Free 115 page ebook
Stock Trading Strategies
Trading System
Profitable Setups
Limited Time
Download it Now


Posts Tagged ‘securities’

Released Stress Test Results

Friday, May 8th, 2009

Exhale. The stress tests results of the nation’s 19 largest banks have been announced. For some, this wasn’t pleasant as some banks find out that they did not have enough capital to withstand a prolonged recession. For others, it was relieving, providing a decent amount of comfort to our investors, along with the public as whole. Overall, the results have established that those banks can withstand to lose approximately $600 billion in a bleak economic situation.

Results showed that 10 of the bank holding companies need to raise an additional $74.6 billion in new capital. Of the 10, Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) needs to raise the largest amount: $33.9 billion. Wells Fargo (NYSE: WF) comes in second place. Other banks include KeyCorp (NYSE: KEY), Citigroup Inc. (NYSE: C), Fifth Third Bancorp (NYSE: FITB), Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS), GMAC LLC (NYSE: GJM), PNC Financial Services Group Inc. (NYSE: PNC), SunTrust Banks Inc. (NYSE: STI), and Regions Financial Corp (NYSE: RF).

These banks will have 6 months to fill their capital shortfalls but they are to submit their plans to federal regulators by June to show how they will fabricate the capital needed.

Some suggestions are:

1) selling stocks - Wells Fargo plans to sell common stocks to bolster their capital base
2) selling business units- Fifth Third Bancorp sold 51% of its processing business, which handled credit card, debit and other transactions, to Advent International. This deal increased FITB’s capital levels by $1.2 billion.
3) selling securities – Each of the banks can sell government issued-bonds and other various types of securities to generate capital.
4) TARP- The Troubled Asset Relief Program still has $110 billion in cash available for investment.

Fortunately for the 9 other banks, they do not need to raise additional capital. These banks include: US Bancorp (NYSE: USB), Bank of New York Mellon Corp. (NYSE: BK), Goldman Sachs Group Inc (NYSE: GS), Capital One Financial Corp. (NYSE: COF,) JP Morgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM), BB&T Corp. (NYSE: BBT), State Street Corp. (NYSE: STT), and MetLife Inc. (NYSE: MET).

With that said, if you are still not quite sure about what the stress test entails and its purpose, please feel free to read “Stressing Out” published on May 3 on this following website. It might be able to provide you pieces and probable answers to any questions that you might have.

Stock Market Education

- My Stock Broker
- What is Fundamental Analysis?
- What is Stock Price?
- Why are economic indicators important when buying stocks?
- Why does stock price go up?
- Trading Psychology
- Futures Trading - What are Futures?
- Options Trading - What are Options?
- Types of Orders
- Commissions and Slippage
- Reverse Splits: Meaning and Purpose
- Stock Splits: Meaning and Purpose
- Stocks VS. Bonds
- Common VS. Preferred Stocks
- Top 5 fundamental analysis books
- Top 10 technical analysis books

Technical Analysis

- What is Technical Analysis?
- Swing Trading Strategies
- How to use technical indicators?
- My Trading Software
- Types of Technical Indicators
- Volume Indicator
- Simple Moving Average
- Exponential Moving Average
- Support and Resistance
- What are Double Tops and Bottoms?
- What are Triple Tops and Bottoms?
- Trendlines
- How to Trade Channels?
- Triangle Patterns
- Flag and Pennant Patterns
- Head and Shoulders Pattern
- Bullish Crossovers
- Divergence Patterns
- How To Screen For Stocks

Online Stock Brokers

Brokers Commission
Optionshouse.com $2.95
Zecco.com $4.50
E*Trade.com $7.99
tradeMonster $7.50

Great news: Tim Sykes Penny Stock Mllionaire program is officially open.
Click here to get all the details




Free Trading Courses

Sign Up Now
(1) The importance of psychology in price movement
(2) How to spot mega trends
(3) Understanding of technical price objectives
(4) How to picture price objectives
(5) How to trade with moving averages
(6) How to use point and figure trading techniques
(7) How to use the RSI indicator
(8) How to correctly use stochastics in your trading
(9) How to use the ADX indicator to capture trends
(10) How to capitalize on natural market cycles.

Stock Lists

- Penny Stocks
- Stocks under $1
- Stocks under $2
- Stocks under $5
- Stocks under $10 ($5-$10 range)
- Stocks under $20 ($10-$20 range)
- NYSE Stocks
- NASDAQ Stocks
- Most Active Stocks
- Most Active Penny Stocks
- Hot Stocks


Bullish Stock Patterns

Bullish Engulfing Pattern
Doji Pattern
Three White Soldier Pattern
Above Stomach Pattern
Hammer Pattern
Piercing Pattern
Harami Pattern
Morning Star Pattern
Bullish Kicker Pattern
Inverted Hammer Pattern
Moving Average Crossover Pattern
Price & Moving Average Crossover
Macd Crossover Pattern
Weekly Macd Crossover Pattern
Stochastic Crossover Pattern
High Volume Percentage Gain stocks
Relative Strength Index (Rsi) Moving Up
Bollinger Band Crossover (Lower)
Bollinger Band BCrossover Upper
Commodity Channel Index (Cci) Crossover
Three Outside Up Pattern
Bullish Side By Side Pattern
Rising Three Method Pattern
Three Line Strike Pattern
Last Engulfing Top Pattern
Three Line Strike Pattern
Gap Up Stocks

Bearish Stock Patterns

Bearish Hanging Man Pattern
Bearish Dark Cloud Cover Pattern
Bearish Harami Pattern
Bearish Evening Star Pattern
Bearish Kicker Pattern
Shooting Star Pattern
Weekly Stochastic Crossover Pattern
On Balance Volume (Obv) Pattern
Average True Range (Atr) Pattern
Moving Average Crossdown Pattern
Price & Moving Average Crossdown Pattern
Macd Crossdown Pattern
Weekly Macd Crossdown Pattern
Weekly Stochastic Crossdown Pattern
Day Volume Percentage Down Pattern
Relative Strength Index (Rsi) Crossdown Pattern
On Balance Volume (Obv) Moving Down Pattern
Average True Range (Atr) Moving Down Pattern