Description

Book Synopsis
Want big returns? Look at small stocks! Penny stocks are low-cost equities that often make large price moves, potentially leading to big gainsor lossesfor investors.Penny StocksForDummieswill help you determine whether this wild ride is right for you. With this hands-on guide, you can grasp the basics, find smart investments, avoid scams, and look for big success, even if youonly have pocket change to start out with. This latest edition takes you right into today's unique penny stock market.You'lllearn how to read penny stock charts, evaluate the strength of small companies, recognize price manipulations, anduse smart trading strategies to maximize your returns. Buying and selling penny stocks can be extremely lucrativeif you know exactly whatyou'redoing. This book will make a penny trader out of you, so you can start making money for the future.(Heads up: you're going to need a bigger piggy bank!) WithPenny StocksForDummies, you will: Find out whether penny stocks are a good fit for your investment goals, available capital, and risk toleranceDo your due diligence and learn how to research potential penny stock investmentsUse fundamental analysis, financial ratios, and penny-specific technical analysis to identify winning betsUncover expert tips that will boost your results and help prevent big losses Penny StocksForDummieswill give youtheknowledge andconfidenceyou needto get in on the ground floorand discover those hidden gems for high rewards.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1

About This Book 1

Foolish Assumptions 2

Icons Used in This Book 3

Beyond the Book 4

Where to Go from Here 4

Part 1: Getting Started with Penny Stocks 5

Chapter 1: Getting to Know Penny Stocks 7

A Big, Fat, “Tiny” Penny Stock Summary 8

Defining Penny Stocks 9

Price per share 10

Market capitalization 10

Stock market 10

Mix and match 11

Why does it matter? 11

Comparing Penny Stocks to Their Blue-Chip Cousins 13

Volatility and speed 14

Safety and risk 14

Investor following and visibility 15

Larger stones take more force to move 16

Chapter 2: Deciding If Penny Stocks Are Right for You 19

Gauging the Popularity of Penny Stocks 20

A high risk/reward ratio 20

Limited funds 22

Risky misconceptions 22

Taking Stock of the Big Business of Penny Stocks 23

You’re not alone 23

Room to grow 24

Making Sense of What You’ve Heard (Much of Which is True!) 25

Penny stocks represent low-quality companies 25

Penny stocks are subject to price manipulation scams 26

Trading penny stocks is a game of chance 26

Making a Fast Million Not! 27

Penny stocks appeal to the impatient 27

Newer investors gravitate to penny stocks 28

Penny stocks appeal to smaller portfolios 29

Being Honest with Yourself: Are Penny Stocks Right For You? 29

Chapter 3: Buying and Selling Penny Stocks 31

The Ins and Outs of the Stock Market 32

Factors influencing which exchange a company lists on 32

A who’s who of stock exchanges 34

Issuing Shares 37

Diluting a good thing 38

How dilution affects investors 39

When new share issues are a good thing 40

When new share issues are not a good thing 41

Stock Buybacks 42

Acquisitions and Takeovers 43

Why penny stock companies are frequently bought 45

Resisting a takeover 46

Understanding which companies are takeover targets 46

Being the buyer 48

Mergers and Amalgamations 49

Stock splits and reverse splits 50

Why you don’t see splits in low-priced shares 51

Why reverse splits are common in penny stocks 51

Bankruptcies 52

Chapter 4: Avoiding Promotions, Scams, and Bribes 53

Why Penny Stocks Are Perfect for Price Manipulation 53

Who is Moving the Price? 57

Promoters 58

Investor or public relations 58

The touter 59

The advisor 59

Rooting Out Poor Quality Companies 60

