Online Stock Market Trading By Hartley Bernstein
Eric Hoffman is one of AWARE's spokesperson and he tells the public, "Something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue is not just for weddings. It applies to financing a new car or truck, too. And since buying a car or truck is often a couple's first major joint purchase, it is important they learn about vehicle financing and talk to each other before deciding what to buy or lease."
Stock Investing Course (AXcess News) New York - A stock promoter knows the angles as well as any pool hustler. The goal is always the same. Run the table. Pump up the price and volume of a stock, even if the issuer has no discernible value and little realistic chance of success. The key lies in the hustle- create an illusion that makes the pigeons salivate because they think they will be big winners.
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Stock Market Game For promoters, the Computer Age was manna from heaven, a golden gateway into the homes and minds of hungry, but naive investors. It no longer was necessary to telephone potential investors, one at a time, and browbeat them into submission. Email made it possible to gain instant access to anyone and everyone, to fabricate credibility, and to increase the odds of success.
Perhaps the most famous wedding superstition of all requires the bride to carry "Something old, something new, something borrowed and something blue." "Something old" symbolizes continuity with the bride's family and the past.
Stock Investing Game For years, this scenario has played out to the advantage of the promoters and the scamsters. Recently, however, there has been a discernible change in their approach, which we suspect reflects a realization that the email game has run its course. This is not to suggest that stock promotions will stop arriving in the form of spam email any time soon. If anything, they have proliferated over the years but they have begun to look even more amateurish, shedding the thin veneer of credibility that allows suckers to believe that "this one" could be the real deal. More and more, promotional emails simply regurgitate issuers' press releases, coupled with an endorsement and buy recommendations. They pale in comparison to some of the detailed, creative efforts churned out by promoters and stock hustlers in the past. It is almost as if a second generation of promoters has stepped to the plate, aping their predecessors but lacking their panache or facility for embellishment.
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Journal Prime Rate Street Wall And what has become of the first-generation promoters, the experts who recognized and exploited the power of email? To some degree, they continue to use the same techniques. Why abandon a good thing? But they also may recognize that the investing public, saturated with email promotions for can't miss investments that miss by a mile, has grown too skeptical to be duped. The prime rubes have grown cautious, are employing anti-spam software and have learned how to hit the delete button.
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Stock Market News So what to do? Lately, promoters have been spreading their hype the old fashioned way, by snail mail. Instead of disseminating amateurish e-mails, riddled with typos, they have been mailing slick brochures, chock full of photos, graphs and charts the sort of stuff that has a veneer of credibility at least on the surface. The reports, from "analysts" with names like "Investment Trader Trends" and "Bullish Alerts," each tout the prospects of some obscure penny stock much like their email counterparts. The difference here is that the brochures now arriving by mail are considerably more costly to produce and distribute, are virtually free of typos andpoor grammarand look impressive enough to seduce hungry investors who have been waiting for their next "home run" stock.
Stock Investing Basics The "analysts" who have been sending these reports generally provide little information about themselves- although they consistently concede that they have received cash and/or stock in exchange for touting a company. Indeed, several "analysts" say that they must sell some of their shares to pay for the costs of producing and mailing their reports.
Stock Investing Software There is nothing new about this approach, which predates the Internet. Promoters have merely decided to employ a brick and mortar technique to catch the attention of investors who have grown weary of cyber-hype. They are banking on the notion that the public is more likely to read junk mail then spam faxes- a reversal that we might have anticipated. Ironic, isn't it?
Stock Market Trading EDITOR'S NOTE:
Stock Investing For Dummy One further note to Stock Patrol readers. At least one devious promoter has been sending out emails that seem to be coming from StockPatrol.com. These emails feature a dicey penny stock called Dark Dynamite, Inc. (OTCBB: DKDY). The emails apparently give the impression that Stock Patrol has recommended Dark Dynamite and urge investors to buy shares. Those emails did not originate here and certainly do not reflect the views previously expressed on these pages. As our readers know, Stock Patrol has written a number of articles pointing out abiding concerns about Dark Dynamite and individuals who have controlled and touted that Company. We sympathize with any readers who have received these annoying spam emails.
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