What's My Stock Worth? – How to Invest in Stocks

Investment Calculator, Strategy, & Training – How to Invest in Stocks

Learn How to Invest in Stocks with the What’s My Stock Worth? iPhone Application

GET THE IPHONE APPLICATION HERE!

Learn How to Invest in the Stock Market. For less than the price of stock trade, the ‘What’s My Stock Worth’ iPhone Application will help you make better and smarter investment decisions. Whether you are a seasoned investment professional or new to the investment world, this application is for you.

This application is three for the price of one. The triple functions built into this app are:

1) An Estimated Stock’s Worth Calculator – Only Available in the ‘What’s My Stock Worth’ iPhone App and to Premium Members

2) Investment Adviser for Stock Purchases– Only Available in the ‘What’s My Stock Worth’ iPhone App and to Premium Members

 

3) Stock Investment Trainer

 

Premium Membership

Sign-up for a premium membership and get access to the ‘What’s My Stock Worth?’ Investment Calculator & Strategy. Price of the membership is only $5.95 per month. Cancel at anytime. Try it for FREE for 7 days. No obligation required.
 
 

We believe serving our customers is critical. As part of your premium membership you will receive a free one on one (1/2 hr.) calculator training and investment coaching session. During this session we will teach you how to use the investment calculator and answer any questions you may have. This will be accomplished by a webmeeting using Skype. Continued individual investment coaching sessions are available for premium members at a price of $19.95 per 1/2 hr.

 

 

Stock’s Worth Calculator

Using data entered in the application by the user, the application calculates estimates of the stock’s current worth or true value using several methods:

· Discounted Net Income (Estimated Future Earnings Per Share)

· Price to Earnings (PE): Historical versus Current Value PE

· Future Operating Cash Flows Discounted to Today’s Value

· Net Book Value Per Share

Investment Adviser for Stock Purchase

What should you invest in? Based on data entered into it, the ‘What’s My Stock Worth?’ application tells you whether the stock you wish to purchase meets the ‘What’s My Stock Worth?’ investment strategy requirements. It is recommended that a stock should not be purchased unless all criteria are listed as PASS.

The ‘What’s My Stock Worth?’ Strategy is based in large part on value investing and the ideas of value investor advocates like Warren Buffett, Benjamin Graham and David Dodd.

The ‘What’s My Stock Worth?’ Strategy incorporates the true value of the stock, company performance, and stock price change indicators.

Stock Investment Trainer

Learn how to invest in the Stock Market. If you are new to stock market investing, this application is a great resource to provide the training you are looking for. The training material includes training videos, written instructions, screen shots and investment term definitions.

What This Application is Not

This application is not a database. It is required that the user enters stock information for the calculator to work. There is no stock information stored in the application.