A good story 60

Financially broken 61

Weak business model 61

Swimming against the trend 62

The 2-pound gorilla 62

Obstacles That Even High-Quality Companies Face 63

Lawsuits 65

Lost customers 66

The 500-pound gorilla 67

Even the Good Can Die Young 67

Part 2: Research and Investment Strategies 69

Chapter 5: Developing a Strategy 71

Trading Risk Free without Using Real Money 72

Keeping it simple: What you need to get started 72

Setting your paper trading parameters 73

Some paper trading considerations 74

Tracking the success (or failure) of your paper trades 75

What You Need Before Your First Trade 76

Choosing a Great Broker 77

Penny-stock-friendly brokers 78

When to upgrade your broker 79

Types of Trading Orders 79

Bids, asks, and spreads 79

Limit orders 80

Market orders 81

Other types of orders 82

Characteristics of a Successful Penny Stock Trader 84

Investing Versus Trading 86

Investing in penny stocks 86

Trading in penny stocks 86

Chapter 6: Doing Your Research 89

Doing Your Due Diligence 90

Skimming the surface 90

Digging a little (or a lot) deeper 91

The Where’s and How’s of Research 92

Stock quotes 93

Trading charts 93

Stock screeners 95

Company financials 95

Press releases 96

Media outlets 97

Paid analysts 97

Investor relations 98

Penny stock newsletters 98

Message boards 100

Calling the Penny Stock Company 101

Be prepared before you dial 101

Questions to ask management or IR 102

Dead-end questions to avoid 104

How to interpret IR responses 104

Corporate and Analyst Guidance 105

Should you trust guidance issued by the company? 106

Following analyst guidance 107

Generating your own guidance data 107

How Expectations Drive Prices: Getting Baked in the Pie 108

Expectations are more important than results 108

Beating estimates 110

Missing guidance numbers 110

Penny Stocks Are Affected by Trends 111

Sector and industry trends 111

Trends in the overall market 113

Trends in consumer and social behavior 113

Market and Company Risk 115

Let the rising tide lift your boat 115

Investing against the current 116

Reacting to nonsystemic (company-specific) risk 117

Reacting to systemic (market) risk 117

Buying What You Understand: The Free and Instant Advantage 118

Chapter 7: Picking a Winner 121

Narrowing Your Choices 122

Your Elimination Criteria 122

Who Do You Trust? 124

Your number one ally: You 124

Considering the motives of others 125

Reviewing their track record 126

Paid advertisements: The wolf in sheep’s clothing 126

Unreliable analysts 127

Stock Screeners 128

Choosing criteria to focus your search 128

Screening your screens: Getting even more focused 130

What stock screeners won’t tell you 131

Choosing Penny Stocks Manually 132

Chapter 8: Penny Stock Manias 133

Wild Speculation and Investor Stampedes 134

Why manias affect penny stocks the most 135

The next stampede: It’s just around the corner 136

Penny Stock Manias of the Past: Learning from Other People’s Mistakes 137

Pot penny stocks 137

Bitcoin mania? 143

The dot-com bubble in penny stocks 150

Surviving and Profiting from Penny Stock Manias 153

Spotting the Next Mania 154

Why the next mania plays out 154

How the next mania plays out 155

Part 3: Trading Penny Stocks 157

Chapter 9: Trading Strategies 159

Scaling In and Scaling Out 160

Averaging Up Not Down 161

The many downsides of averaging down 161

The upsides of averaging up 163

Limiting Your Losses and Locking In Your Gains 163

Stop-loss orders 163

Position sizing 165

Diversification 166

Limit orders 167

Using only the best markets 167

Trading Windows 167

Timing Trades: When to Hold ’Em and When to Fold ’Em 168

Know when to take a profit 168

Know when to sell at a loss 169

Chapter 10: Fundamental Analysis 171

Financial Reports 172

