Investing Questions and Answers

What are the best stocks to buy for children?




Answers: Buy a mutual fund with a long term horizon. Maybe an index fund like an S&P 500 fund. Index funds tend to have less turnover and less income distributed as a result. This way you have less of a chance of having the hassle of filing tax returns for the kids too
If you're asking about "long term investments" for their future, then talk to a financial adviser. (Most banks have some kind of service available to their customers at little to no cost.)

If, on the other hand, you're looking to educate your children on money management, banking, the stock market in general.. then I would suggest that you talk to them first, find out their interests, and maybe buy a couple of shares of something that will keep their interest over time.
As you have no special skills in the stock market, and you are investing for the long term, you should go for an index tracking mutual fund tracking the S&P 500 (ie the American market), like the Vanguard. Ideally, you should be buying little and often

It will be very safe, will need no management from you, they will inform you of progress twice a year and their charge are very low. In the end you will do as well as uncle Sam and no heartaques. But not as well as Bush. He has oil wells.
It depends on how much money you have and the long term investment

From where i can get the chart of indian shares from 1990.?




Answers: pls clik on-
http://www.economictimes.com
http://ww.mangalkeshav.com
You can get it from a division consilor of you town or form Iandian Divisional Counsilor! ple select my answer as the best!

What is the riskiness of equities next to dignified dividend abandon and earn yield?

according to the dividend discount model and other relevant financial models?

Please and thank you.


Answers: The dividend yield really have no effect on the riskiness of the investment. Earnings are earnings; it's irrelevant whether the company is adjectives you a check (dividends) or reinvesting them on your behalf (retained earnings.) The dividend discount model isn't really intended to subtract risk. In fact, surrounded by the formula for the dividend discount model, the required rate of return (or risk measurement) is taken as given; it's not what you're solving for in the formula, usually. When using that formula for valuation you usually plug surrounded by a required rate of return from some other model (such as CAPM.)

However, a high earn yield may indicate that the market perceives an investment to be risky. Basically, a elevated earning concede indicates that the market demands a large rate of return for investing in the asset. If the asset be perceived to be low risk, there would be a high demand for it within the market and the price would be bid up, which would lower the yield yield.

Generally, the appropriate model to total risk is the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM.) There are other multi-factor models that calculate risk, such as the Fama and French 3 Factor Model, but I'll confess that I'm not terrifically familiar beside those. The only determinant of risk within the CAPM is beta (β), which is a measure of how volatile the stock is when compared to the marketplace as a whole.

EDIT IN RESPONSE TO YOUR ADDITIONAL DETAILS: The previous response still applies. Dividend payments, be they contained by actual dollar terms or contained by terms of a percentage concede, are irrelevant to risk.

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