaction: Buy
Target: T1-5345 T2-5370
Stop/Loss: 5275

Commodity type: Copper
Transaction: Buy
Target: T1-441.50 T2-443
Stop/Loss: 437.50

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Tuesday, 3 April 2012

Copper updates - gold silver tips - crude oil trading - commoity market 3april 2012

Commodity Market update

Commodity type: Gold
Transaction: Buy
Target: T1-28620 T2-28670
Stop/Loss: 28480

Commodity type: silver
Transaction: Sell
Target: T1-57000 T2-56800
Stop/Loss: 57600

Commodity type: Crude
Transaction: Buy
Target: T1-5350 T2-5370
Stop/Loss: 5270

Commodity type: Copper
Transaction: Buy
Target: T1-440.50 T2-442
Stop/Loss: 435.30

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Thursday, 29 March 2012

How to invest in a zigzag economy?

Are you in the right sectors of the stock market for this point in the economic recovery? Solid data stretching back to 1945 show that certain industries and sectors outperform during specific stages of any economic recovery.

No argument from me on that. I think investors should do everything they can to put the power of the economic cycle behind their portfolios.

What is the economic cycle?

Just a couple of questions, though: Where exactly are we in the economic cycle? And in the new global economy, does it still make sense to think about over- or underweighting sectors, just on the basis of where the U.S. stands in the economic cycle?

My answers to those questions are complicated (and take up the rest of this column). The short response is that the U.S. economy is in the early recovery stage of the economic cycle. That means you should be overweighting the sectors that do best in that stage: basic materials, as well as industrials near the beginning of this stage and energy near the end.

But my best estimate is that the global economy is further along in the recovery cycle, and that this is especially true for emerging economies. I think the global economy has made the transition from early to late-stage recovery. That means that for foreign stock holdings (and for U.S. companies that rely on sales in the developing world for growth), you should be overweighting those sectors that do best in the late stage of the recovery cycle. Energy typically does well in this stage, and, near the end of the stage, consumer staples and services also tend to prosper.

Confused yet? Let me explain now in more depth and lay out a way for you to position your portfolio for this unique moment in the global economic cycle. I'll end by suggesting a few stocks that I think fit our rather complicated picture.
A primer on the economic cycle

The best work on this subject comes from Sam Stovall, the chief investment strategist for Standard & Poor's Equity Research. His 1996 book, "Sector Investing," is still the best resource on the subject.

Stovall divides the economic cycle into four stages:

Early recession. You should remember this stage vividly. Consumer sentiment ranges from fear to terror. Industrial production plunges, interest rates peak and then start to fall, and unemployment begins to rise rapidly. Sectors that have done well -- relatively, at least -- during this stage include services (near the beginning), utilities, and (near the end of the stage) cyclicals and transportation stocks.
Full recession. Gross domestic product tumbles, interest rates keep falling, and unemployment rises. Sectors that do best during this stage historically have been cyclicals and transportation. Technology performs well at the beginning of the stage; industrials benefit near the end.
Early recovery. Consumer sentiment improves, industrial production turns up, interest rates hit bottom, and unemployment peaks and starts to move lower. Sectors that do best are usually industrials (near the beginning of this stage), basic materials and energy (near the end).
Late recovery. Interest rates rise as the central bank tries to control inflation, consumer sentiment heads down, and industrial production is flat. Sectors that have done well in this stage include energy and, (near the end of the stage) consumer staples and services.
Is the recovery real?

In 2009, it seemed we were well along the path to recovery. The economy had bottomed in the second quarter with U.S. GDP contracting by 0.7%. The economy then grew by 1.6% in the third quarter and by a huge 5% in the fourth quarter.

The recovery was off and running. In January 2010, I wrote that we were in the early recovery stage of the economic cycle.

And then the economy double-crossed us. In 2010, GDP growth dropped to 3.7% in the first quarter and to 1.7% in the second quarter.

1.7%? Wasn't that just about the 1.6% growth investors had seen back in the third quarter of 2009?