The income statement 173

Balance sheet 174

The statement of cash flows 176

Numbers to Look for in Penny Stocks 179

Good numbers on the financial statements 180

Trends in financial results 184

Acting On Analysis 186

Management is Steering This Ship 187

Who’s who at the helm 187

What have these managers done before? 188

The corporate commitment level 189

News Releases and Events 191

Press releases from the company 192

Coverage from third-party sources 192

The timing of milestone events 193

The Outlook for the Sector and Industry 194

Microeconomic influences 195

Macroeconomic influences 196

Keeping your macros and micros straight 197

Chapter 11: Financial Ratios: Comparing Apples to Apples 199

Leveling the Playing Field with Financial Ratios 200

Eliminating size as a factor 200

Comparing stocks across industries 201

The Five Categories of Financial Ratios 201

Liquidity Ratios 202

Current ratio 203

Quick ratio 203

Cash ratio 204

Operating cash flow 205

Activity Ratios 206

Inventory turnover 207

Receivables turnover 207

Payables turnover 208

Working capital turnover 209

Fixed asset turnover 209

Total asset turnover 210

Leverage Ratios 211

Debt ratio 211

Debt to equity 212

Interest coverage 212

Performance Ratios 213

Gross profit margin 214

Operating profit margin 215

Net profit margin 216

Return on assets 217

Return on equity 217

Valuation Ratios 218

Price to earnings 218

Price to earnings to growth rate ratio 220

Price to sales 220

Price to cash flow 221

Chapter 12: The Abstract Review in Penny Stocks 223

Making Products Meaningful with Branding 224

Why branding is more important with penny stocks 225

When branding is done well 226

Harnessing a Unique Selling Proposition 227

Ensuring Product or Service Acceptance 228

Market Share 229

How to find out the market share for a penny stock 230

Profit from changes in market share 230

Barriers to Entry 231

Gauging barriers to new competition 232

The best first movers are the small ones 232

Marketing Strategy and Results 234

Poor marketing is bottomless 234

Marketing is hard to track with penny stocks 235

Loyalty and Attrition 236

Customer turnover 237

Relative order sizes and frequencies 237

Chapter 13: Technical Analysis with Penny Stocks 239

When Technical Analysis is Good 240

Why TA Often Doesn’t Work with Penny Stocks 243

Use Technical Indicators to Spot Trading Opportunities 244

All Patterns Break Down 246

Technical Analysis That Will Work with Penny Stocks 247

Clues from trading volume 247

Support levels 248

Resistance 250

Trends are friends 251

Price spikes 252

Price dips 253

Topping out patterns 254

Bottoming out patterns 256

Consolidation patterns 257

On-balance volume 260

Momentum indicators 261

Moving averages 262

Relative strength 263

Part 4: Scaling Up Your Success 265

Chapter 14: The Surprising Power of Mental Focus 267

Taking a Situational Audit 268

Unless you increase your time and energy 268

When the weeds envelope you 269

Why the dearth of quality? 271

Are Your Expectations Realistic? 271

Truly knowing yourself 272

The purpose is deeper 273

Goals? Not everyone needs them 273

The first step is the longest 273

Your Penny Stock Plan 274

Frequency and fine-tuning 276

You do not get to have luck 276

Take a forced rest 277

Chapter 15: Finding the One Strategy That Works 279

Your Solo Strategy 280

Do less of what doesn’t work 281

Rinse and repeat 282

Simplicity is misunderstood 282

One Penny Stock Truth Above All 282

Dancing on quicksand 283

Changing landscape 283

Adapting to What’s Next 285

Creating a Ritual 286

Shrine, studio, war room, or kitchen table? 287

A statement of commitment 288

Opportunity Costs and Your Results 288

Unseen small investments for major gains 289