Screenshots…


Today’s Stock & Finance News May 19, 2012

  • Pricing the Cost of a Greek Euro Exit
    As Greece girds for elections next month that could lead to its exit from the euro zone, economists are acknowledging an unsettling reality: No one knows what the cost of such a departure would be.
  • In Euro Crisis, Iceland Emerges as an Island of Recovery
    Thanks to a devalued currency, the country has turned its trade deficit into a surplus and smoothed its recovery.
  • Should You Renounce Your U.S. Citizenship?
    A Facebook billionaire has sparked interest in ‘expatriating’ to skirt big tax bills. Here’s what you need to know.
  • Fresh Worries Hit Spain
    Jittery U.K. customers of one of Spain’s biggest lenders pulled out funds on Friday, and bad debts held by Spanish banks rose to a 17-year high, underscoring the challenges facing the country’s financial sector.
  • Europe Weighs Exit Scenario
    Europe has begun to prepare for a possible Greek exit from the euro zone ahead of elections next month that are fast becoming a referendum on the country’s membership in the common currency.
  • How to Play the Euro Now
    Investors should consider selling a basket of currencies that will profit if Greece does leave the euro zone, but also limit the downside if Europe muddles through.
  • Preparing for the End of the Bush Tax Cuts
    Unless Congress acts, most taxpayers will see rate and other increases. Here’s what to expect.
  • Websites for Finance Novices
    As with much on the Internet, the tools range from cutting-edge to useless. Here’s a guide.
  • Dollar Rally Stalls Against the Euro
    The dollar weakened against the euro for the first time in six days, as concerns about Greece’s economic and political crisis subsided, sparking renewed demand for the common currency.
  • CFTC OK’s Expanded CME Trading Hours
    The expansion to a 21-hour trading day applies to CME’s futures contracts for corn, wheat and soybeans, as well as wheat futures traded at the Kansas City Board of Trade and Minneapolis Grain Exchange.
  • Orange Juice Feels Supply-Demand Squeeze
    Orange-juice futures dropped below $1 a pound in intraday trading for the first time in 2½ years.
  • Winnebago Gets Offer
    Winnebago Industries received a $322 million takeover offer from a private-equity firm that wants to bring foreign car and truck assembly to the recreational vehicles maker.
  • For Gupta Trial, Tension and Tips
    Lawyers for former Goldman Sachs director Rajat Gupta say he was estranged from convicted hedge-fund mogul Raj Rajaratnam at the time of some alleged tips. Prosecutors say the friendship broke down much later.
  • MF Global Trustee Collects $168 Million
    J.P. Morgan agreed to hand over $168 million to a bankruptcy trustee representing customers of MF Global.
  • Facebook: Is ‘You’ a Good Investment?
    Those who expect Facebook’s shares to collapse quickly from here should realize that this isn’t your garden-variety overvalued stock.
  • Dow Swoons for Sixth Day
    A day billed as Facebook’s coming-out party ended up marking a much gloomier event: the stock market’s worst week in six months.
  • The Sweet Spots in Stocks and Bonds
    Both the safest and the riskiest assets are overbought. We hunt for the best deals in the middle.
  • Treasurys Rebound From Earlier Losses
    Treasury bonds fizzled and then returned to a sizzle Friday, leaving the prospects open for the benchmark 10-year note’s yield to set new record lows.
  • Stocks: Worst week of the year
    Stocks closed out an ugly week. Despite initial euphoria surrounding Facebook’s public debut, the social network’s shares barely popped above its offering price and failed to inspire investors to buy into the broader market.
  • Facebook trading sets record IPO volume
    Facebook’s stock market debut finally came and went — but for all the breathless hype, shares ended right near their offering price.
  • Anti-social: Zynga tumbles after Facebook IPO
    Social media stocks just aren’t feeling the love, despite Facebook’s highly-anticipated stock market debut.
  • Psychoanalyzing Facebook’s ‘Like’ Button
    Pay Dirt: New research finds that people who “like” an inordinate number of Facebook status updates may be mentally unstable.


