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+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Successful Stock Speculation, by J. J. Butler
+ </title>
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's Successful Stock Speculation, by John James Butler
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Successful Stock Speculation
+
+Author: John James Butler
+
+Release Date: October 8, 2008 [EBook #26841]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SUCCESSFUL STOCK SPECULATION ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Stephen Blundell and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<h1><big>Successful<br />
+Stock Speculation</big></h1>
+
+<h2><span class="p3"><i><small>By</small></i><br />
+J. J. BUTLER</span></h2>
+
+<p class="p1"><i>Written April 1922<br />
+Published December 1922</i></p>
+
+<div class="p3"><p class="center"><i>Published by</i><br />
+NATIONAL BUREAU OF FINANCIAL INFORMATION<br />
+395 Broadway, New York City</p></div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class="bk2">
+<p class="center"><i>This Book Is Not Copyrighted</i></p>
+
+<div class="bk3">We believe the principles expounded
+in this book are of immense value
+to everyone who buys speculative
+securities, and we do not object to
+anyone reproducing any part of it,
+whether or not we are given credit
+for it.</div>
+
+<p class="center"><small><b>National Bureau of Financial Information</b></small></p></div>
+
+<hr />
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td class="td1" colspan="3"></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td2" colspan="3"></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3"></td><td class="td4"></td><td class="td3"></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td1" colspan="3">PART 1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td2" colspan="3">INTRODUCTORY CHAPTERS</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3"><small>Chapter</small></td><td class="td4">&nbsp;</td><td class="td3"><small>Page</small></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">I.</td><td class="td4">The Purpose of This Book</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_7">7</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">II.</td><td class="td4">What Is Speculation</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_9">9</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">III.</td><td class="td4">Some Terms Explained</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_13">13</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">IV.</td><td class="td4">A Correct Basis for Speculating</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_17">17</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td1" colspan="3">PART 2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td2" colspan="3">WHAT AND WHEN TO BUY AND SELL</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">V.</td><td class="td4">What Stocks to Buy</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_23">23</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">VI.</td><td class="td4">What Stocks Not to Buy</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_25">25</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">VII.</td><td class="td4">When to Buy Stocks</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_29">29</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">VIII.</td><td class="td4">When Not to Buy Stocks</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_33">33</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">IX.</td><td class="td4">When to Sell Stocks</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_35">35</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td1" colspan="3">PART 3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td2" colspan="3">INFLUENCES AFFECTING STOCK PRICES</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">X.</td><td class="td4">Movements in Stock Prices</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_41">41</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">XI.</td><td class="td4">Major Movements in Prices</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">XII.</td><td class="td4">The Money Market and Stock Prices</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_47">47</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">XIII.</td><td class="td4">Minor Movements in Prices</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_49">49</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">XIV.</td><td class="td4">Technical Conditions</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">XV.</td><td class="td4">Manipulations</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_53">53</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td1" colspan="3">PART 4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td2" colspan="3">TOPICS OF INTEREST TO SPECULATORS</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">XVI.</td><td class="td4">Marginal Trading</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_61">61</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">XVII.</td><td class="td4">Short Selling</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_65">65</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">XVIII.</td><td class="td4">Bucket Shops</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_69">69</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">XIX.</td><td class="td4">Choosing a Broker</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">XX.</td><td class="td4">Puts and Calls</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_73">73</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">XXI.</td><td class="td4">Stop Loss Orders</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_75">75</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td1" colspan="3">PART 5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td2" colspan="3">CONCLUDING CHAPTERS</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">XXII.</td><td class="td4">The Desire to Speculate</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_81">81</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">XXIII.</td><td class="td4">Two Kinds of Traders</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">XXIV.</td><td class="td4">Possibilities of Profit</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_91">91</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">XXV.</td><td class="td4">Market Information</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_95">95</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3">XXVI.</td><td class="td4">Successful Speculation</td><td class="td3"><a href="#Page_103">103</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<hr />
+<h2><span class="p3"><i>PART ONE</i><br />
+INTRODUCTORY CHAPTERS</span></h2>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER I.<br />
+THE PURPOSE OF THIS BOOK</h2>
+
+<p>This book is written for the purpose of
+giving our clients some ideas of the fundamental
+principles that guide us when we select
+stocks for them to buy, but these principles
+are valuable to every person who trades
+in listed stocks or in any other kind of speculative
+stocks.</p>
+
+<p>First of all, we want you to get a clear
+conception of the meaning of the word speculation,
+which is explained in the next chapter.
+Our purpose is to protect you against
+losses as well as to enable you to make profits,
+and it is very important that you understand
+how to provide for safety in your speculating.</p>
+
+<p>It is a well known fact that there are tremendous
+losses in stock speculation, but we
+claim that almost all of these losses would
+be avoided if all speculators were guided by
+the principles expounded in this book.</p>
+
+<p>"What" and "When" are two very important
+words in stock speculation, and we cannot
+urge upon you too strongly to study carefully
+<a href="#CHAPTER_V">Chapters V. to IX.</a><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><a href="#CHAPTER_X">Chapters X. to XV.</a> tell you much about
+the influences that affect the prices of stocks,
+a knowledge of which should also be a guide
+to you in making your selections.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the most important chapter in
+the entire book is <a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">XXV.</a>, on Market Information.
+A careful reading of this chapter
+should convince you that much of the prevailing
+information about the stock market
+is misleading. That fact alone accounts for
+many of the losses in stock speculation.</p>
+
+<p>It has been our aim to state all facts
+briefly. The entire book is not long, and it
+will not require much of your time to read
+it through carefully. We are sure you will
+get many ideas from it that will help you.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER II.<br />
+WHAT IS SPECULATION?</h2>
+
+<p>To speculate is to theorize about something
+that is uncertain. We can speculate
+about anything that is uncertain, but we
+use the word "speculation" in this book with
+particular reference to the buying and selling
+of stocks and bonds for the purpose of making
+a profit. When people buy stocks and
+bonds for the income they get from them
+and the amount of that income is fixed, they
+are said to invest and not to speculate. In
+nearly all investments there is also an element
+of speculation, because the market price
+of investments is subject to change. "Investment"
+also conveys the idea of holding
+for some time whatever you have purchased,
+while speculation conveys the idea of selling
+for a quick profit rather than holding for
+income.</p>
+
+<p>To the minds of most people, the word
+"speculation" conveys the thought of risk,
+and many people think it means great risk.
+The dictionary gives for one of the meanings
+of speculation, "a risky investment for large<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
+profit," but speculation need not necessarily
+be risky at all. The author of this book once
+used the expression, "stock speculating with
+safety," and he was severely criticized by a
+certain financial magazine. Evidently the
+editor of that magazine thought that "speculating"
+and "safety" were contradictory
+terms, but the expression is perfectly correct.
+Stock speculating with safety is possible.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, we all know that the word
+"safety" is seldom used in an absolute sense.
+We frequently read such expressions as:
+"The elevators in modern office buildings are
+run with safety." "It is possible to cross
+the ocean with safety." "You can travel
+from New York to San Francisco in a railroad
+train with safety." And yet accidents
+do occur and people do lose their lives in
+elevators, steamships, and railroad trains.
+Because serious accidents are comparatively
+rare, we use the word "safety."</p>
+
+<p>In like manner it is possible to purchase
+stocks sometimes when it is almost certain
+that the purchaser will make a profit, and
+that is "stock speculating with safety." When
+Liberty Bonds were selling in the 80's, many
+people bought them for speculation. They<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
+were not taking any risk, except the slight
+risk that the market price might go still
+lower before it would go higher, and that
+did not involve any risk for those who knew
+they could hold them. The fact that the
+market prices of Liberty Bonds would advance
+was based upon an economic law that
+never fails. That law is that when interest
+rates go up, the market prices of bonds go
+down, and when interest rates go down, the
+market prices of bonds go up. When Liberty
+Bonds were selling in the 80's, interest rates
+were so very high, it was certain that they
+would come down. That the market prices
+of Liberty Bonds would go up was also certain,
+but nobody could tell how much they
+would go up in a given time. It was that
+element of uncertainty that made them speculative,
+and not that there was any doubt
+about the fact that the market prices of
+them would go up. Buying Liberty Bonds
+at that time was speculating with safety.
+If you read this book with understanding,
+you will know much about speculating with
+safety.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER III.<br />
+SOME TERMS EXPLAINED</h2>
+
+<p>There are certain terms used in connection
+with stock speculation that are very familiar
+to those who come in contact with
+stock brokers, and yet are not always familiar
+to those who do business by mail. Undoubtedly
+the majority of our readers are
+familiar with these terms, but we give these
+definitions for the benefit of the few who
+are not familiar with them.</p>
+
+<p>Trader: A person who buys and sells
+stocks is usually referred to as a trader. The
+word probably originated when it was customary
+to trade one stock for another and
+later was used to refer to a person who sold
+one stock and bought another. He was a
+trader; but the person who buys stocks for
+a profit and sells them and takes his profit
+when he gets an opportunity, may not be a
+trader in the strict sense of the word. However,
+for convenience, we use the word
+"trader" in this book to refer to any one who
+buys or sells stocks.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Speculator: This word refers to a person
+who buys stocks for profit, with the expectation
+of selling at a higher price, without
+reference to the earnings of the stock. He
+may sell first, with the expectation of buying
+at a lower price, as explained in <a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">Chapter
+XVII.</a> on "Short Selling." In many cases
+where we use the word "trader," it would
+be more correct to use the word "speculator."</p>
+
+<p>Investor: An investor differs from a speculator
+in the fact that he buys stocks or
+bonds with the expectation of holding them
+for some time for the income to be derived
+from them, without reference to their speculative
+possibilities. We believe that investors
+always should give some consideration to
+the speculative possibilities of their purchases.
+It frequently is possible to get speculative
+profits without increase of risk or
+loss of income.</p>
+
+<p>Bull: One who believes that the market
+price of stocks will advance is called a bull.
+Of course, it is possible to be a bull in one
+stock and a bear in another. The word is
+used very frequently with reference to the
+market, a bull market meaning a rising
+market.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Bear: The opposite of a bull is a bear.
+It refers to a person who believes that the
+market value of stocks will decline, and a
+bear market is a declining market.</p>
+
+<p>Lambs: "Lambs" refers to that part of
+the public that knows so little about stock
+speculating that they lose all their money
+sooner or later. The bulls and bears get
+them going and coming. If the lambs would
+read this book carefully, they would discover
+reasons why they lose their money.</p>
+
+<p>Long and Short: Those who <b>own</b> stocks
+are said to be long, and those who <b>owe</b> stocks
+are said to be short. Short selling is explained
+in <a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">Chapter XVII</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Odd Lot: Stocks on exchanges are sold
+in certain lots. On the New York Stock Exchange,
+100 shares is a lot; and on the Consolidated
+Stock Exchange, 10 shares is a lot.
