Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Investing in the Stock Market. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper discussing measures that an investor should want to assess when considering the stock of a company in terms of short- and long-term considerations. The investor needs to assess the balance sheet to find the ratios discussed in the paper, nearly all of which require the use of current assets, current liabilities, total assets and stockholders' equity to determine. The investor finds balance in a combination of stocks, bonds, gold and cash. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KSstockInv06.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
choose to invest in the stock market for all kinds of reasons. Some approach trading as a game requiring active involvement; others seek long term growth for the future;
others seek income from invested capital; still others choose the stock market as an alternative to low-rate bank savings avenues. There are several general "rules" that apply regardless of
the individual investors primary motivations. Determining Goals The investor or potential investor needs to first decide what his goals are, why s/he is
investing the money s/he holds rather than "investing" it in some other area: a new car, estate jewelry, a home mortgage, a passbook savings account. Generally, those approaching retirement
age should seek out and choose stocks that carry little risk and provide either growth or income potential. There is risk with every investment in the stock market, and
older investors have less time available to them to replace any capital they may lose in the investment. Younger investors, however, have more
choices available to them while still investing responsibly. They may want to place a portion of their capital in stocks that carry low risk or provide promise of future
growth, but they also have the luxury of taking on additional risk and therefore additional return potential. Generally, the higher the risk the higher the rate of return it
can be expected to generate. This is reasonable in that if investors capital is at greater risk, then they need to realize higher returns. Otherwise they have no
incentive for choosing the high-risk investment over a lower-risk one if they both offer the same level of expected return in the future.
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