No wonder lots of economists and investors started to worry that we were headed to a double-dip recession -- and that the next quarter would show a drop back to something like the negative 0.7% growth of the second quarter of 2009. But luckily, the economy decided that it had at least one more zigzag up its sleeve. Economic growth accelerated to 2.6% in the third quarter of 2010 and now economists are expecting 3.5% growth for the fourth quarter of 2010.

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Wednesday, 7 March 2012

10 rules for novice traders

If you are going to day trade, it's essential to have a set of rules to manage any possible scenario. Even more important, you must have the discipline to follow the rules.

Sometimes, in the heat of battle, traders will throw out their rules and play it by ear -- usually with disastrous results.

Although there are many rules, the following are the 10 most important:
1. Know your 3 E's: enter, exit, escape

This is the first rule for a reason. Before you press the "enter" key to execute a trade, you must know at what price to get in, when to get out and what to do if the trade doesn't work out as expected.

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Escaping a trade -- also known as using a stop price -- is essential if you want to minimize losses. Knowing when to get in or out will help you to lock in profits, as well as save you from potential disasters.
2. Refrain from trading until 15 minutes after the market opens

Those first 15 minutes of market action are often a time of panic trades or market orders placed the night before. Novice day traders should avoid making moves during this time, while looking for reversals. If you're looking to make quick profits, it's best to wait until you're able to spot rewarding opportunities. Even many pros avoid the market open.

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3. Use limit orders, not market orders

A market order simply tells your broker to buy or sell at the best available price. Unfortunately, best price doesn't necessarily mean the trade will be profitable.

The drawback to market orders was revealed during the May 2010 "flash crash." When market orders were triggered on that day, many sell orders were filled at 10, 15 or 20 points lower than anticipated.

A limit order, however, lets you control the maximum price you'll pay or the minimum price at which you'll sell. You set the parameters.
4. Avoid using margin

When you use margin, you are borrowing money from your brokerage to finance all or part of a trade. Full-time day traders (i.e. pattern day traders) are usually allowed 4:1 intraday margin. That means a trader with a $30,000 trading account will be given enough buying power to purchase $120,000 worth of securities. Overnight, however, the margin requirement is still 2:1.

When used properly, margin can leverage, or increase, potential returns. The problem is that if a trade goes against you, margin will increase losses.

One of the reasons that day trading got a bad name a decade ago was because of margin. Some people cashed in their 401k's or borrowed bundles of money to finance their trades. When a major bull market ended in 2000, many of those traders' accounts were devastated. The bottom line for novice traders: Learn how to day trade stocks without using margin.
5. Have a selling plan

Many rookies spend most of their time thinking about stocks they want to buy without considering when to sell. Before you enter the market, you need to know in advance when to exit, hopefully with a profit.

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Thursday, 1 March 2012

When investing, it’s all right to be wrong

In 1973, the Kreditbanken (bank) at Norrmalmstorg in Stockholm was attacked by robbers, who held bank employees hostage for five days. After the drama, it was evident that the hostages sympathized with their captors, even though they were held against their will. The situation is now considered an academic study — the Stockholm Syndrome — where people get emotionally attached to people who obviously try to do them harm.

More apparent, perhaps was the case of Jaycee Lee Dugard, who was held for 18 long years — from 1991 to 2009 — but got so emotionally attached to her abductor that she even helped him in his business and met customers. Being an unwilling hostage, or in other cases, just being in an unwelcome situation with no way out, makes us rationalize in favor of our position.

Less dramatically, we become hostage to our own opinion. We simply can't let go of what we believe is "normal", even in the face of facts. If your blood tests show you have a high cholesterol level, your immediate reaction is to hope the problem will go away on its own, or imagine that the tests were incorrect. A person abused at work — sometimes with lewd suggestions — will initially justify it as harmless workplace banter. The victims of a drunken driving accident will side with the driver saying how good a driver he "usually" is. We simply don't want to see it, even if we know it.