+Less than these amounts is an odd lot. When
+you sell an odd lot you usually get <span class="abv">1</span>&#8260;<span class="blw">8</span> less
+than the market price; and when you buy an
+odd lot, you usually pay <span class="abv">1</span>&#8260;<span class="blw">8</span> more than the
+market price; that is, <span class="abv">1</span>&#8260;<span class="blw">8</span> of a dollar on each
+share where prices are quoted in dollars.</p>
+
+<p>Point: It is a common expression to say
+that a stock went up or down a point, which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
+means a dollar in a stock that is quoted in
+dollars, but a cent in a stock that is quoted in
+cents, as many of the stocks are on the New
+York Curb. In cotton quotations, a point is
+<span class="abv">1</span>&#8260;<span class="blw">100</span> part of a cent. For instance, if cotton
+is quoted at 18.12, it means 18 cents and
+<span class="abv">12</span>&#8260;<span class="blw">100</span> of a cent per pound, and if it went
+up 30 points the quotation would be 18.42.</p>
+
+<p>Reaction: Every person who has traded
+in listed stocks probably is familiar with this
+word. It means to act in an opposite direction,
+but it is used especially to refer to a
+decline in the price of a stock that has been
+going up.</p>
+
+<p>Rally: "Rally" is the opposite of the sense
+in which "reaction" usually is used. When
+a stock is going down and it turns and goes
+up, it is called a rally.</p>
+
+<p>Commitment: This term is used referring
+to a purchase of stock. It is more commonly
+used by investment bankers when they
+contract to buy an issue, but the term sometimes
+is used by traders.</p>
+
+<p>Floating Supply: The stock of a company
+that is in the hands of that part of the public
+who is likely to sell, is referred to as floating
+supply.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV.<br />
+A CORRECT BASIS FOR SPECULATING</h2>
+
+<p>We maintain that there is only one basis
+upon which successful speculation can be carried
+on continually; that is, never to buy a
+security unless it is selling at a price below
+that which is warranted by assets, earning
+power, and prospective future earning power.</p>
+
+<p>There are many influences that affect the
+movements of stock prices, which are referred
+to in subsequent chapters. All of these
+should be studied and understood, but they
+should be used as secondary factors in relation
+to the value of the stock in which you
+are trading.</p>
+
+<p>If the market price of any stock is far below
+its intrinsic value and there is no reason
+why the future should bring about a change
+in this value that will decrease it, then you
+may be certain that important influences are
+working against the market price of the stock
+for the time being. In the course of time the
+market price will go up towards the real
+value. This matter will be more fully explained
+in subsequent chapters.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>You always should keep in mind the fact
+that when you buy a stock at a higher price
+than its intrinsic value, you are taking a
+risk. The stock may have great future possibilities,
+but it is risky to buy stocks when
+present assets and earnings do not warrant
+their market prices, no matter how attractive
+prospective future earnings may appear.
+However, the possibilities of profit sometimes
+are so great that one is justified in taking
+this risk.</p>
+
+<p>It is our belief that the majority of traders
+buy stocks because they are active in the
+market and somebody said they were a good
+buy, even though the real values may not
+be nearly as much as the market prices.</p>
+
+<p>As an example of this kind of trading, we
+want to call your attention to a news item
+that appeared in a New York paper. It stated
+that on April 1st, some brokers in Detroit,
+as an April Fool joke, gave out a tip to buy
+A. F. P., meaning April Fool Preferred, but
+when asked what it meant, replied "American
+Fire Protection." Of course, there was
+no such stock, but there was active trading
+in it until the joke was discovered. Evidently
+it is not necessary to list a stock on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+the Detroit Stock Exchange in order to trade
+in it.</p>
+
+<p>This story may or may not be true, but
+we believe the statement that people trade
+in stocks they do not know anything about
+is true. You should be careful not to buy
+a stock merely because somebody says it
+is a good thing to buy, unless the person
+making the statement is in the business of
+giving information on stocks, because it may
+be only a rumor with no substantial basis.
+Of course, if many people act on the rumor,
+there will be active trading in the stock, and
+it is frequently for that purpose that such
+rumors are started.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
+<h2><span class="p3"><i>PART TWO</i><br />
+WHAT and WHEN TO BUY and SELL</span></h2>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.<br />
+WHAT STOCKS TO BUY</h2>
+
+<p>In deciding what stocks to buy, it is well
+to consider first the classes of stocks, and
+then what particular stocks you should buy
+in the classes you select. We would first of
+all divide all stocks into two classes, those
+listed on the New York Stock Exchange and
+those not listed on the New York Stock Exchange.
+As a rule, it is better to buy stocks
+listed on the New York Stock Exchange, although
+there are frequent exceptions to this
+rule.</p>
+
+<p>Then, the stocks listed on the New York
+Stock Exchange may be divided into classes,
+such as railroad stocks, public utility stocks,
+motor stocks, tire stocks, oil stocks, copper
+stocks, gold stocks, and so forth. At certain
+times certain stocks are in a much more favorable
+condition than at other times. In
+1919, when the industrial stocks were selling
+at a very high price, the public utility stocks
+and gold stocks were selling low, because it
+was impossible to increase incomes in proportion
+to the increase in operating costs.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
+But since the beginning of 1921, the condition
+of these two classes of stocks has been
+improving and the market has reflected that
+improvement.</p>
+
+<p>At the time of this writing (early in April,
+1922) we are recommending the stocks of
+only a very few manufacturing companies;
+but we are recommending a number (not all)
+of the railroad and public utility stocks, and
+a few specially selected stocks among the
+other classes.</p>
+
+<p>In every instance, when you make a selection,
+you should consider the company's assets,
+present earnings, and prospective future
+earnings, and then take into consideration
+all the influences that affect price movements,
+as explained in subsequent chapters.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI.<br />
+WHAT STOCKS NOT TO BUY</h2>
+
+<p>A great deal more can be said about stocks
+you should not buy than about stocks you
+should buy, because the list is very much
+larger.</p>
+
+<p>Stocks not listed on the New York Stock
+Exchange, as a rule, should not be bought
+by a careful speculator, but as stated in the
+previous chapter, there are exceptions to that
+rule. Billions of dollars have been lost in
+the past by buying stocks that have become
+worthless. A few years ago a list of defunct
+securities was compiled, and it took
+two large volumes in which to enumerate
+them. New ones have been added to them
+every year. Therefore, it is very important
+that you should give careful thought to the
+subject of what stocks <b>not</b> to buy.</p>
+
+<p>Nearly all promotion stocks (stocks in new
+companies) are a failure. An extremely
+small percentage of them are very successful,
+and the successful ones are referred to
+in the advertising of the new ones; but, on
+the basis of average, the chances are you will<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
+lose your money entirely in promotion stocks.
+We believe that most of the promotion companies
+are started in perfectly good faith,
+although some of them are swindles from the
+beginning; but no matter how honest and
+well meaning the organizers are, the chances
+of success are against them. Therefore, we
+say that promotion stocks should not be
+bought by the ordinary man who is looking
+for a good speculation, because his chances
+of making a large profit with a minimum
+risk are very much better when he buys
+stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange
+and uses good judgment in doing so.</p>
+
+<p>Among the listed stocks there are many
+you should not buy. First of all, eliminate
+them by classes. Do not buy the classes of
+stocks that are selling too high now. You
+may say that there are some exceptions in
+all classes. That may or may not be so, but
+in any event, you have a better chance of
+profiting by confining most of your purchases
+to the classes of stocks that are in the most
+favorable position.</p>
+
+<p>As a rule, when stocks are first listed, they
+sell much higher than they do a short time
+afterwards. Of course, that is not always<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
+true. It is more likely to be true when a
+stock is listed during a very active market,
+when prices are more easily influenced by
+publicity. The high price of it is usually
+due to the fact that publicity is given to it,
+and as soon as the effect of this publicity
+wears off, the market price of the stock declines.</p>
+
+<p>It is a good rule never to buy stocks that
+brokers urge you to buy. Your own common
+sense ought to tell you that a stock that is
+advertised extensively by brokers is likely
+to sell up in price while the advertising is
+going on and will drop in price just as soon
+as the advertising stops.</p>
+
+<p>Many people notice that and they think
+they can profit by buying when the advertising
+starts and sell out when they get a good
+profit, but the majority of them lose money.
+The stock may not respond to the advertising,
+or if it does go up, they may wait too long
+before selling. Those who do sell and
+make 200% or 300% profit in a very short
+time are almost sure to lose it all in an effort
+to repeat the transaction. Many of those
+who read this know it is true from their own
+experience.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>You should leave such stocks strictly alone.
