stocks Guide  
 

Is This The Right Time To Buy Stocks?
By M.Farouk Radwan
Before asking yourself the question, Is this the right time to buy stocks?

Time to Stop Writing About Stocks and Start Buying Them
After years of writing about Washington investing, I'm getting ready to buy my first stock in a local company.
Old Money Takes Its Time At Chevy Chase Land Co.
From Ed Asher's penthouse office on upper Connecticut Avenue, the canopy of leaves that covers Washington's suburbs rolls off in all directions like a verdant sea.
We're Stuck With The Mortgage Monsters
After too many years tilting at Washington's windmills, there are few subjects left that can trigger my feelings of outrage.
Rukeyser Pioneered TV Stock Talk, and Cramer Added the Laugh Track
Watching Jim Cramer on CNBC, ripping the head off a toy bear, then raking his audience with machine-gun sound effects, left me longing for the days when Louis Rukeyser was considered "too showbiz" to be talking about stocks on television.

Companies Ignored by Institutions Can Prove Strong Performers
In Washington Investing 101 -- and most books on personal finance -- the first chapter is "The Magic of Compounding," a discourse on how your money can grow if you let gains build year after year.
REITs No Longer Resistant to Rate Increases
Fifteen times in a row the Federal Reserve cranked up interest rates and real estate investors stood their ground.
Va. Takes Heed of Md.'s Electric Rate Backlash
While Maryland politicians and Constellation Energy Group Inc. executives muck around in the mess they've made of electric rates, Wall Street is looking across the Potomac and worrying that something similar could happen in the Old Dominion.
Local Telecom Stocks Reconnect With Investors
Looking at the list of Washington's best-performing stocks for the first quarter, you'd think it was 1999 all over again.

For Start-Up Insurer, Flirting With Disaster Ended Badly
To the list of those hit hard financially by last year's Gulf Coast hurricanes, add some new names:
Infrastructure: A Road to Riches?
If somebody asked if you wanted to buy the Brooklyn Bridge, you'd know it was a con. But how about buying the Indiana Toll Road?
Radio One Takes a Long View
Back when Radio One Inc. began buying radio stations, hip-hop was unheard music.
Stock Markets on the Open Market: Exchanges Go Public, Generate Windfalls
If you think the stocks on the Nasdaq Stock Market have been doing well, take a look at the stock of the Nasdaq Stock Market.

French Parent Targets Huge but Little-Known Lafarge North America
The Washington area is preparing to bid a raucous au revoir to one of its biggest but least-known corporations -- one that arguably never should have existed.
A Lonely Voice Is Vindicated as Google Falters
When Google stock plummeted Wednesday, investors in Maryland's most-vaunted mutual fund, the Legg Mason Value Trust, lost $130 million in value in a single day.
Danaher Thrives on Discipline
For the chief executive of an $8 billion-a-year business that grows by making acquisitions, Danaher Corp. President H. Lawrence Culp Jr. has an impressive ability to say no.
Six Flags Gains Ground Under Redskins' Snyder
Okay, so Redskins owner Daniel M. Snyder can't get his football team into the Super Bowl, but the guy sure knows how to make money on his new sideline -- the Six Flags amusement park chain.

Cuisine Solutions Sizzled in 2005
Washington investors had to read the food section and restaurant reviews to find last year's top-performing local stock -- Cuisine Solutions Inc., an Alexandria company that makes gourmet frozen food.
Dealmaking Power Companies Change the Utility Landscape
Consumers and investors may think it doesn't matter much that Constellation Energy Group Inc., Maryland's biggest utility company, plans to merge with Florida's FPL Group Inc. Think again.
BlackBerry Users Can Relax: NTP Won't Shut You Down
This column is for all those traumatized people who type with their thumbs.
A Peek Inside a Private Offering
Joe E. Robert Jr., the Washington area real estate mogul and philanthropist, has lots of friends.

Investors Could Find A Chink in Under Armour
Not since Cal Ripken Jr. has Maryland produced as rich a sports hero as Kevin Plank.
Host Marriott, Out of the Shadow
What do you call a company that's the biggest in its business, valued by Wall Street at more than $16 billion?
Carl Icahn's Latest Shuffle
Carl Icahn has been trying lately to tell General Motors Corp. and Time Warner Inc. how to run their businesses. The 68-year-old New York financier has acquired significant stakes in both companies and is hectoring management to do something to "increase shareholder value" -- in other words, make the stock he just bought worth more.
Signs Abound That the Joy Ride Of REITs May Be Ending
If you want to understand how nervous real estate investors are these days, take a look at Mills Corp., the company that owns Potomac Mills, Arundel Mills and dozens of other mega-malls.

AES Continues to Charm Wall Street Analysts
Every week the Bloomberg news service compiles a list of companies that get the best rankings from Wall Street analysts. And every week for months, AES Corp. of Arlington has been on that list, ranking among the 30 most highly recommended stocks in the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index.
Nextel Partners Is a Phone Company Without a Brand
Marrying into a family can always bring problems, but rarely do family feuds turn nasty as fast as the dust-up between Sprint Nextel Corp. and Nextel's most successful offspring.
A Chill Hits Feverish Biotech Stocks
Every fall, the biotechnology industry used to get a predictable lift from an annual conference on infectious diseases where biotech companies report their latest drug research. A hint of success in the lab or in patient testing for one or two new drugs would elevate the whole risky sector.
WorldSpace Stumbles
Judging from what happened before WorldSpace Inc. went public in August, the Silver Spring-based satellite radio service should have pulled off Washington's hottest initial public offering since the Roaring '90s.

