Saturday, January 9, 2010
Stocks2Watch
$3.81
FCH has been consolidating and that pattern often precedes a further upward move.
In addition, its MACD has switched positive and its volume has been increasing along with price.
Currently, it is dealing with a resistance level around $3.86
As you may know, FCH is a motel/hotel REIT that traded in the mid-$20 range until the economic downturn hit us.
Keep an eye on the resistance level...
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Bank Forced To Cancel $500,000+ Loan Balance After Owner Gets Loan Mod
Sunday, September 6, 2009
What the heck is Web 3.0 and theTRAFFICplan?
Financial Destination Inc
Sunday, August 30, 2009
What the heck is Web 3.0 ?
What the heck is Web 3.0 ?
It's Web 1.0 + Web 2.0 = WEB 3.0
As you know, Web 1.0 was simply an acronym for eCommerce. Back then, retail stores wanted to do business on the internet rather than just using expensive retail storefronts. Many saw the power of the internet to attract an entirely new audience that may not have had the chance to visit their store in person. This would without doubt give them access to more potential customers for less cost.
Web 2.0, in its simplest definition and use today, has become an acronym for the everyday person's ability to communicate and collaborate globally using Social Networking. It has made things more user friendly to us, and as such, companies have come to embrace these new design and communication formats to engage with their customers.
Web 3.0 brings these two worlds together for the average person to be able to harness the power of the internet to begin to profit with multiple streams of income online by introducing products and services to their groups of followers (also known as their list and also as their tribe).
More info can be found at www.aTRAFFICplan.com
We have live training every Wed evening, you don't want to miss it
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Saturday, July 18, 2009
How to Avoid the 3 Biggest Mistakes Stock Market Investors Make
By Michael Mastersson
I'm not an expert in stocks, but I have been involved with stock market publications and stock market gurus for more than 25 years. During that time, I've met a lot of characters - some brilliant men without a trace of honesty and some honest men without a trace of intelligence.
I've seen investors (including myself) swindled, bamboozled, conned, and just plain charmed.
I've seen a lot. And though I have never attempted to figure out the stock market or how to get the better of it, I now have an idea of what works and what doesn't.
Three caveats, in particular, have come to make sense to me:
1. Don't put too much money in any one recommendation. By limiting each investment, you'll never get hurt so badly that you won't be able to keep going.
2. Never invest in something just because you like the story behind it. A story, by its very nature, is meant to dramatize, not to inform.
3. Don't leave money in an investment after it turns south. I have many good investment-expert friends who will tell me I'm wrong about this one - but in my experience, when a business starts to fail it will almost always continue in that direction. When it comes to investing in your own business, you know enough about it that you might be able to do something extraordinary to turn things around. But when it comes to other people's businesses... their success or failure is completely out of your control.
[Ed. Note: One last thing to keep in mind when deciding where and how to invest: Most so-called "Wall Street" experts usually don't know a solid investment from a hole in the ground. Now's your chance to declare your financial independence from the stream of Wall Street mis-advice and gloom and doom. Set yourself free by taking 5 minutes to read our free report here.]
Saturday, June 6, 2009
Invest in India?

By Ted Peroulakis
India is one of the world's fastest-growing (and most stable) economies, with strength in its agriculture, textile, and service sectors. Services are its main source of economic growth, accounting for over half of India's output with less than a third of its labor force. And India is on track to open up its retail, insurance, and banking sectors to more foreign investment.
The Indian economy has been growing an average of 7 percent over the last 10 years, reducing poverty by about 10 percent over the same period. India had GDP growth of 8.5 percent in 2006, 9 percent in 2007, and 7.3 percent in 2008.
Since the election victory of the free-market-oriented Congress Party, the Bombay Stock Exchange has taken off. I expect billions of dollars' worth of investment capital to flow into Indian stocks, and India's economy is going to continue to soar.
You owe it to yourself to invest in India. Keep in mind, though, that developing markets tend to be volatile, so put only a small portion of your portfolio into any emerging market.
My favorite way to play India is with the PowerShares India Fund (PIN). This exchange-traded fund (ETF) has excellent profit potential. It has seen a great short-term gain of 32 percent since I first recommended it on April 9th. You don't usually see big profits that fast, and it's on track for more.
The fund is traded in the U.S., holds a nice basket of Indian stocks, and seeks to mirror the Indian stock market as measured by the Indus India index.
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