+You may win once or twice, but you are sure
+to lose if you keep it up. As a rule stocks
+of this kind have very little value and the
+brokers who boost them make their own
+money from the losses of their foolish followers.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII.<br />
+WHEN TO BUY STOCKS</h2>
+
+<p>Stocks should be bought when they are
+cheap. By being cheap, we mean that the
+market price is much less than the intrinsic
+value. In <a href="#CHAPTER_X">Chapters X. to XV.</a> we talk about
+influences that affect the price movements
+of stocks. By studying these carefully you
+should be able to decide when stocks generally
+are cheap. Of course, not all stocks
+are cheap at the same time, but the majority
+of listed stocks do go up and down at the
+same time, as a rule.</p>
+
+<p>At the time of this writing (in the early
+part of April, 1922) there are a great many
+stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange
+that are selling at prices much less
+than their intrinsic values, but there are some
+stocks that should not be bought now, nor
+at any other time. There are some stocks
+listed on the New York Stock Exchange now
+that perhaps have no intrinsic value and
+never will have any. Nevertheless we consider<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
+that right now<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> is one of the times for
+buying stocks. There are unusual bargains
+to be had, although keen discrimination is
+necessary in order to be able to pick out the
+bargains.</p>
+
+<p>As a usual thing, it is a good time to buy
+stocks when nearly everybody wants to sell
+them. When general business conditions are
+bad, trading on the stock exchanges very
+light, and everybody you meet appears to be
+pessimistic, then we advise you to look for
+bargains in stocks. The last six months of
+1921 was an unusually good time for buying
+stocks.</p>
+
+<p>It is well known that the large interests
+accumulate stocks at such times. They buy
+only when the stocks are offered at a low
+price and try not to buy enough at any one
+time to give an appearance of activity in
+the market, but they buy continually when
+the market is very dull. It seems to be characteristic
+of human nature to think that business
+conditions are going to continue just
+as they are. When business is bad, nearly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
+everybody thinks business will be bad for a
+long time, and when business is good, nearly
+everybody thinks business will be good almost
+indefinitely. As a matter of fact, conditions
+are always changing. It never is possible
+for either extremely good times nor for
+extremely bad times to continue indefinitely.</p>
+
+<p>You can buy stocks cheaper when there is
+very little demand for them, and you should
+arrange your affairs so as to be prepared to
+buy at such times.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> In our advisory Letter of April 25, 1922, we advised our
+clients to refrain from margin buying for a while, because the
+market was advancing too rapidly. Shortly after that there
+was a decided reaction in the market.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII.<br />
+WHEN NOT TO BUY STOCKS</h2>
+
+<p>There are times when stocks should not
+be bought, and that is when nearly all stocks
+have advanced beyond their real values. It
+is doubtful if there ever is a time when all
+stocks have advanced beyond their real values,
+but when the great majority of stocks
+have so advanced, there is likely to be a general
+decline in all stock prices. The stocks
+that are not selling too high will decline some
+in sympathy with the others. Therefore,
+there are times when we advise our clients
+not to buy any stocks.</p>
+
+<p>Some organizations giving advice in regard
+to the buying of stocks, advise their clients
+to refrain entirely from buying for periods
+of a year or longer, but we think it is seldom
+advisable to refrain entirely from buying for
+any great length of time. There usually are
+some good opportunities if you watch carefully
+for them. It is our business to watch
+for these opportunities and tell our clients
+about them.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There are also times when the technical
+condition of the market is such that we advise
+our clients to refrain from buying for
+a while. See <a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">Chapter XIV</a>.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX.<br />
+WHEN TO SELL STOCKS</h2>
+
+<p>You should sell stocks when the market
+price is too high. That is a general rule, but
+it is necessary for you to study all the influences
+affecting stock prices to be able to
+decide more accurately when you should sell
+your stocks. We give you, in future chapters,
+much more information on judging the
+markets.</p>
+
+<p>Another general rule, is to sell stocks when
+nearly everybody is buying them. It is a
+well known fact that the great majority of
+people buy stocks near the top and sell near
+the bottom. Naturally when everybody is
+optimistic, stocks will sell up high, but sooner
+or later they will come down again, and when
+everything looks very promising is a good
+time to sell. It is better to lose a little of the
+profit that you might have made by holding
+on longer than not to be on the safe side.
+The man who tries to sell at the top nearly
+always loses, because stocks seldom sell as
+high as it is predicted they will, or, in other<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
+words, the prediction of higher prices is advanced
+more rapidly than the prices.</p>
+
+<p>We remember reading in 1916, when U. S.
+Steel sold up around $136 a share, a prediction
+that it was going to sell up to $1000 a
+share. Probably many people who read such
+news items consider them seriously. Of
+course, that was a most exaggerated prediction,
+but during the extreme activity of a
+bull market, it seems that nearly everybody
+is talking in exaggerated terms of optimism.
+That is why most traders seldom ever take
+their profits in a bull market. They wait
+until stock prices start to come down, and
+then they are likely to think there will be
+rallies, and keep on waiting until they lose
+all their profits.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, some people make the
+mistake of selling too soon. Just because
+your purchase shows a liberal profit is no
+reason why you should sell. The stock may
+have been very cheap when you bought it.
+In 1920, Peoples Gas sold below $30. Those
+who bought it then were able to double their
+money by the close of 1921, and many sold
+out and took their profits. Of course, if they
+invested the proceeds in other stocks that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
+were just starting upward, they may not
+have lost anything, but there was no particular
+reason for selling Peoples Gas at that
+time. The public utilities generally were
+coming into their own, and nearly all of them
+were regarded by economic students as having
+unusual opportunities for profit.</p>
+
+<p>Then again, it is not always a mistake to
+sell a stock in order to get funds to put into
+something else that seems more promising,
+even though the stock you sell is likely to
+go much higher.</p>
+
+<p>It is very important that you should try
+to sell your stocks at the right time. That
+is the main thing to keep in mind and it is
+better to sell too soon than too late. Don't
+be too greedy and hold on for a big profit.
+Read <a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">Chapter XXIV.</a> on the "Possibilities
+of Profit."</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span></p>
+<h2><span class="p3"><i>PART THREE</i><br />
+INFLUENCES AFFECTING STOCK PRICES</span></h2>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.<br />
+MOVEMENTS IN STOCK PRICES</h2>
+
+<p>It is due to the fact that stock prices constantly
+move up or down that speculation is
+possible. Sometimes certain stocks remain
+almost at a standstill for a long period of
+time, but at least a part of the stocks listed
+on the Exchanges move either up or down.
+If one always could tell just what way they
+were going to move, it would be comparatively
+easy to make a fortune within a short
+time.</p>
+
+<p>In the last twenty years, a great deal of
+time and money has been spent by statistical
+organizations in checking up statistics for
+the purpose of ascertaining a definite basis
+upon which to predict future movements in
+stock prices. Several of these organizations
+use very different statistics upon which to
+base their conclusions, and yet their conclusions
+are very similar. They have proved
+beyond any question of doubt that some of
+these movements are clearly indicated by
+laws that never fail.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>We do not attempt in this book to explain
+the fundamental statistics upon which the
+predictions of business cycles are based, but
+in the next five chapters we explain some
+of the influences that affect the movements
+in stock prices. Read these chapters very
+carefully, for your success in stock speculation
+will depend very largely upon your
+correct prediction of these movements.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI.<br />
+MAJOR MOVEMENTS IN PRICES</h2>
+
+<p>Stock prices move up and down in cycles.
+These are the major movements in prices,
+but there may be many minor movements up
+and down within the major movements. These
+stock price movements nearly always precede
+a change in business conditions; that
+is, an upward movement in stock prices is
+an indication that business conditions are
+going to improve, and a downward movement
+in stock prices is an indication that
+business conditions are going to get worse.</p>
+
+<p>At the present writing, we are in a period
+of improvement. Stock prices began to go
+up in August, 1921. The upward movement
+has been slow, but gradual. In a period of
+seven months, forty representative stocks
+show an upward movement of about 20
+points, although business has not shown
+much improvement. A steady upward movement
+in stock prices is a sure sign that business
+conditions are beginning to improve,
+even though that improvement is not
+noticeable.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>These major stock movements are not an
+exact duplicate of any previous ones, and it
+is impossible to tell how long they will last
+or just what course they will take. Certain
+influences could change a period of improvement
+into a period of prosperity very quickly.</p>
+
+<p>A period of prosperity is noted for high
+prices, high wages, and increasing production
+in all lines. Everybody is optimistic.
+Most people spend their money freely, and
+that makes times better. As prices go up
+and business increases, more money is required
+in business and interest rates go up.
+As a consequence, when interest rates go up,
+bond prices go down. During this period,
+speculative stocks are selling at their highest
+prices; and under the influence of this movement,
+many stocks that have no actual value
+sell up at high prices. Of course, wise speculators
+sell all their stocks during this period.</p>
+
+<p>Following a period of prosperity comes a
+period of decline. The first sign of it usually
+is a severe break in the stock market. At
+that time general business is running along
+at top speed and there is no sign of a let-up,
+but this break in the stock market should
+be a warning. Most people think the break<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
+is merely a temporary reaction&mdash;they may
+refer to it as a HEALTHY reaction&mdash;and
+they start buying stocks again, and put the
+market up, but it does not go up as high as
+it was before the break occurred. When
+stock prices do not rally beyond the prices
+at which they were before the break occurred,
+it is a sign that the turning point has been
+reached and that the bear market has started,
+although the majority of people do not realize
+this until a long time afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>Next comes a period of depression, when
+we have low prices, low wages, hard times,
+tight money, and many commercial failures.
+Many people who lost all their money during
+the speculation period, become thrifty
+and economize during the period of depression,
+and start in to save again. Nearly
+everybody is pessimistic during this period.
+Trading on the Stock Exchange is irregular
+and as a rule very light.</p>
+
+<p>This is the time to get stock bargains,
+but the general public as a rule doesn't take
+advantage of it. People are scared and think
+prices will go still lower. The big interests
+accumulate stocks during this period, and
+sell them during the period of prosperity.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII.<br />
+THE MONEY MARKET AND STOCK PRICES</h2>
+
+<p>Perhaps no other one thing influences the
+movement of stock prices so much, in a large
+way, as money conditions. It is impossible
+to have a big bull market without plenty of
+money. During a bull market nearly all stocks
+are bought on margin, which is explained in
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">Chapter XVI</a>. This makes it necessary for
+brokers to borrow large sums of money.
+When money is tight, it is impossible to get
+enough to carry on a large movement in
+stocks.</p>
+
+<p>You will see, therefore, that the Federal
+Reserve Bank has it in its power to regulate
+the stock market to some extent. In 1919
+speculation was carried very much further
+than it should have been, but undoubtedly
+it would have been much worse had the
+Federal Reserve Bank not raised interest
+rates and urged member banks to withdraw
+money from Wall Street. While there was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
+considerable criticism of that action, it certainly
+was a good thing for the entire
+country.</p>
+
+<p>In a period of depression, the banks accumulate
+money, and there always is an
+abundance of money at the beginning of a
+bull market. During a period of prosperity
+the banks' reserves decrease and their loans
+increase. When you see these reserves go
+down to a very low point, it is usually time
+for you to sell your stocks.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII.<br />
+MINOR MOVEMENTS IN PRICES</h2>
+
+<p>Within the major movements of stock
+prices, there always are several minor movements,
+which are caused by various influences.
+One of the important causes is the
+technical condition of the market. Another
+cause might be called a psychological one.
+When stocks are moving up steadily in a
+bull market, people closely connected with
+the market expect a reaction and watch for
+it. The newspapers predict it. Consequently,
+there is sufficient let-up in buying to allow
+the pressure of selling by the bears to bring
+it about. However, the desire to buy during
+reactions is so general, many people rush in
+to buy and this buying, in addition to the
+covering by the shorts, puts the market up
+again; and if conditions are favorable for a
+bull market, prices will go up much higher
+than they were before.</p>
+
+<p>In like manner, we have rallies in bear
+markets. Of course the professional bears
+sell during these rallies, with the expectation
+of buying later at a cheaper price.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>These minor price changes mean more to
+the majority of traders than the major movements.