In the financial world, our beliefs are tested often. In 2011, the markets fell over 24%, with the situation in December as dire as it could be; the government was running out of money, industry was slowing down, inflation was high and everything looked bleak. In January 2012, we saw the Nifty and Sensex rise 12%, with no apparent improvement in any of the other pieces of data. This rise has bewildered most analysts, who continue to believe, at every stage, that the market will reverse back down. Consistently, nearly every day, the market sees a rise, but the sage opinion is that this is a fake rally, and that this will come down like a ton of bricks.

It might. The analysis may be spot on, that the Indian story has hit a pause button and not worthy of very high valuations. But at some point, we need to admit that the tide has turned, and prices keep moving north. Our conviction is worth the paper it was never written on — but we carry the weight of it on our shoulders altogether too long. Such irrationality can cost money —a trader that stays short despite a stop loss being broken, almost in anger against such a furiously rising market, continues to lose until eventually giving up. An investor who decides a stock is great and watches it fall, keeps buying until the stock becomes an abnormally large investment, and later feels serious regret when other stocks do better.

If you strongly believed in the Indian telecom story, it was lost on the stocks. From Bharti Airtel to Reliance Communications, the stock prices are way lower than their highs in 2007. We have more air travel than ever before, but airline stocks are in the doldrums. India is spending an enormous amount of money on infrastructure, but the road-builders and power-plant-owners are scraping the bottom of the barrel in the markets. Yet, the question I first get when I say all this is: "Good time to buy?"

The correct way to deal with markets is to expect to be wrong. You have to consciously look for information that counters your thought process. If banks are supposed to be in trouble, then look at their positive results, and look at how strongly the RBI is supporting the system. If buying IT companies on a falling rupee sounds exciting, consider reports that customers are quite aware of the fall and demand corresponding concessions, which they don't reverse easily as the rupee recovers. If you like to buy stocks when they make a new one-year-low, test out how many times you would have made money investing in a broad array of such stocks in the past. (I have checked, and results are horrendously negative at a portfolio level though there are a few that will shine)

It's not easy to stay fluid and keep switching sides as the tide turns — society values loyalty much more than rationality. Being wrong is okay, but staying wrong is evil; in the markets, we can't get married to our opinion.

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Friday, 24 February 2012

How to Profit From Moving Stock

When Forest Oil(FST_) announced in late 2010 that it would spin off its Canadian energy fields in a new company called Lone Pine Resources(LPR_), investors shrugged.

But investors who bought the parent of the spin-off when the deal was completed on Oct. 3, 2011, are glad to have waited. Since then, shares of Forest Oil have moved up from $9 to a recent $14. (Shares dropped from $15 to $9 in early October when the spin-off took effect, pushing shares up to an equivalent of $20 when the value of the spin-off is included).

The key catalyst: Forest's remaining business has become much easier for investors to assess.

Perhaps the main takeaway is that you should hold off buying a company when it announces a plan to spin off a division. Instead, you should pounce when the deal is done. Not only has Forest Oil rebounded more than 50% after the event took place, but Lone Pine Resources is up more than 20% since early October as well.

Just one day after that deal was done, on Oct. 4, 2011, Fortune Brands(FO_), a diversified conglomerate, cleaned up its act by spinning out its liquor business, now known as Beam(BEAM_). The remaining business, known as Fortune Brands Home & Security(FBHS_), became more of a pure play on the company's security and home construction businesses. Since then, shares of Fortune Brands are up 57%, while Beam is up 26%.

Look for more of these spin-offs to come.

Investment bankers, hurting for fresh ideas these days, are likely knocking on the door of any major corporation that will listen to their sales pitch. Breaking up into two or more pieces can be profitable for shareholders if the company is suffering from a "conglomerate discount." This term refers to a company's relatively low valuation because investors have a hard time assigning a price-to-earnings (P/E) multiple on a group of different businesses with varying growth rates.

As an example, recent media reports suggested that Cisco Systems(CSCO_) wanted to unload its cable-TV set-top box business, because the unit carried lower margins and smaller growth rates than Cisco's other businesses. In theory, Cisco would garner a higher P/E ratio if it was a faster-growing company with a higher margin profile. Cisco has since refuted the chatter, so this may be an event that takes place down the road -- if at all.