Extrapolate your destination 289

Chapter 16: Debriefing for Dollars and Cents 291

Your Opinion is Your Mental Blind Spot 292

Comparing results to expectations 292

Comparing expectations to environments 293

The intentions-to-profits contrast 295

The assumptions you were given 296

Media Imagery and Misunderstandings 297

Tunnel-vision gurus 297

Trusted friends and family 298

Buying excitement 298

Building Your Investing Power 299

Collect 100 mistakes 301

List your lessons 301

Take an emotional assessment 303

Change yourself to change your results 303

Part 5: The Part of Tens 307

Chapter 17: Ten Rapid Result Tactics 309

Call the Company 310

Average Up 310

Don’t Confuse Market Risk with Company Risk 311

Try the Product, Use the Service 312

Compare the Wares 313

Paper Trade 313

Know the Corporate Life Cycle 314

What’s Really Driving the Share Price? 315

Watch the Short Interest 316

Don’t Diversify, Pinpoint Invest Instead 317

Chapter 18: Ten Trading Truths 319

Investor Sentiment is Contrarian 319

Big Moves Occur During Brief Trading Windows 321

Greater Volume Means Greater Sustainability 321

Making Up for Losses is Harder than Preventing Them 322

Bigger Things Take More Energy to Move 322

Rapid Rise, Rapid Fall 323

Dilution Disguises Losses 324

Buy the Rumor, Sell the Fact 324

Don’t Try Catching Falling Knives 325

Resistance Levels Can Flip 326

Chapter 19: Ten Key Considerations for Companies 327

Barriers to Entry 327

Competitive Advantages 328

Market Share (and Room for Growth) 329

Customer Diversity and the Company’s Reliance 330

Allies 331

Insider Ownership 331

Institutional Ownership 332

Positioning 333

The Secret of Flag Fall Fees 333

It’s All About Recurring Revenues and Attrition 334

Index 337

Penny Stocks For Dummies

    Product form

    £19.54

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £22.99 – you save £3.45 (15%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Mon 22 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Peter Leeds

    1 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Penny Stocks For Dummies by Peter Leeds

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 18/11/2021
      ISBN13: 9781119828860, 978-1119828860
      ISBN10: 1119828864

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Want big returns? Look at small stocks! Penny stocks are low-cost equities that often make large price moves, potentially leading to big gainsor lossesfor investors.Penny StocksForDummieswill help you determine whether this wild ride is right for you. With this hands-on guide, you can grasp the basics, find smart investments, avoid scams, and look for big success, even if youonly have pocket change to start out with. This latest edition takes you right into today's unique penny stock market.You'lllearn how to read penny stock charts, evaluate the strength of small companies, recognize price manipulations, anduse smart trading strategies to maximize your returns. Buying and selling penny stocks can be extremely lucrativeif you know exactly whatyou'redoing. This book will make a penny trader out of you, so you can start making money for the future.(Heads up: you're going to need a bigger piggy bank!) WithPenny StocksForDummies, you will: Find out whether penny stocks are a good fit for your investment goals, available capital, and risk toleranceDo your due diligence and learn how to research potential penny stock investmentsUse fundamental analysis, financial ratios, and penny-specific technical analysis to identify winning betsUncover expert tips that will boost your results and help prevent big losses Penny StocksForDummieswill give youtheknowledge andconfidenceyou needto get in on the ground floorand discover those hidden gems for high rewards.