+The major movements are so slow
+that people get out of patience, and yet those
+who are guided only by the major movements
+are operating on a much safer basis. We
+believe that a greater amount of money can
+be made, with a minimum risk, by being
+guided principally by the major movements,
+while taking advantage of the minor movements
+in a minor way. However, stocks do
+not move uniformly and there frequently is
+an opportunity to buy some particular stock
+at a bargain when nearly all stocks are selling
+too high. We try to pick out these
+opportunities for our clients.</p>
+
+<p>Reports of earnings by various companies
+influence stock prices, as does also the paying
+of extra dividends or the passing up of
+dividends. A peculiar psychological influence
+is noticed when a company declares an extra
+dividend. The price of the stock usually goes
+up, while as a matter of fact the intrinsic
+value of the stock is decreased by the amount
+of this dividend; and sometimes it is advisable
+to sell a stock shortly after an advance
+in its dividend rate.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV.<br />
+TECHNICAL CONDITIONS</h2>
+
+<p>Technical conditions refer to the conditions
+that usually affect the supply and demand,
+such as short interests, floating supply,
+and stop loss orders.</p>
+
+<p>It is sometimes said that supply and demand
+must be equal or else there could not
+be any sales, but that is not so. There are
+always some people who are willing to sell
+at some price above the market who will not
+sell at the market; and when the demand for
+stock is greater than the supply, it goes up
+until it is supplied by some of these people
+who are holding it at a higher price.</p>
+
+<p>It works the same way when the supply
+is greater than the demand. There are always
+some people who will buy at some price
+below the market. Therefore, when the supply
+is greater than the demand prices must
+go down.</p>
+
+<p>A stock may have an intrinsic value of
+$100 a share and yet be selling at $50 a
+share, and it can never sell higher than $50<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
+until all stock that is offered at that price
+is bought.</p>
+
+<p>However, you should keep this in mind: if
+the real value is $100 a share, sooner or later
+the market price will approach that figure.
+That is why we so strongly urge our clients
+to buy stocks that have actual values,
+or at least prospective values far greater
+than their market prices, and either to buy
+them outright or margin them very heavily,
+and then hold them until the prices do go up.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, when one finds that a mistake
+has been made, the sooner one sells and takes
+a loss the better.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV.<br />
+MANIPULATIONS</h2>
+
+<p>Stock prices are influenced largely by manipulation.
+Years ago when the volume of
+trading on the New York Stock Exchange
+was small compared with what it is today,
+it was possible to influence the entire market
+by manipulation, but it would be very difficult
+to do that today. It is only certain
+stocks that are manipulated; but if conditions
+are favorable, many other stocks may
+be influenced by them.</p>
+
+<p>There are different kinds of manipulation.
+One is for the insiders of a company to give
+out unfavorable news about their company
+if they want the price of the stock to go
+down, so that they can buy it in; or to give
+out very favorable news if they want the
+price to go up, so that they can sell out.
+This method is not practiced now to the extent
+that it was years ago. Public opinion
+is strongly opposed to it, and we believe
+business men are acquiring a higher standard
+of business ethics. Methods of this kind
+are legal but they are morally reprehensible.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Another method of manipulation is the
+forming of pools to buy in the stock of a
+company and force it up. If the market
+price of a stock is far below its real
+value, we believe it is justifiable for a pool
+to force it up, but the ordinary pool is merely
+a scheme to rob the public.</p>
+
+<p>There are four periods to the operation
+of such pools. First is the period of accumulation.
+A number of large holders of stock
+in a certain company will pool their stock,
+all agreeing not to sell except from the pool,
+in which all benefit proportionately. Then
+they give out bad news about the company.
+That is very easy to do, because financial
+writers usually accept the news that is given
+to them without much investigation, especially
+writers on daily papers, because they
+have not the time to investigate. Their copy
+must be ready in a few hours after they get
+the information. See <a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">Chapter XXV.</a> on
+"Market Information" for fuller explanation
+of the reason why financial news usually is
+misleading. The manipulators of stock prices
+can have financial news "made to order."</p>
+
+<p>When the general public reads this news
+and sees the stock going down, many of them<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
+get discouraged and sell. It is just the time
+they should not sell, but it is a well known
+fact that the majority of people do in the
+stock market just what they should not do.
+The more they sell the more the price goes
+down, and the pool operators accumulate the
+stock.</p>
+
+<p>Having secured all the stock they want,
+they give out good news and continue to buy
+the stock until it starts to go up. The public
+reads this favorable news, and seeing the
+stock go up, will go into the market and buy,
+which puts it up higher. All the time financial
+writers are supplying good news about
+the stock and the public buys it. After they
+have sold all of it, the public may still be
+anxious for more, and the pool operators may
+go short of the stock. Then they will begin
+giving out bad news, so that they can buy
+in stock at a lower price to cover their short
+interests.</p>
+
+<p>After that they have very little interest
+in the market. If it is declining too fast,
+they may support it occasionally by buying
+some stock and giving out some favorable
+news. That will make the market rally and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
+they will sell out the newly acquired stock
+near the top of the rally.</p>
+
+<p>Manipulations of this kind appear to be
+going on nearly all the time, and there does
+not seem to be any limit to the number of
+suckers who fall for them. But then, one
+can't blame the public when you realize how
+thoroughly unreliable is most of the market
+information given to them.</p>
+
+<p>Still another kind of manipulation is "one-man"
+manipulation, where one man controls
+companies, which are known as "one-man"
+companies. Usually the directors of these
+companies are friends or employees of his,
+and in many instances he has their resignations
+in his possession, so that they must do
+whatever he wants them to do. Owing to
+the strict rules of the New York Stock Exchange,
+it is rather difficult for such manipulations
+to be carried on there. But there
+have been many of them on the New York
+Curb. When the Curb was operating on the
+street and was not under very much control,
+manipulations of this kind were very
+frequent.</p>
+
+<p>As an example, suppose a man of this kind
+has a mining company. When he wants the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
+stock to go up, he sends the stockholders a
+great deal of information about the work at
+the mine, and perhaps sends them a telegram
+when a new vein of rich ore is found. The
+stockholders rush in to buy more stock, and
+that puts the price up. Then he unloads
+stock on them to the extent that they will
+buy it.</p>
+
+<p>In a day or two, the stock may drop back
+to less than one half of what it was selling
+at. If this "one-man" manipulator wants to
+buy any stock, he will give out a little unfavorable
+news, and he can get stock at his
+own price.</p>
+
+<p>After that the news is good or bad according
+to whether the manipulator wants to buy
+or sell, but as a rule he has an abundance of
+stock that he wants to sell, and is continually
+giving out good news.</p>
+
+<p>A few years ago there was a man operating
+in New York who promoted several companies
+and manipulated them in a large way.
+He is out of business now, but the same thing
+is still done in a smaller way.</p>
+
+<p>It is our opinion that more money is lost
+by the public in manipulated stocks than
+in promotion stocks, and we read a great<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
+deal about the enormous losses in them. Promotions
+that are failures may be perfectly
+legitimate and conducted in the utmost good
+faith, but manipulations are nearly always
+for the purpose of swindling the public. However,
+the lure of them is so great many
+people cannot withstand the temptations of
+them even after they have been "trimmed"
+several times.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span></p>
+<h2><span class="p3"><i>PART FOUR</i><br />
+TOPICS OF INTEREST TO SPECULATORS</span></h2>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI.<br />
+MARGINAL TRADING</h2>
+
+<p>Most people who trade in stocks buy on
+margin. The ordinary minimum margin is
+about 20% of the purchase price, because
+banks usually lend about 80% of the market
+value of stocks.</p>
+
+<p>If you put up 20% of the purchase price
+of your stocks with your broker, he has to
+pay the other 80%, but he can do that by
+borrowing that amount from his bank, and
+putting up the stock as security. In this
+way brokers are able to handle all the margin
+business that comes to them, as long as
+money can be borrowed. Of course, there
+are some stocks that are not accepted by
+banks as collateral for loans, and you should
+not expect your broker to sell such stocks
+on margin. In fact, if he offers to do so, it
+looks as though he were running a bucket
+shop. See <a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">Chapter XVIII</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Many people think that buying stocks on
+margin is gambling and that people should
+not do it for that reason, but buying on margin
+is done in all lines of business, although it<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
+may not be known under that name. If you
+bought stock outright, but borrowed 80% of
+the purchase price from your banker to complete
+your payment for it and put up the
+stock with him as security, you would be
+buying on margin just the same.</p>
+
+<p>In like manner, if you bought a home and
+paid 20% with money you had and borrowed
+the other 80% of the purchase price, you
+would be buying a home on margin. The
+principal difference is that when you buy
+from a broker on margin, one of the conditions
+of his contract is that he has the right
+to sell your stock provided the market price
+drops down to the amount that you owe on
+the stock, whereas if you borrow money on
+a home, it is usually for a certain specified
+time and the lender cannot sell you out until
+that time expires. However, in principle,
+there is very little difference between the
+two transactions.</p>
+
+<p>Most margin traders do not put up sufficient
+margin. If you put up only the minimum
+margin, your broker has the right to
+call on you for more margin if the price of
+the stock declines at all. Unless you are
+fully prepared at all times to put up an<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
+additional margin when called upon, you
+should make smaller purchases and put up
+a heavy margin when you buy. The amount
+of margin depends upon the transaction, but
+we advise from 30% to 50%, and at times
+we advise not less than 50% margin on any
+purchase. In fact there are times when
+we advise not to buy stocks on margin at
+all.</p>
+
+<p>Those who wish to be entirely free from
+worry should buy stocks when the prices
+are very low, pay for them in full, get their
+certificates, and put them away in a safe
+deposit box. However, when stocks are low
+the risk in buying on a liberal margin is
+very small, and the possibilities of profit are
+so much greater, we do not see any objection
+to taking advantage of this method of
+trading.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII.<br />
+SHORT SELLING</h2>
+
+<p>By short selling, we mean selling a stock
+that you do not possess, with the intention
+of buying it later. Short selling in general
+business is very common, and we think nothing
+of it. Manufacturers frequently sell
+goods that are not yet made, to be delivered
+at some future time. Selling stocks short
+is a similar transaction, except that in a majority
+of cases delivery of the stock must
+be made immediately.</p>
+
+<p>However, your broker can attend to that
+by borrowing the stock. As explained in the
+preceding chapter, when the market is active
+most of the trading is done on margin. Your
+broker buys a stock for you, but as he has
+to pay for it in full, it is customary for him
+to take it to his bank and borrow money on it.