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Tuesday, 14 February 2012

Stock future will rise ahead U.S. data

U.S. stock futures rise after gains in Europe were, as investors awaited a batch of U.S. economic data.



Dow Jones Industrial Average ($ INDU 0.57%) to 12 848 futures up 13 points. S & P 500 ($ INX 0.00%) in 1350 was 1.2 points on the futures markets. Nasdaq (COMPX $ 0.00%) in the 2570 futures were 2.7 points.



Moody's Investors Service downgraded the debt of six European countries on the open market sentiment and reminded investors that the recession is in the shadows a long-term risk. Degraded countries, Italy and Spain, their Triple-A, like Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia and Malta are lost.


In Europe, a German investor confidence to its highest level in 10 months reading ZEW Centre for Economic Research in Mannheim, according to.



Germany, the DAX was 0.4%, while London's FTSE 0.12%. Japan's Nikkei index down 0.59%, and Hong Kong's Hang Seng was 0.15%.



At the same time, Greece with its European creditors to obtain approval for a rescue mission on track, investors may pay attention to the domestic economy Tuesday turn on the news.


U.S. retail sales for January rose to 0.9%, according to Thomson Reuters, will get to 0.1% last month to add. 08.30 Clock Department of Commerce will release its report on the amount

Saturday, 11 February 2012

Best Money website over internet

There are many other worthy sites out there, sites that, like these, are all about money: making it, spending it, saving it, investing it, protecting it.

But this is my list. These are the sites I like, the ones I consistently turn to for good information, solid advice, unique perspectives, really cool tools and, in at least a few cases, good laughs. They're sites that consistently offer something their competitors don't, which makes them worth investing my scarcest resources: time and attention.

If sites you love aren't on this list, sorry. But check these out anyway. I think you'll find some new favorites, too.
Big media sites (5)

What distinguishes these sites: resources. Professional journalists interview experts in various fields to offer uncommon insight and analysis.

Bucks: The New York Times' Bucks blog covers "consumer tactics" regarding money, which means an array of articles and posts about things that affect your wallet. High-quality reporting from Times columnist Ron Lieber and personal-finance reporter Tara Siegel Bernard make this blog a daily must-read.

Liz Weston

Liz Weston

Kiplinger Personal Finance: The oldest (and best) personal-finance magazine covers the gamut of money topics, from budgeting to travel, in an accessible way.

Planet Money: National Public Radio's economics team does a phenomenal job of explaining the often-complex and sometimes-obscure world of money in ways that real people can actually understand. Their podcasts about the financial crises, both here and in Europe, are required listening.

SmartMoney: The Wall Street Journal's personal-finance magazine offers a wealth of helpful tools as well as money news and advice.

Smart Spending: Yeah, it's cross-promotion, but MSN Money's Smart Spending blog is still one of my favorite places to check for savings tips, commentaries on frugality and a roundup of good deals around the Web.

US coupon craze turns to medical care
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Money bloggers (10)

Many of these sites started out as one-person operations. Some are still that way, while others have expanded with guest writers and staff bloggers to offer a wider array of content. Either way, they're worth reading.

Bargaineering: Jim Wang's blog offers plenty of good personal-finance content along with reviews of banks, credit card offers, books and products.

Consumerism Commentary: "Flexo," aka Luke Landes, started a trend by posting his assets and liabilities for everybody to see. He used the public exposure to hold himself accountable for learning more about money and reaching his financial goals. Now that he's blogged his way to solvency, he has staff writers and a regular podcast that covers the gamut of money topics.

Daily Worth: A site co-founded by my friend and former MSN Money colleague MP Dunleavey, Daily Worth describes itself as "a community of women who talk money." Its short, pithy articles offer a fresh take on financial matters of particular relevance to women.

The Dollar Stretcher: This granddaddy of frugal-living sites offers an enormous library of articles and tips that's constantly refreshed with new ideas. Even black-belt frugality experts will find new information here.

Financial Integrity: This is the site run by the New Road Map Foundation and Vicki Robin, a co-author of the seminal voluntary-simplicity guidebook "Your Money or Your Life." Learn the steps to create financial freedom and align your financial life with your personal values.

