The Benefits Of Pooled Investment In Shares And The Forex

Posted by Nick Niesen on October 29th, 2010

One of the simplest, most effective, and currently most popular methods of buying stock is the Monthly Investment Plan.The Plan now has more than 93,000 accounts in force, and new ones are being written at the rate of about 180 a day.

Another 111,734 Plans begun in the same period have been completed or terminated. Altogether, MIP investors have bought some 3,674,000 shares of various stocks, with a market value at time of purchase of over $154 million.

The Plan operates on the brilliantly simple basis of reversing the conventional buying procedure. Instead of having the price of the stock desired determine the amount of money that must be invested, MIP permits the amount of money available for investment to determine the amount of stock bought. This is a feature highly attractive to new or inexperienced investors, without large sums at their disposal.

Since the Plan encourages regular, periodic investment, it also permits the application of Dollar Cost Averaging, one of the more successful formulas for acquiring stock.
Step by step, here is how it works.

The would-be investor, first of all, may go to a New York Stock Exchange member broker, any of whom may service an MIP account. He tells the broker which stock he would like and how much, on a monthly or quarterly basis, he expects to invest. He may stocks listed on the Exchange, but no securities handled over the counter, or exclusively on other exchanges.

The broker notes this information on a form, together with the name (or names) in which the stock is to be registered, and upon receipt of a first payment, the Plan is in motion.

The form, let it be said, is not a contract, but a routine purchase order. It does not obligate the investor to a series select any of the more than 1,500 common and preferred of instalment payments; it is simply a record of his intention to invest a certain amount at regular intervals, if possible. Its small print merely specifies the normal conditions under which securities are bought and sold, which apply to any stock-exchange transaction. No fees, charges, or interest payments are involved. MIP investors pay only the usual brokerage fees which, for the sake of convenience, are deducted from his payments.

Permissible payments range from as little as $40 every three months to a maximum of $1,000 a month. The usual rate is $40 a month.

Over the years, General Motors has emerged as the favorite MIP stock. It is being bought by some 4,500 Plan investors.

If you should happen to want it, too, what would your monthly $40 buy? As this was being written, GM sold at 48V4. With a commission of approximately 6 per cent deducted, you have $37.74 for investment. This will buy .7781 per cent, or about ¾ of a share.

Right here is the unique element of MIP. It is possible in ordinary stock-exchange dealings to buy an odd lot of as little as one share. It is possible to spend no more than $40 and acquire 10 shares of a stock selling at 3. But in no way except through the MIP can an investor buy fractional shares and accumulate stock costing more per share than he has to invest.

The prime benefit to the investor is that it brings the entire range of Big Board stocks within reach.

While it is not true that higher-priced stocks are necessarily sounder or better values than lower-priced stocks, a great many of the premier issues are to be found at prices above $40.

It also seems to be true that even if a person accumulates, say, $180, by putting aside $40 a month for nearly five months, he does not rush into the market to buy one share of American Telephone & Telegraph. Although it may be an illusion, $180 in the savings bank seems like more wealth than a mere one

share of stock?even AT&T. Furthermore, in five months' time, the accumulation may be needed elsewhere, or A T & T may have reached 200?both eventualities discouraging to the eager investor.

You also have more safety in the Forex, if you have a pool of money and only invest a small part of it 1-2% per trade.

With this method you would need to make a bad trade more than 50 times is succession before you lost all of your money.

To limit your losses and increase your gains it is best to use some Forex software.

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Nick Niesen

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Nick Niesen
Joined: April 29th, 2015
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