Investing Questions and Answers

Do you think wal-mart will ever go out of business if do how do would one who was rich COMPETE WITH THEM?




Answers: Yes... Eventually. As for retail history tells the tale... Woolworth's, Bradly's, Mamothmart, Caldor, the list can go on. those are ones of the top of my head...

And Walmart has already shown chinks in the armor. Sears was once the titan... now look at them. still around true... but not the powerhouse they once were...
Target has grabbed a significant market share of Walmarts might along with other stores in recent years. The stock has not done a whole lot for a while now. The writing is on the wall to me

Yeah we may not see it's demise soon... but it will come... as sure as honey is sweet.
Psh, Wal-Mart will never go out of business. They have a plan to take over the world; they're taking every other company out of business (K-Mart, Target, etc) with their low prices. Then, when there's no more competition, their prices will ski-rocket and then there's the chance that they might go out of business but only if another company rises up and people give them their business instead. But that would take a lot.
Don't shop at wal-mart!
=)
Walmart is what the K-marts and Sears stores were in the 70's and 80's. Only Kmart and Sears do not have anywhere near the buying power as WalMart does.

Some businesses exist only as a vendor to WalMart. Walmart will dictate their price point to the vendor or they will stop doing business with them. For the businesses that have only one customer, WalMart, it is fiscal suicide to say no. As for stopping business with a vendor..there is enough stock in the warehouses to hold the chain for about 2 months....they will find a comparable vendor in that time.

One thing that WalMart did that Kmart and other department stores didn't...include a food store under the same roof. How unheard of...sell food, clothing, etc!
If an insider screws up walmart, if the government forces them to break up or if something bigger and cheaper shows up. All could have them go out of business.

If the dollar keeps going lower you may see Walmart finding a lot of there made in china stuff to be too expensive to import so they might have trouble with finding a cheaper manufacturer which could lead to supply shortages.

If people just stopped going there then that would do it too, but I doubt that will happen.

What's the prodecure to become mutual fund agent?

seriosly i want to know


Answers: Become either a financial advisor or a stock broker. It's profusely harder than it sounds. You want to become a certified financial advisor.

Good luck.
You will have to find out what the regulations are contained by your state as they apply to Mutual Funds first of all.

There are required test to sell mutual funds, and your best bet will be to start on a study course to prepare yourself.

Many companies set aside study courses, and if you approach some broker/dealers they will hire you as an 'intern' type of program and they will pay for your training and trialling.

Check out:
http://www.foranfinancial.com/workbooks/...

If you want to talk almost some of your favorite mutual funds with others call round http://www.fingad.com

Good Luck!
lots of tests, start stale as a financial advisor and work your way up.

How do I interpret ETF acting out charts - total bazaar return and NAV?

ETF PFF (I'm not investing in it, in recent times go beside me because it is a good example) come up as a international ETF with expense ratio within the bottom 40% and 1 mnth performance surrounded by the top 20%.

Chart shows the price (right?) which started at $50, dropped to almost $40 at the end of 2007, and very soon sits at $45. Appears in the top player list because it is a 9% return surrounded by the past 30 days.

When I join the S&P index for comparison it doesn't show the price anymore but a % trend (% difference from inception? Y axis on the chart?) Sure, PFF is at 0 on the Y axis, down 20% at the end of '07 and around -10% very soon. But the S&P trend doesn't make sense against that; it starts at 75%?? and dips above and below that rank.

How do I interpret all that??

What is the difference between Total Market Return and NAV Return on a fund or ETF activities report?

How do I search for an ETF near the best performance over 3-5 years beside low expense ratios?


Answers: The S&P strip, like the PFF strip, is cumulative return from the beginning of the time time of year. I'm not sure what specific graph you're looking at where you see 75%, but the foundation it doesn't start at zero is because the genesis return is the percent change as of the first day's get underway from the previous day's close. If the S&P happened to break open at the exact same price it had closed the previous morning, the S&P line would start off at zero.

NAV return is freshly the percent change surrounded by the NAV of a fund or ETF. Total market return is the percent modification in NAV plus any distributions that may enjoy been received, such as dividends. If you try and subtract what you would have earn from owning a stock by just looking at the amend in price, you would be understating return because you aren't accounting for dividends. A total return estimate accounts for that.

Sorry, can't help on the ETF turn out.
Wow, good question. PFF is from Ishares. The fund was introduced within 3/2007. No way you can find out how it would own performed over a 3 year length, accurately. You would have to back-test adjectives of the stocks in the fund to see how it would enjoy performed. There are a few things you can do to relieve you in your research:

1. Go to the nouns section of yahoo.com. It is terrific. It will endow with you most of the information you need on pff.

2. Go to the ishares website. It have a screener. it also has definition for all of the expressions you are questioning.

3. If you own a stock account next to a broker ( Schwab for instance) there is a comprehensive ETF screener and you can set your parameter and it will spit out all of the similar ETF's, their costs and the NAV returns.

4. There are also some great resources on the internet. One of my favorites is exchangetradedfunds.com

Look practically at the stocks included in this ETF. You will see profusely of bank stocks, Ford Motor Co., etc. Be sure explicitly the investment you want to make--those stocks have adjectives been hammer, and are subject to further write downs for consumer debt, and/or economy dependent for continued growth. So, this may be the sound time to get into them, or it may still be untimely.

Hope this helps. There is plenty of information available to you, for free, at the websites I've down. Good luck! Also, Rydex, Powershares, all of the ETF companies enjoy websites with screeners...There are over 600 ETF's currently, so you enjoy plenty to look at! And, almost every stock brokerage has an teaching section on their website, making it flowing to find definitions and explanations. Plus, if you haven't open a stock account on the other hand, you can call a broker and relay him/her of your interest and ask how best to educate yourself--anyone who requirements your business will be happy to point you within the right direction.

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