Monday, 8 August 2011

conservative stock investing



For the stock investor still hurting from the 2008 market crash conservative stock investing is attractive. Each of the world two largest economies, the European Union and the United States, is dealing with its own potentially disastrous debt crisis. There may not be enough time for the US congress to switch from posturing to passing the necessary legislation to avoid a debt default by the USA. As European officials drag their feet the so called PIIGS debt crisis spreads from Greece to Portugal, Spain, and Italy. How would the world economy respond to twin debt defaults on opposite sides of the Atlantic? How would such a situation affect stock investors and traders in the USA? Is conservative stock investing the route to take? A number of US companies, like Microsoft with $50 Billion in offshore reserves, have heaps of cash that amount to a significant margin of safety . In considering how to stock investing today we should first consider just what is conservative stock investing. What does conservative mean and is a conservative approach always the best choice? Where do the basics of stock investing and share tips, fundamental and technical analysis and the use of time honored tools such as Candlestick analysis fit in this story?

There are degrees of conservative investing and it is important to recognize where you stand. These degrees include:

1. Totally concerned and committed to just about not risking a penny of your cash but desiring to at least keep even with inflation.
2. Committed to minimal risk of your money but desiring to see it grow a little more than inflation.
3. Conservative in most cases but willing to use a small portion of your cash to grow faster than inflation but not to the extent of taking wild risks.

If you fall in the #1 category, safe investments can be found:


  • Bonds, bond ETFs or bond mutual funds
  • Some stocks (companies) with a 10 year or longer history of paying strong dividends, ETFs or mutual funds based on dividend paying stocks
  • US treasuries, ETFs or mutual funds based on treasuries

1 comment:

  1. I feel the war is over at least for now, if you check out I had mentioned that 16300 seems to be absolute bottom on weekly scale, for accurate forecasting of markets please visit http://www.kalpeshmaniar.com

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