Buying Stocks

You should now have the basic concept of the stock market, the  exchanges that exists within it and just what it means to buy and sell a  stock.  Now you are probably wondering what it takes to get setup and  get started buying and selling stocks yourself.  Well, we’re glad you  asked!
<h2>Choosing a Stock Brokerage</h2>
Firstly, you will have to decide on a stock brokerage. There are  quite a few online stock brokerages available. They range from the more  pricey full-service brokerages with brokers who work with you to manage  finances and investment to discount brokerages. Discount brokerages are  much cheaper and allow you to do the research and management on your  own.

A few brokerages to take a look at are:
<ul>
<li><a href=”">OptionsHouse.com :: First 100 Stock Trades for FREE</a></li>
<li><a rel=”nofollow” href=”http://etrade.com/”>E*Trade</a></li>
<li> <a rel=”nofollow” href=”http://tdameritrade.com/”>TDAmeritrade</a></li>
</ul>
<h2>Your First Stock Purchase</h2>
While all of the brokerages have a somewhat unique way of letting you  research stocks and enter orders to buy and sell a stock, they are all  quite similar. Most brokerages will offer you rather in-depth tools to  research and find your first investment.

Once you have located a worthy stock to purchase, you can lookup its  quote. There are quite a few things that can appear on a full stock  quote. However, the basics are: Sybmol, Last Price, Bid and Ask. For  example: MSFT (Microsoft Corp.), $26.56, Bid: $26.55, Ask: $26.56. We  will explain about <a href=”http://hotmicrocapstocks.com/learn-to-trade/level-ii-quotes.aspx”>bid and ask</a> more later. So, all you need to know to begin is for most companies  that are traded by a lot of traders throughout the day (which are most  of them) the bid and ask spread is very small. In our MSFT example it is  1 cent (26.55-26.56). When this is the case and you aren’t buying 1  million dollars worth of the stock, you probably would never need to pay  attention to the bid or the ask. Therefore, for the simplicity of first  stock trade, let’s look at only the Last Price (which is usually  somewhere between the bid and ask).

At this point you would decide how much money you wish to invest. Let  us say, you want to invest about $2700 in MSFT. At it’s current market  price you would be able to purchase about 100 shares. You would then  enter a market order (there are other <a href=”http://hotmicrocapstocks.com/learn-to-trade/stock-market-order-types”>order types</a> which we will cover later) for 100 shares of MSFT. Click “buy stock”  and that should be it. Within seconds you should be the proud owner of  100 shares of MSFT.

To get a bit more in-depth will the methods of stock buying and selling, be sure the check out the next section, starting with: <a href=”http://hotmicrocapstocks.com/learn-to-trade/stock-market-order-types”>Stock Market Order Types</a>.

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