+A bank usually lends about 80% of the market
+value, but if some other broker wants to
+borrow this stock, he will lend the full value
+of it. If that particular stock is very scarce
+and hard to get, the lender of the stock may<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
+get the use of the money without any interest.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, there is an advantage to the
+broker in lending stock, and for that reason
+it is nearly always possible for a broker to
+arrange delivery of stock for you if you
+wish to sell short. When you instruct him
+later on to buy the stock for you, he will do
+so and deliver it to the broker from whom he
+borrowed it, who will return the money he
+received for it.</p>
+
+<p>When you sell stock short and the price
+goes up, you will have to pay a higher price
+for it. Therefore, to protect himself against
+the possibility of losing, your broker demands
+a payment from you just the same as you
+pay margin when you buy stock.</p>
+
+<p>Short selling is something that we do not
+recommend very much to our clients. We
+think it is not advisable to do any short selling
+as long as there are good opportunities
+to make money by buying; but when all bargains
+disappear, as they do sometimes, you
+must either sell short or else keep out of the
+market entirely. At such times, there may
+be many opportunities to make money by
+short selling, and we do not consider that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
+there is any reason why our clients should
+not take advantage of them.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, great care must be exercised
+in selling stocks short. You might sell a
+stock short because you know the market
+price is 100% greater than its real value,
+but it is possible for manipulators to force it
+up a great deal higher; and if you are not
+able to put up sufficient money with your
+broker to protect him, he will buy at a high
+price and you will lose the money you have
+put up with him. In some instances, stocks
+are cornered and the short interests are
+forced to buy the stocks at prices that represent
+enormous losses.</p>
+
+<p>It is a common thing to read about the
+short interests in certain stocks. All stocks
+that are sold short must be bought sooner or
+later, and when that buying takes place, it
+may affect the market very much. Therefore,
+if it is known that there is a big short
+interest in a certain stock, we should expect
+the stock to sell at a higher price; but sometimes
+the short interests break the market
+and force the price down, especially when
+general conditions are in their favor.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII.<br />
+BUCKET SHOPS</h2>
+
+<p>There has been so much publicity given
+to bucket shops, nearly everybody is familiar
+with the term. A broker runs a bucket shop
+when he sells stock to his clients on margin
+and either never buys the stock for their accounts,
+or else sells it immediately after buying
+it. The bucket shop simply gets your
+money on the supposition that you are more
+likely to be wrong than to be right. Of
+course, if you take the bucket shop's advice
+you surely are likely to be wrong. Bucket
+shops get their clients into the very speculative
+stocks, where there is likely to be a
+great deal of fluctuation in the price of the
+stocks, which gives them frequent opportunities
+to sell out their clients.</p>
+
+<p>When the market is going down or when
+there are many movements up and down in
+the price of stocks, the bucket shops make
+money rapidly, but occasionally there is a
+long period when the market is working
+against the bucket shops, and unless they
+have a great deal of money they must fail.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In August, 1921, Stock Exchange stocks
+started to go up. The upward movement
+was very slow but it was continual. Up to
+the time of this writing, there has not been
+a three-point reaction, except in a few stocks,
+in all of that time. Without a fluctuating
+market, the bucket shop has no chance to
+clean out its customers. As a consequence,
+the bucket shops began to fail in the early
+part of 1922, and up to the present writing
+(April, 1922) there have been more than fifty
+of these failures. However, it is not likely
+that all the bucket shops will be put out of
+business. The more successful ones are
+likely to "weather the storm."</p>
+
+<p>Many laws have been enacted against bucket
+shops, and we believe some way will be
+found to get rid of them at some future time;
+but we do not expect that to happen soon,
+and we warn our readers not to get into their
+hands, because if they do not get your money
+away from you one way they are likely to
+get it some other way. The man who runs
+a bucket shop usually has no conscience, and
+it certainly is an unfortunate thing for anyone
+to get mixed up with such a man.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX.<br />
+CHOOSING A BROKER</h2>
+
+<p>It is very important that you choose a
+good broker. No matter how careful you are,
+it is possible to make a mistake. However,
+if you choose a broker who is a member of
+the New York Stock Exchange, you have
+eliminated a very large percentage of your
+chances of getting a wrong broker.</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally a member of the Stock Exchange
+fails and once in a while one is suspended
+for running a bucket shop or being
+connected with one, but these instances are
+very rare compared with the number of brokers
+who get into trouble who are not members
+of the New York Stock Exchange. The
+rules and regulations of the Stock Exchange
+protect you to a great extent.</p>
+
+<p>When you buy stock on margin, you leave
+your money in the hands of a broker, and
+you should know that he is responsible. No
+matter who your broker is, you should get a
+report on him. If you are a subscriber to
+Bradstreet's or Dun's Agencies, get a report
+from them. If you are not a subscriber to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
+any mercantile agency, you perhaps have a
+friend who can get a report for you, or your
+bank may get one for you. Banks make a
+practice of getting reports of this kind for
+their clients. When asked to do so, we send
+our clients the names of brokers who are
+members of the New York Stock Exchange,
+but we prefer not to recommend any broker.
+Of course, we cannot guarantee that a broker
+is all right. We simply use our best judgment,
+but, as we said before, you eliminate
+a large percentage of your chances of going
+wrong when you trade with a broker who
+is a member of the New York Stock Exchange.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XX.<br />
+PUTS AND CALLS</h2>
+
+<p>A "put" is a negotiable contract giving the
+holder the privilege to sell a specified number
+of shares of a certain stock to the maker
+at a fixed price, within a specified time. A
+"call" is the exact reverse. It is a negotiable
+contract giving the holder the privilege
+to buy a specified number of shares of a certain
+stock from the maker at a fixed price,
+within a specified time. The price fixed in
+a put or call is set away from the market
+price a certain number of points, depending
+upon the stock and the condition of the market.
+When the market is steady and not
+fluctuating, the price fixed is frequently only
+two points away, but in a more active market
+it is considerably more.</p>
+
+<p>For instance, at the present time, U. S.
+Steel is selling at about 95, and you can buy
+a call on it at 97 or a put at 93. That is by
+paying a certain amount, which at present is
+$137.50, you can have the privilege of buying
+100 shares of U. S. Steel at 97, within
+thirty days of the date of the purchase of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
+your call. If Steel should go up to 101 you
+could have your broker buy it at 97 and sell
+it at the market, and you would make a
+profit of four points, less the cost of your
+call and commissions.</p>
+
+<p>As a method of operating in the stock
+market, we do not recommend the buying of
+puts and calls. Professional speculators may
+be able to use them to advantage sometimes,
+but for the outsider, who is not in close touch
+with the market, there is nothing about them
+to recommend.</p>
+
+<p>Here is one point: the people who sell puts
+and calls fix the terms. If the market is
+irregular, they will set the point of buying
+or selling far away from the market price.
+These people are shrewd traders and they
+make the terms in their own favor. It is
+generally said that nearly all the buyers of
+puts and calls lose, and that is our opinion.
+Therefore, we advise you to leave them alone.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXI.<br />
+STOP LOSS ORDERS</h2>
+
+<p>A "stop-loss" is an order to your broker
+to sell you out if the market sells down a
+certain number of points. Many speculators
+place stop loss orders only two points from
+the market price. The idea is that when the
+market starts to go down it is likely to continue
+going down, and by taking a two-point
+loss you may save a much greater loss. It
+also can be applied to a short sale, when you
+give your broker instructions to buy in the
+stock for you if it goes up a certain number
+of points.</p>
+
+<p>We read so much in the financial news
+about stop-loss orders or merely stop orders,
+which is the same thing, the average reader
+is likely to get the idea that it is something
+he must use for his own protection, but it
+is our opinion that it is something that should
+be used very seldom by those who trade along
+the broad lines recommended by us. If your
+purchases were made in stocks that were
+very cheap, you should continue to hold them
+in case of a reaction. If you bought them<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
+outright or on a substantial margin, you are
+not in danger, and you should look upon your
+loss merely as a paper loss. In the great
+majority of cases, you will be a great deal
+better off to hold on to your stocks than you
+would be if you had a stop-loss order.</p>
+
+<p>A large number of stop-loss orders is a
+good thing for the short interests. Let us
+take U. S. Steel again, as an example. Suppose
+it is selling at 94 and it is believed
+that there are a large number of stop-loss
+orders at 92. The short interests may sell
+the stock heavily and force it down to 92.
+Then the brokers with stop-loss orders would
+begin to sell; that would force the price down
+still lower, and the short interests could buy
+in to cover at this lower price.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, we believe that stop-loss orders
+are a bad thing and, as a rule, do not recommend
+them.</p>
+
+<p>There is one instance where a stop-loss
+order can be used to advantage, and that is
+near the top of a bull market. It is impossible
+to tell when the market has reached the
+top. If you sell out too soon, you may lose
+a profit of several points. Of course, it is
+better to do that than to take a chance of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
+a large loss. In that case, you might instruct
+your broker to place a stop-loss order at two
+or more points below the market, and keep
+moving it up as the market price moves up.
+Then when the reaction does come, he will
+sell you out and prevent you from losing a
+large part of your profit. That is about the
+only instance where we recommend a stop-loss
+order, but we do recommend it to our
+clients sometimes, although seldom.</p>
+
+<p>If the stock you own is selling at more
+than 100 we would suggest that you make
+the stop loss order at least three points from
+the market, but for stocks selling below 100,
+a two-point stop-loss order might be used.
+However, the number of points should be
+decided upon in each particular case. In the
+special instructions to our clients, we tell
+them when we think they can use a stop-loss
+order to advantage.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span></p>
+<h2><span class="p3"><i>PART FIVE</i><br />
+CONCLUDING CHAPTERS</span></h2>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXII.<br />
+THE DESIRE TO SPECULATE</h2>
+
+<p>It is said that the desire to speculate is
+very strong in the American people. That
+is why our country has made greater progress
+than any other country in the world, because
+progress is the result of speculation. We
+are not referring merely to stock speculations,
+but to the word in its broadest sense.
+Every new undertaking is a speculation.</p>
+
+<p>An inventor speculates on what he is going
+to invent. Often such speculations result in
+losses, because many inventors, or would-be-inventors,
+never accomplish very much. They
+spend their money, time, and efforts, and
+probably live years in poverty, and then if
+the invention is not profitable, they are heavy
+losers. Many inventors spend the best years
+of their lives in poverty and never succeed.
+We hear a great deal about some of those
+who do succeed, but very little about those
+who fail&mdash;those whose speculations were unsuccessful&mdash;except
+when somebody accuses
+them of being crooks because they solicited<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
+money for the promotion of their inventions
+and did not succeed.</p>
+
+<p>It is the same thing with every new business.
+It is purely a speculation. It is a common
+saying that 95% of commercial undertakings
+fail. We do not know that that
+statement is correct, but there is no question
+but that the number of failures is very great,
+which shows the great risk in going into a
+new undertaking. It is far greater than the
+risk involved in stock speculating when it is
+done in accordance with the advice given in
+this book.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, there would be no progress without
+speculating of this kind. If those entering
+a new business would make a careful study
+of the venture before entering it, and would
+exercise greater care and judgment in conducting
+it, the number of failures would be
+very much less. The same thing is true of
+stock speculating. The failures in stock speculating
+are caused mainly by ignorance and
+greediness. Many people who would be satisfied
+with a fair return on their money in a
+business enterprise, think they ought to make
+a 100% profit in a few weeks in stock
+speculation.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There is something about stock speculation
+that appeals to the greediness and pure
+gambling instincts of people. In the chapter
+on Manipulation, we have told you how stock
+prices are put up and down. Some outsider
+accidentally buys one of these stocks just
+before the price starts up. In thirty days
+he has made several hundred per cent profit.
