Penny Stock Picks
For some time, I’ve been doing research on many of these websites that offer you free e-mails that will inform you on buying penny stocks that will make you money. It’s amazing how many websites are out there that are doing that exact thing. But are they really helping anyone make any money with their penny stock picks?
Let’s start with the concept of someone giving you free advice on which stock to buy and when to buy it. What’s in it for them? That’s the first question that comes to mind when I think of these websites. If they send you free e-mails and don’t ask you for any money on return, then how do they make their money? To get one thing straight… getting a tip on a stock is not the way to play the stock market. You need to do your own research on the stock that you are looking to purchase. Don’t be what I refer to as being a penny stock chaser.
These websites are more designed to get others to buy into stocks that they’ve already set up a position in and are waiting for the “new” investors to jump on the band-wagon and cause the price to go up. When that happens, they will scale out of their position and leave those who are not as quick to get out before the price drops back to where it was.
In my research of these websites, I signed up for their e-mails and track how the stock moved. In many of these cases ( over 85%), I would never own or invest into any of these stocks. Their balance sheet and the financial reports of these companies did not look good. As a matter of fact, one company in particular WDAS.PK, was being hyped by three different websites. What did the stock do from the e-mails? What happened was unbelievable. The first alert was on Sunday Oct. 11th. Telling their subscribers to buy at $0.05, but when the stock opened on Monday it was at $.40. Updated alerts went on stating that the climb wasn’t over and to buy at $0.40 – $1.20 per share. I will say that those who timed it well, made a ton of money if they sold their shares around $1.85 – $2.00. It hit a high of $2.00 before closing at $1.85. In just two trading days it closed at $0.48.
During the entire 10 trading days from when they first talked about WDAS.PK, the stock went up and back down again to where the ride started at. As of this past Friday, Nov. 20th, it closed at $.20 per share. Was it good to “play” this stock tip? Only if you were able to watch the day to day activity of the stock, was it worth it. The stock came down a lot quicker than it went up. I’m sure many didn’t get out in time and suffer a loss.
My advice to you is to do your own research and not to take anyone’s advice at face value. Just because someone or some website says it good, doesn’t make it so. I know it may be harder to do research on companies that trade on the pink sheets because usually these companies don’t have analyst watching them. Some information is out there, but you have to watch for fluff articles that publicist put out to help boast interest in the company.
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Things To Consider Before Buying Penny Stocks
Trading and buying penny stocks is best suited to those who are capable of dealing with the ups and downs of volatile markets and understanding the stock market basics. These stocks, named for their relative cheap costs, are typically issued by companies in prospecting industries where there is great risk involved. Often, geographical natural resource concerns with the potential to find mineral wealth on their lands need capital to perform their prospecting activities.
In order to fund these activities, they sell shares in their companies for attractively low prices in the hopes that they indeed find marketable quantities of the resource in question. In the event that they do indeed find what they are looking for, the value of the company increases by many factors resulting in amazing returns for investors. These stocks are incredible volatile for three main reasons: the first is that they are already trading in ‘pennies’ so a one penny increment can represent an enormous percentage difference in price.
Secondly, as investors await word from geophysical tests and explorations, the price is incredibly vulnerable to rumours of all kinds that one or another investor may feel is or is not applicable to the success or failure of that particular company.
The third reason that these stocks are so volatile is that they are often traded at incredibly small volumes leading them to be incredibly susceptible to buy or sell requests from speculators.
Unfortunately, these stocks are also vehicles for dishonesty and insider trading. In the case of BRE-X, for example, the stocks price increased by many multiples on news that resources were found that would result in unprecedented profits. Such news gave an incredible injection of positive will towards the company and many people invested their entire life’s savings, only to find that these results were fraudulent and that the company did not in fact have any basis for their reports, but making millions of dollars for those responsible in the meantime as they allowed their stocks to increase in value, and selling before the collapse was exposed. Caution should always be practiced when buying and selling penny stocks.
Tags: Buying Penny Stocks, insider trading, invest, investor, investors, penny stock, Penny Stocks, profit, profits, risk, speculators, volatile marketsRelated posts
Consider Buying Penny Stocks
If you’re searching for ways to increase your investment returns you may have considered buying penny stocks. “Penny” stocks are common shares, listed on stock exchanges or the over-the-counter market Pink sheets, that trade for less than a dollar.
There’s a common perception that they are very risky, and there is some truth to this. The risk is not caused by the low price of the penny stocks. Many foreign exchanges typically price even their blue-chips in share prices which are less than a dollar. And because penny shares are not marginable in North American brokerage accounts – which means your broker won’t lend money against their value – they are actually less risky than stocks that trade for higher prices, as the most you can lose with pennies is your initial investment.
But there are some ways in which penny stocks are riskier than stocks that trade for higher prices if you’re not good at understanding the stock market. They tend to be smaller companies, and thus their management is not typically comparable in quality to that larger companies where the remuneration paid to executives can be much higher. Their smaller capitalizations make them more subject to insider manipulation. And they tend to be involved in riskier enterprises such as mining exploration.
In addition to the added risk, there are some other difficulties in trading penny stocks which you should consider. Institutional investors – such as mutual funds and pension funds – avoid them because they are too illiquid to buy in large quantities. This creates a problem for the retail investor as well. If you accumulate a large position in a penny stock you may find it very difficult to reduce your position. There simply may not be enough buyers who wish to buy your stock on any given day. In fact, some penny stocks are so illiquid that they do not trade every day. This illiquidity leads to another problem in trading them: the large bid-ask spreads. The bid-ask spread is the difference between the bid price and the asking price of a share.
In penny stocks it can sometimes be very large, with the difference representing a large percentage of the share’s value. With penny stocks it’s important not to put in market orders unless you’re confident that the spread is small, and that there is sufficient volume trading to fill your order. Otherwise, make it a practice only to use limit orders, and be patient. Volatility is another problem with penny stocks. For this reason you should generally avoid using stop-losses, particularly with very thinly traded issues, as you can easily be stopped out of a position simply by routine trading swings.
Penny stocks are risky, but they can also be rewarding. Returns of 100 percent, 500 percent, or even 1000 percent or more do happen. And since you can only lose a maximum of 100 percent on any single trade, you don’t need to pick a winner every time in order to make a significant return on your investment. Just be sure to limit the portion of your portfolio invested in penny stocks, and then pick a basket of them, rather than putting all of your money into a single name or two. Trading penny stocks can increase your investment returns, provided you trade them with caution, and are fully aware
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