International Float Planned for Hot new Stock. (english)
Sharp dressed Guy.
http://www.indymedia.org/front.php3?article_id=219685&group=webcast
With all the buzz around hot new stock,P & I Youth.Inc. Patrick Bateman and I have been up all night working on the IPO and if it should start in Nepal!

After all,its not where your from anymore,right?
It's where your at!
And in todays networked world,where ever you are is the center.While Nepal may not have an established record for new release's,right now its track record of dead cops is whats shakin'

Now to survive the burn rate we have to plan ahead and that means do your homework.It doesn't take a professional trader or an investment banker to know there's something very special about getting in on an initial public offering of a nationally listed company. Many people who have never owned individual stocks have heard news reports about stocks that skyrocket on their first day of trading. This has created the popular image that IPOs offer one of the most potent ways to make a lot of money fast.

And for once, the popular image is correct! Trading newly minted stocks can produce super-charged returns. If you trade stocks, especially if you trade stocks using chart patterns, you definitely should learn how to fish in these waters.

However, the popular image of prodigious riches misses the dangerous flipside of IPOs.

In many ways, the IPO game is stacked against the individual trader in favor of the big, deep-pockets institutions that dominate Wall Street. And newly issued stocks pose special risks. They lack long trading histories which can help someone who uses charts make buy and sell decisions. And newly public companies usually are young, unproven companies, without long track records of earnings and sales growth and extensive coverage by outside analysts.

Yes, IPOs can heat up your profits. But they also can burn the ill-prepared.

Fortunately for you and me, professional traders have worked out time-tested tactics for trading these new issues. These techniques can give us a realistic shot at the tremendous profit potential of IPOs, while enabling us, with vigilance and discipline, to reduce risk.

I will take you, step by step, through three of the best tactics for trading new issues in the next three weeks of the course. Each involves chart analysis. All deal with trading newly issued stocks after they have come public. In other words, these tactics are for those of us who are not among the select few who manage to buy IPO stock at the offering price.

The first two tactics enables you to time entries into long positions -- the "Hot IPO Pullback" setup invented by TradingMarkets co-founder and short-term trader Jeff Cooper and the first-stage base, which some of you may have encountered in the work of William O'Neil, founder of Investor's Business Daily and author of How to Make Money in Stocks. The third tactic defines the precise conditions when you can short-sell new issues.

But before you and I leap into practical trading tactics, let's get our bearings this week.

Why do newly issued stocks behave so differently than more aged issues? Do newly issued stocks really outperform the market on average? If so, for how long? What factors might help some IPOs perform better than others? What do you, as a trader, need to know about how IPOs are structured by the underwriters and their pre-IPO owners? I will answer these and other questions this week.

And while few of us ever get to buy IPO stock at the delectable offering price before a stock goes public, there are ways to improve your odds at getting shares of these stocks. In this week's installment, I'll describe some things you can do to try to finesse IPO allocations.

http://www.indymedia.org/front.php3?article_id=219685&group=webcast

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