+He does not realize that it was purely accidental
+as far as he was concerned, and he
+tries to do the same thing again, and loses
+all of his profits and probably all of his capital
+as well.</p>
+
+<p>A stock gambler (we use the word "gambler"
+to refer to a man who operates ignorantly)
+is watching a large number of extremely
+speculative stocks and suddenly
+notices one that takes a big jump in price.
+Then he says to himself, "If I only had
+bought that stock on a ten-point margin, I
+would have made several hundred per cent
+profit." He picks out another stock that
+some one tells him is going to do equally
+as well. He buys as much of it as he can and
+puts up all the money he has as a margin,
+but the price doesn't go up. Perhaps the
+price goes down and he loses his margin; but,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
+it may remain almost stationary for a long
+period, sometimes for a year or more, and
+during all of this time, this man is worrying
+for fear he will lose his money. If he does
+not lose his money, it is tied up for a long
+time where he cannot use it to take advantage
+of real opportunities that come his way.</p>
+
+<p>It does not pay to take big risks. That is
+true in stock speculating the same as in any
+other undertaking. Most speculators are
+keeping their minds all the time on the possibilities
+of profit and not thinking about the
+possibilities of losing.</p>
+
+<p>If you want to be successful in stock speculating,
+there is one thing you must learn
+to do, and that is never to think about the
+big profits you might have made if you had
+bought such and such a stock, because the
+probabilities are you could not have afforded
+to take the necessary risk in buying that
+stock.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, after it is all over, it may look
+to you as though the buying of that stock
+was a sure thing, but the buying of such
+stocks is never a sure thing. The risk always
+exists. There is an old saying, and we believe
+a very true one, that a man who speculates<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
+with the idea of getting rich quickly loses all
+his money quickly, but that the man who
+speculates with the idea of making a fair
+return on his money usually gets rich.</p>
+
+<p>In our advice to our clients, we seldom
+recommend highly speculative stocks, because
+we consider the avoidance of loss more
+important than the making of profits. You
+may object to that statement, because you
+speculate to make profits, and not for the
+purpose of avoiding losses. Nevertheless, if
+you are careful in keeping your losses down
+to a minimum, your profits are likely to be
+very liberal. Any trader who trades for any
+great length of time is likely to make large
+profits sometimes, and yet the majority of
+them have greater losses than profits. It is
+said that more than 80% of all margin traders
+lose; but we do not consider that an argument
+against trading on margin, because
+these losses are mostly due to ignorance,
+greediness, and the taking of too great
+chances.</p>
+
+<p>Do not suppress your desire to speculate.
+All progress would stop if people did not
+speculate. But do not speculate in stocks
+nor in anything else without any knowledge<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
+of what you are doing, and try to use as
+much good judgment and care as possible in
+all of your transactions. If you do not know
+what to do, get advice from someone who is
+supposed to know and who is not interested
+in having you buy or sell. Stock speculating
+with safety is possible for those who make
+the effort to be guided by correct principles.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIII.<br />
+TWO KINDS OF TRADERS</h2>
+
+<p>There are two kinds of stock traders. One
+kind nearly always makes a profit, and the
+other wins sometimes and loses other times,
+but eventually loses all if he does not change
+his methods. The first kind buys stocks on
+liberal margin or outright and is not worried
+when the market goes against him, because
+he has good reasons for believing that prices
+eventually will go up. If he does have to
+take a loss occasionally, it is likely to be
+small compared with his profits. The second
+kind wants to make a big profit quickly, and
+he buys stocks that he thinks are going to
+make big gains in the near future, but his
+selections are not based upon good judgment.</p>
+
+<p>We might designate these two traders as
+the careful trader and the reckless trader.</p>
+
+<p>The careful trader tries to get good advice
+on the markets and the values of stocks. If
+the advice appears to him to be conservative,
+he is guided by it; but if the reckless trader
+gets advice on stocks, he is not guided by it
+if it is of a conservative nature. If he does<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
+take advice, it is likely to be from one of
+those unreliable market tipsters who is very
+emphatic in his statements about what the
+market is going to do. The reckless trader
+lets his greed and desire for large and quick
+profits influence his judgment.</p>
+
+<p>Once in a while one of these reckless traders
+realizes that he has made a great mistake,
+and he wants to change his attitude.
+Usually he is holding several stocks that
+show a big loss and he does not know what
+to do with them. He reasons that they are
+selling so low now they surely will sell higher
+some time. Perhaps his reasoning is good
+and perhaps it is not. The stocks may have
+no chance of going up for a very long time,
+if at all, but even though they have a good
+chance to go up later, it is better for him to
+sell them now if he can put the money derived
+from the sale into something else that has a
+better chance to make a profit.</p>
+
+<p>Our advice is never to hesitate to sell and
+take a loss if you can put the proceeds
+from the sale into something better rather
+than leave it in the stock in which it is now.
+It is not so much a question whether or not
+the stock you are holding will go up, as it<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
+is whether or not you would buy that particular
+stock if you were just coming into
+the market to make a purchase. Of course
+there is a loss of commissions when you sell
+a stock and buy something else, and for that
+reason we sometimes recommend holding a
+stock when we would not recommend
+buying it.</p>
+
+<p>If you have been a reckless trader in the
+past, the only thing for you to do is to
+change your methods and try to become a
+careful trader. It is much better to go to
+the extreme in carefulness and be satisfied
+with very small profits than to take great
+risks.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXIV.<br />
+POSSIBILITIES OF PROFIT</h2>
+
+<p>What are the possibilities of profit in stock
+speculation? That question is frequently
+asked but it is difficult to answer. James R.
+Keene is quoted as having said: "Many men
+come to Wall Street to get rich; they always
+go broke. Others come to Wall Street to operate
+intelligently for fair returns; they usually
+get rich."</p>
+
+<p>While it is true that nearly all stock traders
+who try to make unusually large profits
+in a very short time in stock trading lose, yet
+unusual profits can be made if you exercise
+good judgment and have patience.</p>
+
+<p>Roger W. Babson, in his book entitled,
+"Business Barometers," speaks of the possibilities
+of profit in language that would be
+considered greatly exaggerated if used by a
+promoter, and yet he is extremely conservative
+in his advice to traders. He advises
+never to buy on margin, never to sell short,
+and staying out of the market entirely,
+neither buying or selling, for a great part
+of the time. Here is a quotation from his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
+book, which follows a detailed statement of
+an investment of $2,500 over a period of fifty
+years:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"The preceding example shows that $2,500 conservatively
+invested in a few standard stocks about
+fifty years ago would today amount to over
+$1,000,000. These are not only strictly investment
+stocks, but are also stocks which have fluctuated
+comparatively little in price. This, moreover was
+possible by giving orders to buy or sell only once
+in every three or four years.</p>
+
+<p>"If other stocks which were not dividend payers
+and which have shown greater fluctuations were
+purchased, and advantage had been taken of the
+intermediate fluctuations, the $2,500 would have
+amounted to much larger figures. By intermediate
+movements is not meant the weekly movements
+which the ordinary professional operator notes, but
+the broader movements extending over many months
+and possibly a year or more. Nevertheless, these
+broader intermediate movements should not be
+noticed by a conservative investor, as it is possible
+to correctly diagnose only the movements extending
+over longer periods. Many brokers believe that it
+is possible to discern also these intermediate movements
+of six or eight months; and if so, the following
+results would have been possible.</p></div>
+
+<div class="bq2"><p>"$5,000 invested in 'St. Paul' in 1870 would
+amount to over $10,000,000 today.</p>
+
+<p>"$5,000 invested in 'Union Pacific' in 1870
+would amount to over $15,000,000 today.</p>
+
+<p>"$5,000 invested in 'Central of New Jersey'
+would amount to over $30,000,000 today.</p>
+
+<p>"$5,000 invested in 'Northern Pacific' would
+amount to over $50,000,000 today.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"These figures are not based on the supposition
+that the investor was selling at the top of every<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
+rise or buying at the bottom of every decline, but
+that the transactions were made at average 'high'
+and average 'low' prices based upon the study of
+technical conditions."</p></div>
+
+<p>If such large profits can be made by following
+Babson's advice, of course larger
+profits can be made by buying on conservative
+margin and by selling short when all
+the conditions are in favor of it.</p>
+
+<p>While there are possibilities of making
+extremely large profits without taking great
+risks, by those who are patient and exercise
+good judgment, one should be satisfied with
+a small profit, if it is the result of great care,
+in an effort to eliminate risk. Of course, you
+can afford to take a much greater risk with
+a small part of your speculative fund than
+you can with all of it. The less money you
+have with which to speculate, the more careful
+you should be. Some people cannot afford
+to speculate at all. They should invest their
+funds in good, safe investments, but this
+book is written for speculators.</p>
+
+<p>Careful stock speculation carried on regularly
+over a period of years, we believe brings
+larger returns than almost anything else, and
+in the next chapter we tell you something
+about where to get information to guide you.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV"></a>CHAPTER XXV.<br />
+MARKET INFORMATION</h2>
+
+<p>Where do you get your market information?
+Perhaps most people get it from the
+daily papers. When you look over the financial
+news of one of the leading metropolitan papers
+and see how much there is of it, you can
+get some idea of the enormous volume of
+work necessary to get this matter ready for
+the press in a few hours. There is no time to
+confirm reports. It is necessary that many
+of the articles be written from pure imagination,
+based on rumors.</p>
+
+<p>Weekly and monthly periodicals can be
+more accurate in their information, but even
+they are not always dependable. Much of
+the financial news published comes from
+agencies that are not reliable. Read what
+Henry Clews says about them:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Principally among these caterers are the financial
+news agencies and the morning Wall Street news
+sheet, both specially devoted to the speculative interests
+that centre at the Stock Exchange. The object of
+these agencies is a useful one; but the public have a
+right to expect that when they subscribe for information
+upon which immense transactions may be undertaken,
+the utmost caution, scrutiny and fidelity<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
+should be exercised in the procurement and publication
+of the news. Anything that falls short of this
+is something worse than bad service and bad faith
+with subscribers; it is dishonest and mischievous.
+And yet it cannot be denied that much of the so-called
+news that reaches the public through these
+instrumentalities must come under this condemnation.