Blue-Chip Trio Played Out of Tune in Third Quarter
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Marriott International.
Hurricanes Bring Price Spikes in Stocks, Construction Supplies
Driven by Katrina and now Rita, higher prices are rolling through the building and construction business, affecting both consumers and investors.
Airlines Hide Out In Bankruptcy Court
US Airways of Arlington is on Runway 11, revving its engines to fly out of bankruptcy.
Lockheed Rules Roost on Electronic Surveillance
Small-time stock traders love to try to make money off news events, so when the London transit bombers were caught on video cameras recently, electronic surveillance stocks got hot.

Quirky MicroStrategy Springs Another Surprise
MicroStrategy Inc. has produced such solid profits and strong stock performance recently that it was almost possible to believe the company had put its past behind it and matured into what it was always meant to be -- a nice second-tier software maker.
Sprint Nextel Emerges as Contender to Rule Local Market
Move over, Lockheed Martin.
All Is Not Equal in the World of Spinoffs
When Marriott International Inc. spun off a new real estate investment company to buy hotels, so many investors wanted in on the deal that the year-old company, DiamondRock Hospitality Co., sold $292 million worth of stock in May instead of the $172 million it had first offered.
Asbestos Stocks Hostage to Fate Of Legislation On Liability
Six months ago, W.R. Grace & Co. was the hottest stock in town.

Aether Systems Finds a Billion Dollars in Losses Is an Asset Worth Protecting
When David S. Oros, the founder of Aether Systems, came by for lunch with editors and reporters six years ago, he was one of the rock stars of Washington business.
SEC Trading Rule Gives Executives An Out Just Ahead of Bad News
In the month before the Trex Co. revealed that slumping sales and rising raw materials costs are eroding profits, three top officials of the Virginia maker of composite deck boards cashed in a combined $2.75 million of their stock.
Down but Not Out, Local Stocks Fare Better Than the Dow
How much money have you lost in the market so far this year?
Share Prices Fall, But Pay Goes Up
Pay for performance. What a great idea. Too bad the executive compensation system so rarely works that way.

Financial Firms Weigh Expansion Closer to Home or Farther Afield
The future of three of the Washington area's biggest financial services companies depends on a question nobody can answer with confidence.
Winning and Losing, Yet Still Coming Up Big
On most rankings of mutual fund performance, two fund families based in the Washington area show up among the biggest winners -- and the biggest losers.
US Airways Investors Live in A Fantasy World
Attention investors: The captain has turned on the seat-belt light. Please prepare for landing.
Delisting A Stock Isn't A Death Knell
Champagne corks pop to celebrate initial public offerings, when companies sell stock to the public for the first time, but there are no ceremonies to mark the other end of the corporate life cycle, when a company's stock is delisted.

Online Investing: Consolidate Or Go Home
As chief executive of E-Trade Financial Corp., Mitchell H. Caplan is determined to be a winner in the multibillion-dollar game of musical chairs in the online investing business.
Riggs Stockholders Decide How to Collect in PNC Deal
Riggs Bank's customers and shareholders are facing a tough decision: Should they stay, or should they go?
Xybernaut Stock Sold Like Its Computers Didn't
As a maker of "wearable computers," Xybernaut Corp. of Fairfax has been far more successful at selling stock than selling computers.
To Find Top Performers, Get Back to Basics
As chief executive of NVR Inc., the Washington area's biggest home builder, Dwight C. Schar gets a lot of grief.

Legg Mason's Miller Presses For Qwest Bid
Other investors may own more MCI stock, but few have as much at stake in the fight for control of MCI Inc. as Baltimore's Legg Mason Inc.
As Coal Prices Rise, So Do Coal Stocks
You can't help but be reminded of the Little Engine That Could when you chart the stock price of Massey Energy Co. of Richmond.
USEC's Gain Tops Regional Stock Index In 1st Quarter
In the gloomiest quarter in two years for Washington investors, one stock glowed like it was radioactive.
Plan to Merge MCI, Qwest Has A Sour Ring to It
As a long-time advocate for investors, it pains me to say it, but MCI Inc.'s board of directors ought to tell shareholders who oppose merging with Verizon Communications Inc. to take a hike.

Buyer Beware: Retail Stocks May Not Pay Off
With Kmart and Sears preparing for a summer wedding and the nation's two biggest department store groups celebrating their engagement, investors may be tempted to start shopping for retail stocks.
Wall Street Is Stuck With Fannie Mae
Fannie Mae's stock finally had a good day on Friday--after a six-day slide that cost its shareholders $6 billion.
Some Troubled Firms Turned Into Top Performers in 2004
Flirting with bankruptcy is getting to be the most reliable way for Washington investors to pick a top-performing local stock.

you must first ask yourself, when is the right time to buy stocks?
Want to have a solid and practical investment knowledge?

Check out:

www.theway2invest.com

 
 
 

stock market trading

Here are some articles to start with..