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22 Ways to Avoid Losing Money

0221. Overtrading – Trading often with tight stops and tiny profit targets will only make the broker rich. The desire to “just” make a few thousand rupees a day by locking in tiny profits whenever possible is a losing strategy.
2. Over leveraged – Leverage is a two way street. The brokers want you to use high leverage because that means more spread income because your position size determines the amount of spread income; the bigger the position the more spread income the broker earns.
3. Relying on Others – Real traders play a lone hand; they make their own decisions and don’t rely on others to make their trading decisions for them; there is no halfway; either trade for yourself or have someone else trade for you.
4. Stop Losses – Putting tight stop losses with retail brokers is a recipe for disaster. When you put on a trade commit to a reasonable stop loss limit that allows your trade a fair chance to develop.
5. No Trading Plan – ‘Make money’ is not a trading plan. A trading plan is a blueprint for trading success; it spells out what you see your edge as being; if you don’t have an edge, you don’t have a plan, and likely you’ll wind up a statistic (part of the 95% of new traders that lose and quit). (more…)

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Have u Heard Any Analyst or Any Fund Manager at 9200 level of Nifty …………….Looking EXPENSIVE OR EXIT ?

At 8000-8100—Every Tom Dick & Harry says :Value Buying ,Worst is over……………..These Idiots Don’t know :Market Controlled by FIIS & Manipulated by Company People in India

Jokers :Talk about GDP ,INFLATION ,IIP Numbers…………….How many people know in India ?Check it out.

Less Then 2 Million Traders Trade in Market with Population of 125 Crore /Out of Which 40% or more Still Below POVERTY LINE !

Technically Yours /ASR TEAM/BARODA

Facebook now 'worth $33 billion

Facebook is now worth as much as $33.7 billion, after investors have paid up to $76 for a share in the company ahead of its much-hyped flotation on the stock market, according to a report.

The Financial Times has said that the implied valuation means that Facebook is now has a higher valuation than technology giants such as eBay and Yahoo!, which have capped market values of $30.1 billion and $18.3 billion respectively.

David Gelles, a reporter for The Financial Times wrote: “Common stock in Facebook is trading as high as $76 a share as investors scramble to get a piece of the company before it files for an initial public offering, which analysts say could be the biggest technology IPO since Google’s $1.67bn flotation in 2004.

“While Facebook and other successful Silicon Valley companies, such as Twitter, LinkedIn and Zynga, are delaying their IPOs because of perceived weak appetite on the public markets, some investors are not content to wait. They are acquiring stakes in technology companies while they are still private, hoping that their eventual IPOs will send share prices even higher.”

Facebook, which registered its 500 millionth member last month, is currently financed through a mixture of investment firms and venture capital companies. It is not yet know when the company will float, although there have been hints it will not be until 2011.

The company was the brainchild of Mark Zuckerberg while he was still studying at Harvard University and launched in February 2004. Zuckerberg remains the chief executive.

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