+The 'points,' the 'puffs,' the alarms and the canards,
+put out expressly to deceive and mislead, find a wide
+circulation through these mediums, with an ease
+which admits of no possible justification. How far
+these lapses are due to the haste inseparable from the
+compilation of news of such a character, how far to
+a lack of proper sifting and caution, how far to less
+culpable reasons I do not pretend to decide; but
+this will be admitted by every observer, that the
+circulation of pseudo news is the frequent cause
+of incalculable losses. Nor is it alone in the matter
+of circulating false information that these news venders
+are at fault. The habit of retailing 'points'
+in the interest of cliques, the volunteering of advice
+as to what people should buy and what they should
+sell, the strong speculative bias that runs through
+their editorial opinions, these things appear to most
+people a revolting abuse of the true functions of
+journalism."</p></div>
+
+<p>Of course, every trader gets market letters
+from one or more brokers. These are many
+and varied in character. Some of them are
+prepared with great care and give reliable
+information, but you must remember that
+a broker's market letter is published for the
+purpose of getting business, and business is
+created only by the customers' trading.
+Therefore it is to the broker's interest to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
+have his customers make many trades instead
+of a few trades. In his book "Business
+Barometers," Roger W. Babson reproduces a
+letter written to him by the Manager of the
+Customers' Room of a Stock Exchange
+House. We consider this letter so important
+to all traders, we are taking the liberty to
+reproduce it here:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Hearing on every hand about the fortunes made
+in Wall Street, I decided, upon being graduated from
+college, to devote myself to finance. With this end
+in view, I secured a position with a first-class New
+York Stock Exchange House, finally becoming the
+'handshaker' for the firm; that is, 'manager' of the
+customers' room. So I had an exceptional opportunity
+to size up the stock business. The chief
+duties of the manager are to meet customers when
+they visit the office, tell them how the market is
+acting, the latest news from the news-tickers and
+the gossip of the Street. But the real duties are
+to get business for the house. Once a most peculiar
+man came to the office. He was about forty-five
+years of age, dressed in a faded cutaway coat, high-water
+trousers, and an East Side low-crown derby
+hat. In a high squeaky voice he said that he knew
+our Milwaukee House and would like to open an account.
+Of course, we were all smiles, for here was
+a new 'customer.'</p>
+
+<p>"One day while in Boston he called us up on the
+long-distance telephone to make an inquiry about
+the grain market. One of my assistants, desiring to
+get a commission out of him, said 'We hear that
+Southern Pacific is going up; you had better get
+aboard.' He said 'All right; buy me a hundred at
+the market.' The stock was bought, but he never
+saw daylight on his purchase, for the market declined<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
+steadily afterward and by the time he got
+back from Boston it showed a heavy loss. The man
+who advised its purchase had no special knowledge
+about the stock, but simply took a chance, knowing
+that the market had only two ways to go, and it
+might go up, in which case, besides making twenty-five
+dollars in commissions for the house, he would
+be patted on the back for his good judgment. If the
+market went down, as it did, he would still make
+twenty-five dollars.</p>
+
+<p>"I venture to say that 99% of the speculations
+on the New York Stock Exchange are based on
+such so-called 'tips'. The manager has got to get
+the business to keep his position and salary, and this
+can only be done by 'touting' people into the market.
+So he draws on the 'dope' sheets of the professional
+tipsters and his own feelings, and gives positive
+information to the bleating lamb that the Standard
+Oil is putting up St. Paul, or that certain influential
+bankers are 'bulling' Union Pacific. The lamb buys
+the stock, the broker gets the commission, and then
+the lamb worries his heart out as he sees his one-thousand-dollar
+margin jumping around in value.
+Now it has increased to eleven hundred dollars, then
+declined to nine hundred and fifty dollars, then nine
+hundred dollars, eight hundred dollars, then back to
+eight hundred and fifty dollars and then it takes the
+'toboggan' to three hundred dollars upon which the
+broker calls for margins, and sells the customer out
+if they are not forthcoming, the whole speculation
+being based on the manager's 'feeling' that stocks
+ought to go up.</p>
+
+<p>"Men of affairs who will not play poker at home,
+and are shocked at the mention of faro and roulette,
+which any old-timer will tell you are easier to beat
+than the stock market, think they are using business
+judgment when they try to make money on stock
+market 'tips'. Anyone with common sense can see
+that a 10% margin has no more chance in an active
+market than a brush dam in a Johnstown flood. One<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
+of the causes for this kind of speculating on a margin
+is that a broker's commission is only 12<span class="abv">1</span>&#8260;<span class="blw">2</span> cents
+per share and it does not pay to do small-lot business.
+The one-thousand-dollar margin would only
+buy ten shares outright and net the broker but $1.25
+for buying and $1.25 for selling, whereas that same
+amount as margin on one hundred shares yields the
+broker $12.50 each way besides interest on the balance,
+the net result being that for any given amount
+of money a speculator on 10% margin multiplies his
+profits by ten and his losses by ten over those that
+would occur were he to buy the stock outright and
+take it home. The broker on his side multiplies his
+commission by ten over what he would receive were
+he to do an investment business."</p></div>
+
+<p>From the above letter you get an idea of
+the attitude of an employee of the average
+broker's office. He would not be considered
+loyal to his employer if he had a different attitude.
+When an attitude like this influences
+the broker's market letters, they are not
+reliable.</p>
+
+<p>You may ask whether there is any reliable
+information about the market. Yes, there
+is. There are several large organizations
+that make a study of fundamental statistics
+and statistics of different companies and give
+information to their subscribers based upon
+this knowledge. We believe that is the only
+kind of information that is worth very much
+to a trader, except the statistical information&mdash;the
+number of shares sold and the prices at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
+which they are sold&mdash;he gets from his daily
+or weekly papers. Some of the principal organizations
+of this kind are as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>Standard Statistics Company, Inc.<br />
+Babson's Statistical Organization.<br />
+The Brookmire Economic Service.<br />
+Harvard Economic Service.<br />
+Poor's Investment Service.<br />
+Moody's Investors Service.<br />
+Richard D. Wyckoff Analytical Staff.</i></p></div>
+
+<p>The above are the principal organizations
+of this kind. Subscriptions to their service
+cost from $85 to $1000 a year. In addition
+to these there are a few other organizations
+besides our own and individuals giving a
+somewhat similar service, but we know of
+none that gives such a service at as low a
+price as ours.</p>
+
+<p>You should not confuse the service given
+by the above organizations with that given
+by many organizations and individuals who
+attempt to tell you what the market is going
+to do from day to day. In other words, they
+give 'tips' on the market. There are a number
+who issue daily market letters of this
+kind and charge from $10 to $25 a month
+for their service, but it is a line of service
+that we do not recommend at all, because we
+consider that you would be taking a very<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
+great risk if you followed advice of that kind.
+You might make enormously large profits
+occasionally, but you would also have frequent
+losses, and when the losses did come
+they might be greater than all the previous
+profits. We want you to understand that
+that kind of advice is entirely different from
+what we are recommending.</p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVI.<br />
+SUCCESSFUL SPECULATION</h2>
+
+<p>Success in stock speculation depends upon
+a few things that are very simple.</p>
+
+<p>If you know what to buy, when to buy,
+and when to sell, and will act in accordance
+with that knowledge, your success is assured.
+You may think it is impossible to know these
+things, but it is not so difficult as it is supposed
+to be.</p>
+
+<p>Many people buy stocks at the wrong time,
+and most of those who do buy them at the
+right time, buy the wrong stocks. Right now
+(early in April, 1922) is buying time in the
+stock market, and it is possible that this buying
+time may continue&mdash;with some interruptions&mdash;for
+another year or two, or even
+longer.</p>
+
+<p>It is more difficult, however, to tell you
+WHAT stocks to buy. First of all, we advise
+you against buying stocks that are put
+up to high prices by manipulation. Of course,
+if you get in one of those stocks right and
+get out right, your profits are very large,
+but you take a great risk, and those who win<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
+once or twice by this method are almost sure
+to lose everything sooner or later in an effort
+to do the same thing again. Your
+chances are not much better than if you
+gambled at Monte Carlo. The chances in
+buying manipulated stocks are invariably
+against the outsider.</p>
+
+<p>There always is so much publicity about
+these very active speculative stocks that the
+public is attracted towards them. Newspapers
+and brokers' market letters give altogether
+too much space to them. Such
+stocks sell far too high, and when the break
+comes, it brings ruinous losses to many
+people.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, by following a conservative
+course, you really have a chance to
+make large profits with a minimum risk. We
+are giving below sixteen stocks that we recommended
+in our Advisory Letter of February
+14th, 1922, with the approximate prices
+of them then and the approximate prices on
+March 31st.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> In arriving at these prices, we<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
+took the closing prices on February 13th and
+on March 31st, and omitted the fractions.
+We recommended only sixteen stocks on that
+date, and you will see that every one of them
+made substantial gains.</p>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td class="center"><small>Stock</small></td><td class="center"><small>Approximate<br />Price<br />Feb. 14, 1922</small></td><td class="center"><small>Approximate<br />Price<br />Mar. 31, 1922</small></td><td class="td3"><small>Profit</small></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td5">C. R. I. &amp; P. pfd (6)</td><td class="td6">75</td><td class="td6">79</td><td class="td7">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td5">C. R. I. &amp; P. pfd (7)</td><td class="td6">88</td><td class="td6">93</td><td class="td7">5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td5">New York Central</td><td class="td6">76</td><td class="td6">88</td><td class="td7">12</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td5">Pacific Gas &amp; Electric</td><td class="td6">64</td><td class="td6">68</td><td class="td7">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td5">Consolidated Gas</td><td class="td6">90</td><td class="td6">109</td><td class="td7">19</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td5">American Telephone &amp; Telegraph</td><td class="td6">118</td><td class="td6">121</td><td class="td7">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td5">General Motors Deb. (6)</td><td class="td6">70</td><td class="td6">78</td><td class="td7">8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td5">General Motors Deb. (7)</td><td class="td6">81</td><td class="td6">91</td><td class="td7">10</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td5">U. S. Steel</td><td class="td6">87</td><td class="td6">95</td><td class="td7">8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td5">Dome Mines</td><td class="td6">23</td><td class="td6">26</td><td class="td7">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td5">Laclede Gas</td><td class="td6">50</td><td class="td6">63</td><td class="td7">13</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td5">Missouri Pacific Pfd</td><td class="td6">48</td><td class="td6">54</td><td class="td7">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td5">C. R. I. &amp; P. Common</td><td class="td6">33</td><td class="td6">40</td><td class="td7">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td5">Am. Smel. &amp; Refining</td><td class="td6">45</td><td class="td6">53</td><td class="td7">8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td5">Anaconda</td><td class="td6">47</td><td class="td6">51</td><td class="td7">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td5">Erie Common</td><td class="td6">10</td><td class="td6">11</td><td class="td7">1</td></tr>
+<tr class="tr1"><td class="td5">Total</td><td class="td6">1005</td><td class="td6">1120</td><td class="td7">115</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>Let us suppose you bought ten shares of
+each of these stocks on February 14th. They
+would have cost you $10,050. We recommended
+30% margin on the first ten, all of
+which were dividend payers; and 50% margin
+on the last six, because they were more
+speculative and would have been more affected<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
+by a reaction in the market. To buy
+ten shares of each on that margin basis
+would have required a little less than $3,500,
+but let us suppose you put up $3,500. After
+allowing for buying and selling commissions
+and interest on the balance of $6,550, but
+crediting you with dividends paid, your profit
+would be about 32% or at the rate of about
+250% per annum.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, we do not claim that by following
+the conservative course we advise,
+you always will make such large profits, although
+you might do just as well as that
+if you took advantage of some of the opportunities
+so frequently to be found in the market;
+but keen discrimination in what you
+buy always is necessary. However, let us
+suppose you made annual profits of one-fifth
+the above amount, or 50%, which is easily
+possible without taking the risks that are
+usually taken in stock speculating. If you
+invested $1000 and made 50% profit per annum,
+reinvesting your profit at the same rate
+each year for twenty years, you would have
+more than THREE MILLION DOLLARS.</p>
+
+<p>When there is a possibility of making such
+enormous profits as that by following careful<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
+methods, surely there is no argument in
+favor of taking the extreme risks that people
+do take in buying the highly speculative
+stocks, the prices of which are put up for
+the purpose of unloading them on the public.