      Table of Contents

      Introduction 1

      About This Book 1

      Foolish Assumptions 2

      Icons Used in This Book 3

      Beyond the Book 4

      Where to Go from Here 4

      Part 1: Getting Started with Penny Stocks 5

      Chapter 1: Getting to Know Penny Stocks 7

      A Big, Fat, “Tiny” Penny Stock Summary 8

      Defining Penny Stocks 9

      Price per share 10

      Market capitalization 10

      Stock market 10

      Mix and match 11

      Why does it matter? 11

      Comparing Penny Stocks to Their Blue-Chip Cousins 13

      Volatility and speed 14

      Safety and risk 14

      Investor following and visibility 15

      Larger stones take more force to move 16

      Chapter 2: Deciding If Penny Stocks Are Right for You 19

      Gauging the Popularity of Penny Stocks 20

      A high risk/reward ratio 20

      Limited funds 22

      Risky misconceptions 22

      Taking Stock of the Big Business of Penny Stocks 23

      You’re not alone 23

      Room to grow 24

      Making Sense of What You’ve Heard (Much of Which is True!) 25

      Penny stocks represent low-quality companies 25

      Penny stocks are subject to price manipulation scams 26

      Trading penny stocks is a game of chance 26

      Making a Fast Million Not! 27

      Penny stocks appeal to the impatient 27

      Newer investors gravitate to penny stocks 28

      Penny stocks appeal to smaller portfolios 29

      Being Honest with Yourself: Are Penny Stocks Right For You? 29

      Chapter 3: Buying and Selling Penny Stocks 31

      The Ins and Outs of the Stock Market 32

      Factors influencing which exchange a company lists on 32

      A who’s who of stock exchanges 34

      Issuing Shares 37

      Diluting a good thing 38

      How dilution affects investors 39

      When new share issues are a good thing 40

      When new share issues are not a good thing 41

      Stock Buybacks 42

      Acquisitions and Takeovers 43

      Why penny stock companies are frequently bought 45

      Resisting a takeover 46

      Understanding which companies are takeover targets 46

      Being the buyer 48

      Mergers and Amalgamations 49

      Stock splits and reverse splits 50

      Why you don’t see splits in low-priced shares 51

      Why reverse splits are common in penny stocks 51

      Bankruptcies 52

      Chapter 4: Avoiding Promotions, Scams, and Bribes 53

      Why Penny Stocks Are Perfect for Price Manipulation 53

      Who is Moving the Price? 57

      Promoters 58

      Investor or public relations 58

      The touter 59

      The advisor 59

      Rooting Out Poor Quality Companies 60

      A good story 60

      Financially broken 61

      Weak business model 61

      Swimming against the trend 62

      The 2-pound gorilla 62

      Obstacles That Even High-Quality Companies Face 63

      Lawsuits 65

      Lost customers 66

      The 500-pound gorilla 67

      Even the Good Can Die Young 67

      Part 2: Research and Investment Strategies 69

      Chapter 5: Developing a Strategy 71

      Trading Risk Free without Using Real Money 72

      Keeping it simple: What you need to get started 72

      Setting your paper trading parameters 73

      Some paper trading considerations 74

      Tracking the success (or failure) of your paper trades 75

      What You Need Before Your First Trade 76

      Choosing a Great Broker 77

      Penny-stock-friendly brokers 78

      When to upgrade your broker 79

      Types of Trading Orders 79

      Bids, asks, and spreads 79

      Limit orders 80

      Market orders 81

      Other types of orders 82

      Characteristics of a Successful Penny Stock Trader 84

      Investing Versus Trading 86

      Investing in penny stocks 86

      Trading in penny stocks 86

      Chapter 6: Doing Your Research 89

      Doing Your Due Diligence 90

      Skimming the surface 90

      Digging a little (or a lot) deeper 91

      The Where’s and How’s of Research 92

      Stock quotes 93

      Trading charts 93

      Stock screeners 95

      Company financials 95

      Press releases 96

      Media outlets 97

      Paid analysts 97

      Investor relations 98

      Penny stock newsletters 98

      Message boards 100

      Calling the Penny Stock Company 101

      Be prepared before you dial 101

      Questions to ask management or IR 102

      Dead-end questions to avoid 104

      How to interpret IR responses 104

      Corporate and Analyst Guidance 105

      Should you trust guidance issued by the company? 106