Get Rich Slowly: Blogger J.D. Roth dug his way out of debt and tells you how you can, too, with the help of a team of writers. An active community of readers provides additional insights and commentary.

PT Money: Philip Taylor finally hit the big time earlier this year when he attracted the notice of none other than Suze Orman, the queen bee of personal finance. She called him an "idiot." (Orman flipped out on Twitter after bloggers, including Taylor, criticized her new Approved prepaid card.) She later apologized. She really got this one wrong, since Taylor is a thoughtful personal-finance blogger who offers helpful reviews of financial products and services.

The Simple Dollar: Like Roth, Trent Hamm has experienced and conquered debt. He grew up in poverty and understands how early deprivation can lead to later disasters with money.

Surviving and Thriving: Donna Freedman is a contributor to MSN Money and Get Rich Slowly. She's also a good friend; we met and bonded at the Anchorage Daily News many moons ago. So I can tell you with confidence that she's one remarkable lady. Donna grew up poor, was a single mom for a while and was thrown back near the poverty line by her divorce. Her resilience, compassion and frugal chops are unmatched -- plus, she's wickedly funny.

Wise Bread: A variety of voices enlivens Wise Bread, a site devoted to "living large on a small budget." In addition to personal finance and frugal living, Wise Bread provides commentary on careers and "life hacks." Check out its list of 100-plus most popular personal-finance blogs for even more great sites to visit.

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Wednesday, 25 January 2012

Gold futures down slightly

Multi Commodity Exchange, gold for February delivery fell by 33 rupees or 0.12 percent, 1306 many a business with a turnover of Rs 27 477 per 10 grams.


Trend in the Asian region and a strong rupee, which hit the U.S. currency, especially the duck and gold futures prices rose for the week against the high -10 Analysts weak.

Rupee U.S. dollar business to determine the cost of imported goods in precious metals plays an important role.

Meanwhile, from 0.30 percent of gold fell to $ 1672.25 an ounce in early trade today in Singapore

Thursday, 5 January 2012

Copper trading tips and Guide : Future & Options

Copper futures: Copper, man, whose opportunities to know a product that directly reflects the state of the global economy, one of the oldest objects. Iron and aluminum, and industrial machinery used in construction and manufacturing industries, especially after the cycle is the world's third most widely used metal. Mining techniques to extract maximum profit from the metal depends on cost-effectiveness, and supply management organization in the state, particularly in copper mining, is sensitive to the political situation.

Copper was first worked about 7,000 years ago. The softness, color, and natural appearance, easily available and antique utensils, tools and weapons that can be arranged. Five thousand years ago and a new era of man-made production of bronze, copper alloy with tin know that. Copper was established as a matter of commercial value.

In the 20th century, new mining and smelting technology, the United States, it is possible to process low grade ore, copper markets, resulting in a dramatic expansion of the developed world.


Copper, copper futures traded on the exchange:

In the New York Mercantile Exchange, Commodity Exchange in August 1994 with the merger, Inc. became the world's largest physical commodity exchange.

COMEX Division copper futures markets, price transparency and market to protect all participants to stand alone and reliable protection for you. There is no exchange, and its Clearinghouse, financial services companies in the field of customer credit risk, some of the most highly regarded, each transaction represents the other side.

Furthermore, all relevant trading volume, open interest, an accurate, reliable, and timely statistical information provided, including the transfer of shares in easier fashion warehouse.

Security, subtle, complex systems, market participants and more spontaneously - without counter market manipulation and other foreign markets and a guarantee against defaults that are equally applicable.
Copper futures: Why Trade COMEX Division copper futures and options?

Creating a rewarding opportunity to benefit from fears of possible price changes.

COMEX Division offers businesses a number of advantages:

Contracts are financial instruments that are standardized by quality and quantity of liquid

Trading and risk management provides the ability to market opportunities.

COMEX division, copper prices are widely and immediately worked with the world reference price, are disseminated.

