By now you know that my stock-picking process has two parts:
the first to identify stocks worthy of further analysis, the second to use both
fundamental and technical analysis to help decide which, whether, and when.
Also:
By now you know I especially value AAII and VectorVest as resources for investors seeking
opportunities for investment in stocks. There are others. For example:
• The
Street, where Jim Cramer provides his Action Alerts and much, much more.
And:
• DecisionPoint,
where the charting is done for you, not just as assistance with analysis but
also for alerts to market bottoms and tops for those of us who try to buy low
and sell high. And:
• finance.Yahoo.com,
where basic charting is easy and quick to do, where analysis is easy and
quick, and where coverage includes not only investing but also personal finances. And:
• Financial
Visualizations, which provides a ranking of stocks that might ease your
search for stocks worthy of your fundamental and technical analysis.
• Morningstar,
which provides its own quality ratings of
stocks and funds.
• Nasdaq,
where analysts’ consensus shows us recommendations to buy, hold, or
sell. And:
• NYSE (New York Stock
Exchange), which lets us store up to 20 stocks for easy following and has the basic, intermediate, and
advanced word on stocks, bonds, options, ETFs, ETVs, ETNs, funds, futures, and
more.
• StockCharts.com, where one can get free tutoring on the McClellan
Oscillator and other useful charts. And:
• Value Line, which provides an astonishing amount
of analytic information in a one-page report on each of an enormous number
of stocks.
• Zacks, which
covers all aspects of individual investing, including its own recommended “best
stocks.”
That’s not a complete listing of resources I like, but it is a pretty good start.
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