  • Enough on Facebook! Buy Google or Apple
    Facebook is finally trading. And even though the stock didn’t explode out of the gate, the company is still worth more than $100 billion. It shouldn’t be.
  • Natural-Gas Prices Rally 5.7%
    Natural-gas prices jumped 5.7%, settling at their highest level in five months. Forecasts of warmer-than-normal temperatures are expected to heat up demand for the fuel.
  • Crude Skids for Sixth Straight Day
    Oil futures slid for the sixth session in a row, settling at their lowest level in nearly seven months and setting yet another new low for the year.
  • Worst Week for European Stocks In 8 Months
    The Stoxx 600 fell for the fifth consecutive session, pressured this time by concerns over slowing growth in China. Bank stocks rose amid speculation about a ban on short-selling.
  • Gold Rises for Second Day
    Gold futures climbed for a second day, erasing this week’s losses as investors continued to close out bets on lower prices following the 10-month lows hit earlier this week.
  • Facebook: Many mutual funds already have a stake
    Whether you do or don’t like Facebook, you may already own a piece of the social media site: over the past year, nearly 70 mutual funds have snapped up pre-IPO shares on private markets.
  • Tech IPOs have a dismal track record
    There are plenty of reasons to “like” Facebook, but Internet IPOs are better known for their epic flops than wild successes.
  • Europe fears pressure world markets
    European markets were mixed Friday as investors remained anxious about Spanish and Greek banks, while Asian stocks sold off sharply amid worries of a further slowdown in China.
  • The new threat to your portfolio
    In the current pullback, we’re starting to see a phenomenon at work that keeps even good stocks in retreat — and invites investors to buy high and sell low.
  • Japan Nonlife Insurers Hit by Thai Flood Payouts
    Tokio Marine’s fiscal-year profit plunged 92% while MS&AD Insurance Group and NKSJ Holdings both posted losses, hurt by about $6 billion in payouts related to flooding in Thailand that damaged Japanese manufacturing operations.
  • Yields Sink on Haven Bonds
    Nervous investors piled into haven bonds, pushing short-term German yields close to zero, as a raft of Spanish bank downgrades further jolted sentiment already weakened by fears of a Greek exit from the euro zone.
  • U.S. slams Chinese solar panels with new tariffs
    The U.S. Commerce Department announced stiff tariffs on Chinese-made solar panels Thursday, a move critics said could raise costs for consumers and further inflame trade tensions with Beijing.

Today’s Stock & Finance News May 18, 2012

Today’s Stock & Finance News May 17, 2012

  • Short-seller Einhorn targets Amazon and Martin Marietta
    Noted short-seller David Einhorn targeted Amazon and Martin Marietta Materials on Wednesday but was curiously silent on Herbalife.
  • Hedge-Fund Stars Make Stocks Move
    David Einhorn, Jeff Gundlach and other prominent hedge-fund managers took center stage at a conference to share their investment ideas—and they affected the stock prices of several companies.
  • Unknowns Loom If Greece Exits Euro
    Returning to a national currency after more than a decade of using the euro and having its money managed by the ECB would catapult Greece into a financial, legal and political no-man’s land.
  • Dow Extends May Swoon
    Stocks slipped as confusion over Greece’s political future trumped firm U.S. economic data.
  • Funds Bet on J.P. Morgan Before Loss
    More than 1,000 funds initiated or increased holdings of J.P. Morgan stock as of the end of the first quarter.
  • Lawmakers Seek an Accounting on J.P. Morgan Trading Loss
    Sen. Mike Johanns of Nebraska, a Republican on the Senate Banking Committee, said he wants J.P. Morgan Chase Chief Executive James Dimon to explain the bank’s $2 billion-plus trading loss.
  • Pay Clawbacks Raise Knotty Issues
    J.P. Morgan boss James Dimon says the bank may pursue pay clawbacks for those employees responsible for more than $2 billion in trading losses. But Wall Street’s track record is thin in this area.
  • Lampert Skeptics Could Get Seared
    Sears has seen numerous aborted share-price rallies in the past five years and is down 70% over that time. But Chairman Edward Lampert may deserve the benefit of the doubt this time.
  • Facebook IPO: Insiders Cashing Out
    Some of Facebook’s biggest holders are selling up to $3.8 billion in extra shares in Friday’s IPO, in some cases at Facebook’s request. Goldman Sachs and Tiger Global will now sell 50% of their stakes.
  • Greece worries weigh on U.S. stocks
    Following a positive start, U.S. stocks closed in the red for a fourth straight session Wednesday, as investors weighed strong U.S. economic data against ongoing uncertainty about Greece’s political situation.
  • Cities and Bond Buyers: The Courtship
    With the economy stalling and widespread fears of a sharp rise in defaults by local authorities, many municipalities are finding they need to do more to woo potential bond buyers.
  • FBI opens JPMorgan investigation
    The director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation said Wednesday that the agency has opened an investigation into JPMorgan Chase, the nation’s largest bank.
  • J.C. Penney stock plunges on dismal earnings
    Investors jettisoned J.C. Penney on Wednesday after a dismal earnings report, following the first full quarter with a former Apple executive at the helm.
  • Should you buy Facebook?
    Facebook’s IPO is causing a frenzy among investors eager to get a piece of the social networking website.
  • Is Greece the Lehman of 2012?
    With apologies to John Lennon: Imagine a eurozone without Greece. It’s easy if you try.
  • FOMC announces revised tentative 2012 meeting schedule and tentative 2013 meeting schedule
    FOMC announces revised tentative 2012 meeting schedule and tentative 2013 meeting schedule
  • Minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee, April 24-25, 2012
    Minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee, April 24-25, 2012
  • European leaders scramble to contain Greek debt crisis
    Leaders across Europe rushed to try to reassure nervous investors Wednesday that they were working to prevent Greece from an unprecedented exit from the eurozone and the damage that might cause for other troubled European economies.
  • Rep. Bachus Talks Down Impact of J.P. Morgan Loss
    In the aftermath of the $2 billion-plus trading loss J.P. Morgan disclosed last week, Rep. Spencer Bachus noted that the blunder would barely make a dent in the New York bank’s profitability.
  • J.P. Morgan May Turn Loss Into Gain
    Real-Time Advice: The firm’s derivatives flop could prove lucrative for its share repurchase plan, writes Jack Hough.


