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Simulador de Bolsa

Espaço dedicado a todo o tipo de troca de impressões sobre os mercados financeiros e ao que possa condicionar o desempenho dos mesmos.

Re: Simulador de Bolsa

por LTCM » 4/12/2011 23:32

jcnunes Escreveu:Boa tarde,

Pretendo sugestões de sites onde possa criar gratuitamente uma conta gratuita de forma a poder acompanhar e apostar de forma virtual e lúdica em acções de modo relativamente básica e para iniciantes, mas sempre baseada em valores reais e actuais das cotações (PSI20...).
Algo que permita com base num plafon virtual adquirir acções e acompanhar respectivos ganhos/perdas de forma simulada.
Antecipadamente grato pelas dicas/sugestões.
[/b]


Isso só serve para perder tempo.
É bastante melhor testar com dinheiro real, por muito pequena que seja a quantia a estoirar.

So You Want To Be A Trader?
It’s really easy, right? Open an online brokerage account, send some money, and fire away. You can start your application now and be on margin within the hour. Sounds like a party, huh? Here are some things to consider:

1) 95% of individual traders lose money over ANY 10-year period. Why? Mainly because most investors buy poor quality stocks, but I could write a book on the hundreds of other reasons why I think this happens.

2) 88% of mutual fund managers can’t beat the S&P 500 ($SPY). You know when your 401k plan offers you all those mutual funds to choose from? You are better off putting it all in an S&P 500 Index fund for 2 reasons: A) You have a 1 in 10 chance of selecting a fund that will beat the S&P and B) 500 multi-national companies is PLENTY of diversification.

3) Since 1886, the US economy has been in a recession or depression 61% of the time. I realize that the economy does not equal the stock market, but they are fairly correlated.

I don’t share these statistics to discourage you from trading. In fact, I highly encourage everyone to be involved in the stock market because the opportunities are endless. I’ve heard about so many people who supplemented their income, helped pay for their kids’ education, retired early, donated to great charities, and countless other rags to riches stories…all from the stock market. The key is to work hard at it, gain experience from actual trading, cut your losses, manage your emotions, and protect your confidence. Anyone can do it, but keep in mind, it takes hard work and of course some luck. As Thomas Jefferson said: “I’m a great believer in luck, and I find the harder I work, the more I have of it.”

The truth of the matter is that trading takes a lot of work. Staying till 7pm is hard to do every day. But Peter, one of our new trainees, does it. It is hard to write a detailed trading review after the close everyday. But Shark does it. It is hard to crunch your trading stats indepthly everyday. But GMan does it. Is this them working hard or just being lost in work that connects with something inside of them?

I had a conversation with a new trainee recently who emphatically claimed to really want to get better. I asked him for a plan of attack going forward on a specific adjustment we identified. He followed up with a two paragraph email. This new trader will never make it. This is short of the work necessary to succeed. It is not that this trainee is lazy or a bad person or not competitive. This is just not his thing. There is no flow for him when he does his trading work. He thinks he is working hard. But he isn’t. People who work hard think about their passion all the time because that is what they want to do.

Sometimes I think we make way too much over who fails as a trader. Do they really fail or just learn that trading is not their passion? If I teach a new trader well this should be their exit. They should knock on my door, sit down, and tell me they are leaving because they just do not love trading.
Remember the Golden Rule: Those who have the gold make the rules.
***
"A soberania e o respeito de Portugal impõem que neste lugar se erga um Forte, e isso é obra e serviço dos homens de El-Rei nosso senhor e, como tal, por mais duro, por mais difícil e por mais trabalhoso que isso dê, (...) é serviço de Portugal. E tem que se cumprir."
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por Automech » 4/12/2011 22:54

Go Bulling, XTB, Orey, IG Markets, etc.
No man is rich enough to buy back his past - Oscar Wilde
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por Sr_SNiper » 4/12/2011 18:12

Gobulling, começas com 100.000 virtuais para torrar a brincar e ver que isto não é a arvore das patacas.
Tudo real time e igual à conta a "sério"
Lose your opinion, not your money
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Simulador de Bolsa

por jcnunes » 4/12/2011 18:00

Boa tarde,

Pretendo sugestões de sites onde possa criar gratuitamente uma conta gratuita de forma a poder acompanhar e apostar de forma virtual e lúdica em acções de modo relativamente básica e para iniciantes, mas sempre baseada em valores reais e actuais das cotações (PSI20...).
Algo que permita com base num plafon virtual adquirir acções e acompanhar respectivos ganhos/perdas de forma simulada.
Antecipadamente grato pelas dicas/sugestões.
[/b]
 
Mensagens: 1
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