Who's stock should I buy?

I will say that there appear to be some legitimate responses....... but I still don't trust financial advice from somebody that I'm not PAYING to give me that advice. Or my old man, who does that for a living.
 
but they still made a profit, as opposed to going broke and filing for bankruptcy like everyone else...

they're in the black, everyone else is in the red. i'm just going by sales and profit numbers here
 
In Canada, Teck Cominco. Has rebounded substantially from its crash and will certainly keep going. Dunno if it'll make it back up to 50 but it will climb.
 
PEP pepsi co now we know coke out sells pepsi, but everywhere else pepsi wins

aquafina out sells desani

gatoraide outsells poweraide

tropicana out sells minutemade

not to mention the entire frito lays segment go try to find a salty snakck food not made by frito lay(in pa its easy every where else goodluck there are a few but over all frito lay is domanint in the market
 
You will see very minimal returns in stocks like Apple and Pepsi co.

If you really want to make money in a decent amount of time I would suggest these:

Small banks is my absolute best advice. You are going to see small bank stocks soar as the larger banks that were bailed out trickle money down and as the smaller banks play somewhat of an intermediary between lending and small businesses (which are set to take off again soon). Look for local banks and even banks like TD banknorth should take off by quite a bit.

Auto companies- Toyota is a decent one at only around $35 a share. You are going to see an explosion soon in the Chinese market and if GM gets their shit together they may get in on the action. Hummer was just bought by a Chinese company which says a lot about where their auto industry is going. Basically I would pick from Ford, GM, Toyota, or any other Chinese aimed manufacturer.

Mutual funds are a decent idea but I wouldn't recommend it right now. Hedge funs are an almost proven disaster at the moment.

I would steer clear of anything else. Except if you have means of foreign bonds. They are pretty good to buy and even the US bonds aren't a bad idea.
 
7sectors that arent influenced (a lot) by economical crisis:
EnergyEnvironmentInternational relationsSecuritygovernmenteducationhealthcare

just for your information....
 
My personal advice would be to steer very clear of healthcare. A very uncertain future and pharmaceutical companies are probably going to take quite a hit if we do any sort of nationalized health care. Insurance companies that deal with health too. Definitely not a good plan.

Energy is a pretty sketchy bet right now too. Very hard to predict those.

Other categories are pretty solid to go with though.
 
if you want to put the money away long term and arent going to be that active with it think about going with an eft. cheaper than a mutual fund and they allow you to pick a sector.
 
OK, this isn't just a case of what stock should I buy as this is exactly what gets noob investors into trouble. Asking somebody else's opinion (including brokers in many cases) is a dangerous game to play because nobody cares about your money more than you do... The way to go is to learn to do your own research and make well timed purchases and sales
If you want to make money in the stock market I suggest you read some economics books for starters, I am sure that you have a good grasp of this being a Business Major. Remember there are two Human forces working the market thats FEAR and GREED.
I personally use a Growth stock strategy, the kids that are telling you to buy GM are on a Value strategy i.e buy a stock when its down at a bargain price because you can get more "value" for your money. Growth investing involves hunting out new and emerging companies with innovative ideas and management within one to three years of going public. Look for solid fundamentals on the balance sheets, you said that you have been studying to do this, well look for stocks with massive increases in sales and profits over the last 2-5 years. They need to be small cap stocks (i.e those with few investors holding the stock) as these have a much higher volatility and can move up (and down) in price quickly, dont bother with large caps ie mcdonnalds and walmart they have so much stock outstanding and move really slowly, they are boring.
Next learn to read the market as stocks follow the general marked trend. Do you know what the market has been doing over the last year or so? Yes we are in a historic recession but the Market actually is doing well at the moment and now would seem like a strong time to buy as the market is in a confirmed rally and bottomed out in March.
Now learn how to read stock charts. There is a lot of voodoo chart readers out there who swear this is the way to pick stocks (sometimes known as Technical Analysis) but in reality it is a blend of skills needed to be successful in the market. I could go on for ages about this but basically look for a bassing period in a stocks chart that shows steady buying. With a growth stock, look for it emerging from its first consolidation period since it was a IPO. Then get the timing right with the market and combine it with outstanding fundamentals and bam buy time.
Now plan your strategy. I will buy stock and set an automatic stop loss at 7% below the buy point, then if it suddenly drops I don't have a difficult decision to make about selling, the stock automatically sells out If the stock and hey I loose 7% but if I back a winner, I will normally sell once it has risen 20% or so unless it goes up massively in a short space of time then I will hold on for the ride!! As you can see you can loose on 2 stocks and win on one and your up 6%
Seling, This is often the hardest part as Greed (if its going up) or fear (if its going down) wont let you leave a stock but remember, its always better to sell on the way up because its hard as hell to guess the top. I will sell if it looks like the general market is starting to go south or if I see massive price spikes and volatility.
I use scottrade as my online broker as its cheap to buy and sell (7 dollars for a market trade) and its easy to get money in and out. Consider starting a ROTH IRA if you want to avoid paying tax but this has to be a long term option.
hope that helps, read investors business daily every day (subscribe to them if you really are serious and use investors.com for your daily market updates. thats the best advice i can give
..wow this is what happens if i don't go skiing on a friday night. I'm off to jump on the trampoline. Peace.
ohh PM me and let me know how you are getting on
 
and whats your take on GE, i've been trying to figure out if it might not be bad to get in soon, im worried about their finance division but beyond that i think its an undervalued company
 
Another auto company to try is Honda, they are still doing well despite the state of things in the auto industry right now. They have a very long term approach so you will most likely not get short term gains but in the long run it is a good bet.
 
You're not far off actually.
I don't want to be an economics douche, but invest in Giffen goods, basically, the goods people buy when they have less money.
So go for cheaper food brands, like McDonalds, cheaper car brands, cheaper energy brands, then sell when the market starts to pick up.
 
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