COMEX Division markets allow hedgers and investors tend to trade anonymously through futures brokers.

Depth distribution of basic goods market contract or receipt should be allowed to deteriorate easily.

If futures contracts are rarely required for the delivery and distribution, performance, of course, is used. Operations are executed on the exchange without counterparty risk.

Copper futures and options contracts, and some of the most respected names in banking and financial services industries, including the support of a strong financial system, COMEX Division clearing members, to support contract performance.

Exchange secure, fair and orderly markets to fund its aggressive defense and provides monitoring processes.

Copper futures

The internal distribution of goods is less than 1% of all metals futures contracts are sold each year as a result. Instead of the contracts before they mature, traders generally offset their futures positions. Offset the initial cost of buying or selling profit or loss is realized represents the difference between.

COMEX Division high grade copper futures trading and deliveries in the current calendar month for the next 23 months is continuing.
Copper futures options

Due to the nature of the global metal markets, their price may be volatile. Serious adverse price movements in the metal industry and other commercial markets for hedging against the uncertainty in the stock price had learned to cope. There are potential future, the primary risk management tool among the options when they are versatile, economical trading strategies open to a host.

Copper futures options on offer:

Buyers pay a premium option to reduce power losses.

Against an adverse price direction without foregoing the benefits of favorable price movements is the ability to hedge cash and futures positions.

Cost and availability of insurance risk management degrees at various levels of security.

Act aggressively or conservatively on the visual direction and volatility of copper prices is a way for businesses and investors.

Using a combination of options or futures contracts or copper updates

, no risk strategies, time horizon, or find the idea to cover the costs.

COMEX Division trading is selected for each of the following contract months: March, May, July, September and December last year. So for three months, business has always listed a series of months. Twenty-four months to 24 months in July or December copper options listed. At the end of American style options can be at any time.

Call options are there, and there are two types of points. Call option on a futures contract holder the right but not obligation to buy. Conversely, a put gives the right holder is responsible for the future to sell, but no. Premium is an option to buy or sell at any price.

Wednesday, 4 January 2012

Gold as an investment : Tips & Strategies

There will be no objection if i say that gold is one of the most sought after metals in the world. Such as gold and metal, which is due to its market value, investment. A number of empires and nations of this shiny piece of metal that has been fought for a long time.

A closer view of your portfolio invested in gold is the best way to start. If you invest in gold is not recommended to put your money at all, but you can also consider a number of other investment options. It is always useful for any new investor with a diversified investment portfolio. You should consider all options for buying gold.

Gold Investment for Beginners

Once the effects of the economic downturn we have seen on all our lives, homes, markets, and what is not lost. At the time of their investment is safe in the hands of the people who are trying to save people time. There is a safe investment, rather than invest in gold than others. Precious metals such as gold and silver as an investment in its portfolio an investor should be at least 25%.

Physical Gold
The first choice for beginner's guide to investing in physical gold, gold. Gold traders, gold stores, bars and gold coins can be purchased from private dealers, etc.

Gold Mutual Funds
Another great option is gold and gold mutual funds invest in is putting their money. When you sleep, but the various owners of physical gold by investing in gold mutual funds, not as the owner of the points. Funds such as mutual funds, gold mining and gold stocks ETF trading securities consist of various investments.

Gold Jewelry
If you have some historical relevance of jewelry to purchase, where a great design and very good condition, market rates may be very large. This means that gold prices will need to sleep more than ever, there are now skyrocketing.

Gold Mining Stocks
To invest in gold without actually buying the real thing, some another way to buy gold mining stocks. This investment is very volatile.

Now the question I should be investing in gold, arose? I can not say why.

Monday, 2 January 2012

Commodity trading tips - Gold Silver Copper updates

Commodity market trading update :

Commodity type: Gold
Transaction: sell
Target: T1-27250 T2-27170
Stop/Loss: 27450


Commodity type: silver
Transaction: Sell
Target: T1-50970 T2-50700
Stop/Loss: 51500


Commodity type: copper
Transaction: Sell
Target: T1-403 T2-401
Stop/Loss: Abv 408.70