      Following analyst guidance 107

      Generating your own guidance data 107

      How Expectations Drive Prices: Getting Baked in the Pie 108

      Expectations are more important than results 108

      Beating estimates 110

      Missing guidance numbers 110

      Penny Stocks Are Affected by Trends 111

      Sector and industry trends 111

      Trends in the overall market 113

      Trends in consumer and social behavior 113

      Market and Company Risk 115

      Let the rising tide lift your boat 115

      Investing against the current 116

      Reacting to nonsystemic (company-specific) risk 117

      Reacting to systemic (market) risk 117

      Buying What You Understand: The Free and Instant Advantage 118

      Chapter 7: Picking a Winner 121

      Narrowing Your Choices 122

      Your Elimination Criteria 122

      Who Do You Trust? 124

      Your number one ally: You 124

      Considering the motives of others 125

      Reviewing their track record 126

      Paid advertisements: The wolf in sheep’s clothing 126

      Unreliable analysts 127

      Stock Screeners 128

      Choosing criteria to focus your search 128

      Screening your screens: Getting even more focused 130

      What stock screeners won’t tell you 131

      Choosing Penny Stocks Manually 132

      Chapter 8: Penny Stock Manias 133

      Wild Speculation and Investor Stampedes 134

      Why manias affect penny stocks the most 135

      The next stampede: It’s just around the corner 136

      Penny Stock Manias of the Past: Learning from Other People’s Mistakes 137

      Pot penny stocks 137

      Bitcoin mania? 143

      The dot-com bubble in penny stocks 150

      Surviving and Profiting from Penny Stock Manias 153

      Spotting the Next Mania 154

      Why the next mania plays out 154

      How the next mania plays out 155

      Part 3: Trading Penny Stocks 157

      Chapter 9: Trading Strategies 159

      Scaling In and Scaling Out 160

      Averaging Up Not Down 161

      The many downsides of averaging down 161

      The upsides of averaging up 163

      Limiting Your Losses and Locking In Your Gains 163

      Stop-loss orders 163

      Position sizing 165

      Diversification 166

      Limit orders 167

      Using only the best markets 167

      Trading Windows 167

      Timing Trades: When to Hold ’Em and When to Fold ’Em 168

      Know when to take a profit 168

      Know when to sell at a loss 169

      Chapter 10: Fundamental Analysis 171

      Financial Reports 172

      The income statement 173

      Balance sheet 174

      The statement of cash flows 176

      Numbers to Look for in Penny Stocks 179

      Good numbers on the financial statements 180

      Trends in financial results 184

      Acting On Analysis 186

      Management is Steering This Ship 187

      Who’s who at the helm 187

      What have these managers done before? 188

      The corporate commitment level 189

      News Releases and Events 191

      Press releases from the company 192

      Coverage from third-party sources 192

      The timing of milestone events 193

      The Outlook for the Sector and Industry 194

      Microeconomic influences 195

      Macroeconomic influences 196

      Keeping your macros and micros straight 197

      Chapter 11: Financial Ratios: Comparing Apples to Apples 199

      Leveling the Playing Field with Financial Ratios 200

      Eliminating size as a factor 200

      Comparing stocks across industries 201

      The Five Categories of Financial Ratios 201

      Liquidity Ratios 202

      Current ratio 203

      Quick ratio 203

      Cash ratio 204

      Operating cash flow 205

      Activity Ratios 206

      Inventory turnover 207

      Receivables turnover 207

      Payables turnover 208

      Working capital turnover 209

      Fixed asset turnover 209

      Total asset turnover 210

      Leverage Ratios 211

      Debt ratio 211

      Debt to equity 212

      Interest coverage 212

      Performance Ratios 213

      Gross profit margin 214

      Operating profit margin 215

      Net profit margin 216

      Return on assets 217

      Return on equity 217

      Valuation Ratios 218

      Price to earnings 218

      Price to earnings to growth rate ratio 220

      Price to sales 220

      Price to cash flow 221

      Chapter 12: The Abstract Review in Penny Stocks 223

      Making Products Meaningful with Branding 224

      Why branding is more important with penny stocks 225

      When branding is done well 226

