ashley2006
哪里能找到在美国炒股入门的知识
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2006-09-09 01:41:00
在美国炒股,具体怎么操作啊?和国内炒股有什么不同?
[此贴子已经被作者于2006-9-9 1:42:26编辑过]
MM是想自己炒股吗?
我没明白具体怎么操作是什么意思,可以自己开一个帐户,然后买卖啊
贴过来一些基本的用语解释
What kind of buy order you use will depend on things including risk tolerance and time frame. But especially if you're among the 10 million Americans trying to trade online without an live broker, you should know the difference.
(Each of the following has a “sell” version, too. For simplicity's sake, however, the explanations are for buying.)
• Market order. An order that is executed at the best available price. It's like paying the going rate.
Upside: You get your order filled, usually in minutes. Downside: The price could have spiked to a level you didn't want to pay.
Example: Buy 100 shares of Batesville's Hillenbrand Industries. You decide to buy last Monday, when the shares opened at $45. But the market order isn't executed until the shares go above $46.50 — costing you another $150. Such delays are extrememly rare, although Internet bottle-necks have led regulators to recommend online traders not use market orders.
• Limit order. An order to buy at a set price. You name your price, and wait to see if someone will sell for it.
Limit orders account for fully two-thirds of all orders on the Nasdaq and the New York Stock Exchange. Most last just for the day, unless you specify the order is Good Til Canceled, or GTC.
Upside: You know better what you're paying and usually feel more in control during volatility. Downside: You won't get your stock if no one will sell at that price.
Example: Buy 100 shares of Hillenbrand at $45 (GTC). As the price rises Monday and Tuesday past $46, you go without getting your stock. But when the price falls back by mid-week, your order is filled at $45, even though the price then falls to $44.50.
• Stop order. A market order to buy if a specified price (the stop price) is reached or passed.
Upside: Used more for sell orders to prevent heavier losses, stop buy orders are useful in momentum trading. Downside: You still could have your order go unfilled if your stop price isn't reached.
Example: Buy 100 shares of Hillenbrand somewhere above $46. It opens last Monday at $45, but quickly moves up and through $46, at which point your order becomes a market order and is filled at the current market price, say $46.25.
• Stop-limit order. An order to buy at a specified price higher than the current price. Essentially a combination of a stop order and a limit order, this also lets you look for upward momentum.
Upside: You have even more control over at what price and under what circumstances to buy. Downside: There's even more of a chance that your order will not be filled.
Example: Buy 100 shares of Hillenbrand at $46, but only after the price hits $45.50. Then you are buying as the stock price is climbing — not the other way around.
[此贴子已经被作者于2006-9-9 2:45:36编辑过]
或者可以注册一个帐户,自己练练手http://www.stocktrak.com/2005Version/index.php
到底了
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