How to Buy Gold… At the Price You Want & Get Paid for It
Sep 29th, 2009 | By Lee Lowell | Category: Gold MarketSo what exactly is the best way to grab profits from the important and often explosive world of commodities?
So what exactly is the best way to grab profits from the important and often explosive world of commodities?
I’m going to open the door to a “secret society” for you today.
If you’re looking for what I call a “blast-off” move, look no further than the sugar market.
In the last few columns, we’ve focused on sectors that typically see lots of action during the summertime. Most notably, this includes the “grains” (corn, wheat, soybeans), the “softs” (orange juice), and even natural gas. When you have commodities that are so susceptible to weather, you often see dramatic moves in one day, only for it to unwind the next day.
I’d like to focus today’s segment on the markets that typically see heightened activity during the summer months, due to the fact that it’s their prime growing season. Specifically, that means the grains and orange juice markets.
I’d like to focus this week’s segment on the markets that typically see heightened activity during the summer months, due to the fact that it’s their prime growing season. Specifically, that means the grains and orange juice markets.
Today, I want to focus on specific markets that heat up during the summer thanks to the less-than-reliable nature of weather.
Let’s say you’ve been interested in buying Microsoft stock and you feel $20 is a good price to pick up some shares. It currently trades at $23.50 per share, so you’ll need it to fall in price a bit before getting filled on the trade. Most stock traders would just put in a “limit buy” order to buy the stock if/when Microsoft falls down to $20 per share. But there’s no guarantee that Microsoft will ever fall to $20 per share, and there’s no one paying this stock trader upfront for his time while they wait to buy Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) at $20…
Right now, bunches of savvy investors are getting paid cold, hard cash for nothing more than agreeing to buy stocks. Investors are giving them money to buy stock that they were looking to purchase anyway. Sound crazy? Well it isn’t
Whether it’s heading up or down, the oil market usually asserts itself as the leader of the commodities world. Having plunged from levels around $130 per barrel this time last year all the way down to the $40s, the market has spent the last couple of months striking to the upside again.