      Harnessing a Unique Selling Proposition 227

      Ensuring Product or Service Acceptance 228

      Market Share 229

      How to find out the market share for a penny stock 230

      Profit from changes in market share 230

      Barriers to Entry 231

      Gauging barriers to new competition 232

      The best first movers are the small ones 232

      Marketing Strategy and Results 234

      Poor marketing is bottomless 234

      Marketing is hard to track with penny stocks 235

      Loyalty and Attrition 236

      Customer turnover 237

      Relative order sizes and frequencies 237

      Chapter 13: Technical Analysis with Penny Stocks 239

      When Technical Analysis is Good 240

      Why TA Often Doesn’t Work with Penny Stocks 243

      Use Technical Indicators to Spot Trading Opportunities 244

      All Patterns Break Down 246

      Technical Analysis That Will Work with Penny Stocks 247

      Clues from trading volume 247

      Support levels 248

      Resistance 250

      Trends are friends 251

      Price spikes 252

      Price dips 253

      Topping out patterns 254

      Bottoming out patterns 256

      Consolidation patterns 257

      On-balance volume 260

      Momentum indicators 261

      Moving averages 262

      Relative strength 263

      Part 4: Scaling Up Your Success 265

      Chapter 14: The Surprising Power of Mental Focus 267

      Taking a Situational Audit 268

      Unless you increase your time and energy 268

      When the weeds envelope you 269

      Why the dearth of quality? 271

      Are Your Expectations Realistic? 271

      Truly knowing yourself 272

      The purpose is deeper 273

      Goals? Not everyone needs them 273

      The first step is the longest 273

      Your Penny Stock Plan 274

      Frequency and fine-tuning 276

      You do not get to have luck 276

      Take a forced rest 277

      Chapter 15: Finding the One Strategy That Works 279

      Your Solo Strategy 280

      Do less of what doesn’t work 281

      Rinse and repeat 282

      Simplicity is misunderstood 282

      One Penny Stock Truth Above All 282

      Dancing on quicksand 283

      Changing landscape 283

      Adapting to What’s Next 285

      Creating a Ritual 286

      Shrine, studio, war room, or kitchen table? 287

      A statement of commitment 288

      Opportunity Costs and Your Results 288

      Unseen small investments for major gains 289

      Extrapolate your destination 289

      Chapter 16: Debriefing for Dollars and Cents 291

      Your Opinion is Your Mental Blind Spot 292

      Comparing results to expectations 292

      Comparing expectations to environments 293

      The intentions-to-profits contrast 295

      The assumptions you were given 296

      Media Imagery and Misunderstandings 297

      Tunnel-vision gurus 297

      Trusted friends and family 298

      Buying excitement 298

      Building Your Investing Power 299

      Collect 100 mistakes 301

      List your lessons 301

      Take an emotional assessment 303

      Change yourself to change your results 303

      Part 5: The Part of Tens 307

      Chapter 17: Ten Rapid Result Tactics 309

      Call the Company 310

      Average Up 310

      Don’t Confuse Market Risk with Company Risk 311

      Try the Product, Use the Service 312

      Compare the Wares 313

      Paper Trade 313

      Know the Corporate Life Cycle 314

      What’s Really Driving the Share Price? 315

      Watch the Short Interest 316

      Don’t Diversify, Pinpoint Invest Instead 317

      Chapter 18: Ten Trading Truths 319

      Investor Sentiment is Contrarian 319

      Big Moves Occur During Brief Trading Windows 321

      Greater Volume Means Greater Sustainability 321

      Making Up for Losses is Harder than Preventing Them 322

      Bigger Things Take More Energy to Move 322

      Rapid Rise, Rapid Fall 323

      Dilution Disguises Losses 324

      Buy the Rumor, Sell the Fact 324

      Don’t Try Catching Falling Knives 325

      Resistance Levels Can Flip 326

      Chapter 19: Ten Key Considerations for Companies 327

      Barriers to Entry 327

      Competitive Advantages 328

      Market Share (and Room for Growth) 329

      Customer Diversity and the Company’s Reliance 330

      Allies 331

      Insider Ownership 331

      Institutional Ownership 332

      Positioning 333

      The Secret of Flag Fall Fees 333

      It’s All About Recurring Revenues and Attrition 334

      Index 337

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