  • What I don’t ‘like’ about Facebook
    The IPO will be huge; the company has an impressive reach. But what does it say when our hottest business wins because young adults are stuck on couches?
  • J.C. Penney stock sinks on falling sales
    J.C. Penney gave investors two reasons to ditch the stock: the retailer said Tuesday that it is suspending its dividend and that sales are dropping dramatically.
  • Facebook’s New R&D Machine
    Facebook is no longer run by a loose collection of programmers who dream up half-baked products after all-night coding sessions. CEO Mark Zuckerberg is taking a more deliberate approach to product development for major features.
  • The hedge funds profiting off JPMorgan’s trades
  • Best and Worst Brokers of 2012
    Brokers are luring investors with high-tech tools and more. Our annual survey ranks the good and the bad.


  • In U.K., Pay Spats Escalate
    A shareholder rebellion over executive pay rippling through the U.K. is exposing fissures inside some of the nation’s biggest firms.
  • Gas Pains Bring Investor Gains
    Hough: Where to look now that natural gas stocks are out of steam.


  • Dimon Eludes Holders’ Ire
    James Dimon faced just a handful of angry questions at J.P. Morgan Chase’s annual meeting, though the percentage of shareholders voting to take away his powers as chairman hit at least a seven-year high.
  • Justice Department Probes J.P. Morgan
    The Justice Department has opened an inquiry into J.P. Morgan Chase’s $2 billion-plus trading loss, according to a person familiar with the matter.
  • A Gamble That Pays Off
    Mount Airy Casino Resort, one of Pennsylvania’s first stand-alone casinos, is enjoying a change in fortune after years of tough times and a legal cloud over its ownership.
  • Holders Back Morgan Stanley Pay Plan
    Morgan Stanley shareholders approved by a wide margin the securities firm’s 2011 executive-compensation plan and a plan to allow issuance of 50 million shares for stock grants to pay employees.
  • More Real-Estate Loans Default in Europe
    European commercial real-estate markets are struggling with a sharp increase in mortgages falling into trouble, just as more European countries slip back into recession.
  • Above the Fray
    It’s the rare stock analyst who tells clients to sell shares. But with stocks down last year in all 10 of the markets covered in The Wall Street Journal survey of Asia’s Best Analysts, those are the ones who made money for their clients.
  • Brookfield to Spin Off Holdings
    Brookfield Asset Management plans to bundle together its wide array of commercial-property holdings into a new publicly traded subsidiary, with an eye toward further growth.
Next Page »