+Ten of the stocks we selected in the above
+list were dividend payers, and while the other
+six were not, they were considered worth
+much more than their market prices, and
+the list as a whole was conceded by conservative
+people as a safe one to buy.</p>
+
+<p>Very frequently we are able to recommend
+a list of stocks that we believe will
+yield equally large profits, but the stocks you
+should buy are not the ones that are the
+most active nor the ones that are mentioned
+most frequently in the financial news and
+brokers' market letters. The stocks that
+most people buy are usually the very stocks
+that should be left alone. The stocks you
+should buy are usually the ones you hear
+very little about.</p>
+
+<p>There is only one SAFE way to speculate,
+and that is to be guided by a knowledge of
+the fundamental conditions of each stock and
+also of the industries they represent. There
+are several large organizations giving information<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
+of this kind, and those who have been
+guided by the fundamental statistics issued
+by them, almost invariably have made money
+in stock speculating. The value of that kind
+of service has been thoroughly demonstrated
+beyond any question. However, a subscription
+for the service of most of these organizations
+costs more than the average person
+can afford to pay. Usually it is anywhere
+from $100 to $1,000 a year.</p>
+
+<p>We are giving a service for the purpose of
+guiding our clients to successful speculation
+for a fee of only $25 a year, $15 for six
+months, or $10 for three months. For this
+fee we tell you what stocks to buy, when to
+buy, and when to sell. We send you our
+recommendations at least twice a month, but
+send you additional Advisory Letters and lists
+oftener if conditions make it necessary. You
+also have the privilege of unlimited personal
+correspondence regarding your market problems.
+The cost of our Service is very small,
+compared with what other reliable organizations
+charge.</p>
+
+<p>Our Service is based on the principles expounded
+in this book. We try to select
+stocks having the greatest possibilities of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
+profit with minimum risk, and the sample
+of our Service given in this chapter is proof
+of our success.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>NATIONAL BUREAU OF FINANCIAL<br />
+INFORMATION</b></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>395 Broadway, New York City</b></p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> We did not advise the sale of these stocks on March 31st,
+but the author figured profits to that date because this book
+was written shortly after that. If these stocks had been bought
+on or about February 14th, on the margin basis suggested by
+us, and sold six months later, the profit would have been more
+than 60%, or 120% yearly.</p></div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="trn"><b>Transcriber's Note:</b>
+Minor typographical errors have been corrected without note.
+Variant spellings have been retained.</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Successful Stock Speculation, by John James Butler
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+Project Gutenberg's Successful Stock Speculation, by John James Butler
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Successful Stock Speculation
+
+Author: John James Butler
+
+Release Date: October 8, 2008 [EBook #26841]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SUCCESSFUL STOCK SPECULATION ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Stephen Blundell and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Successful
+ Stock Speculation
+
+ _By_
+ J. J. BUTLER
+
+
+ _Written April 1922_
+ _Published December 1922_
+
+
+ _Published by_
+ NATIONAL BUREAU OF FINANCIAL INFORMATION
+ 395 Broadway, New York City
+
+
+
+
+ _This Book Is Not Copyrighted_
+
+ We believe the principles expounded
+ in this book are of immense value
+ to everyone who buys speculative
+ securities, and we do not object to
+ anyone reproducing any part of it,
+ whether or not we are given credit
+ for it.
+
+ National Bureau of Financial Information
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+ Minor typographical errors have been corrected without note. Variant
+ spellings have been retained. Bold text has been indicated as
+ +bold+.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ PART 1
+ INTRODUCTORY CHAPTERS
+
+ Chapter Page
+ I. THE PURPOSE OF THIS BOOK 7
+ II. WHAT IS SPECULATION 9
+ III. SOME TERMS EXPLAINED 13
+ IV. A CORRECT BASIS FOR SPECULATING 17
+
+
+ PART 2
+ WHAT AND WHEN TO BUY AND SELL
+
+ V. WHAT STOCKS TO BUY 23
+ VI. WHAT STOCKS NOT TO BUY 25
+ VII. WHEN TO BUY STOCKS 29
+ VIII. WHEN NOT TO BUY STOCKS 33
+ IX. WHEN TO SELL STOCKS 35
+
+
+ PART 3
+ INFLUENCES AFFECTING STOCK PRICES
+
+ X. MOVEMENTS IN STOCK PRICES 41
+ XI. MAJOR MOVEMENTS IN PRICES 43
+ XII. THE MONEY MARKET AND STOCK PRICES 47
+ XIII. MINOR MOVEMENTS IN PRICES 49
+ XIV. TECHNICAL CONDITIONS 51
+ XV. MANIPULATIONS 53
+
+
+ PART 4
+ TOPICS OF INTEREST TO SPECULATORS
+
+ XVI. MARGINAL TRADING 61
+ XVII. SHORT SELLING 65
+ XVIII. BUCKET SHOPS 69
+ XIX. CHOOSING A BROKER 71
+ XX. PUTS AND CALLS 73
+ XXI. STOP LOSS ORDERS 75
+
+
+ PART 5
+ CONCLUDING CHAPTERS
+
+ XXII. THE DESIRE TO SPECULATE 81
+ XXIII. TWO KINDS OF TRADERS 87
+ XXIV. POSSIBILITIES OF PROFIT 91
+ XXV. MARKET INFORMATION 95
+ XXVI. SUCCESSFUL SPECULATION 103
+
+
+
+
+_PART ONE_
+
+INTRODUCTORY CHAPTERS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE PURPOSE OF THIS BOOK
+
+
+This book is written for the purpose of giving our clients some ideas of
+the fundamental principles that guide us when we select stocks for them
+to buy, but these principles are valuable to every person who trades in
+listed stocks or in any other kind of speculative stocks.
+
+First of all, we want you to get a clear conception of the meaning of
+the word speculation, which is explained in the next chapter. Our
+purpose is to protect you against losses as well as to enable you to
+make profits, and it is very important that you understand how to
+provide for safety in your speculating.
+
+It is a well known fact that there are tremendous losses in stock
+speculation, but we claim that almost all of these losses would be
+avoided if all speculators were guided by the principles expounded in
+this book.
+
+"What" and "When" are two very important words in stock speculation, and
+we cannot urge upon you too strongly to study carefully Chapters V. to
+IX.
+
+Chapters X. to XV. tell you much about the influences that affect the
+prices of stocks, a knowledge of which should also be a guide to you in
+making your selections.
+
+Perhaps the most important chapter in the entire book is XXV., on Market
+Information. A careful reading of this chapter should convince you that
+much of the prevailing information about the stock market is misleading.
+That fact alone accounts for many of the losses in stock speculation.
+
+It has been our aim to state all facts briefly. The entire book is not
+long, and it will not require much of your time to read it through
+carefully. We are sure you will get many ideas from it that will help
+you.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+WHAT IS SPECULATION?
+
+
+To speculate is to theorize about something that is uncertain. We can
+speculate about anything that is uncertain, but we use the word
+"speculation" in this book with particular reference to the buying and
+selling of stocks and bonds for the purpose of making a profit. When
+people buy stocks and bonds for the income they get from them and the
+amount of that income is fixed, they are said to invest and not to
+speculate. In nearly all investments there is also an element of
+speculation, because the market price of investments is subject to
+change. "Investment" also conveys the idea of holding for some time
+whatever you have purchased, while speculation conveys the idea of
+selling for a quick profit rather than holding for income.
+
+To the minds of most people, the word "speculation" conveys the thought
+of risk, and many people think it means great risk. The dictionary gives
+for one of the meanings of speculation, "a risky investment for large
+profit," but speculation need not necessarily be risky at all. The
+author of this book once used the expression, "stock speculating with
+safety," and he was severely criticized by a certain financial magazine.
+Evidently the editor of that magazine thought that "speculating" and
+"safety" were contradictory terms, but the expression is perfectly
+correct. Stock speculating with safety is possible.
+
+Of course, we all know that the word "safety" is seldom used in an
+absolute sense. We frequently read such expressions as: "The elevators
+in modern office buildings are run with safety." "It is possible to
+cross the ocean with safety." "You can travel from New York to San
+Francisco in a railroad train with safety." And yet accidents do occur
+and people do lose their lives in elevators, steamships, and railroad
+trains. Because serious accidents are comparatively rare, we use the
+word "safety."
+
+In like manner it is possible to purchase stocks sometimes when it is
+almost certain that the purchaser will make a profit, and that is "stock
+speculating with safety." When Liberty Bonds were selling in the 80's,
+many people bought them for speculation. They were not taking any risk,
+except the slight risk that the market price might go still lower before
+it would go higher, and that did not involve any risk for those who knew
+they could hold them. The fact that the market prices of Liberty Bonds
+would advance was based upon an economic law that never fails. That law
+is that when interest rates go up, the market prices of bonds go down,
+and when interest rates go down, the market prices of bonds go up. When
+Liberty Bonds were selling in the 80's, interest rates were so very
+high, it was certain that they would come down. That the market prices
+of Liberty Bonds would go up was also certain, but nobody could tell how
+much they would go up in a given time. It was that element of
+uncertainty that made them speculative, and not that there was any doubt
+about the fact that the market prices of them would go up. Buying
+Liberty Bonds at that time was speculating with safety. If you read this
+book with understanding, you will know much about speculating with
+safety.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SOME TERMS EXPLAINED
+
+
+There are certain terms used in connection with stock speculation that
+are very familiar to those who come in contact with stock brokers, and
+yet are not always familiar to those who do business by mail.
+Undoubtedly the majority of our readers are familiar with these terms,
+but we give these definitions for the benefit of the few who are not
+familiar with them.
+
+Trader: A person who buys and sells stocks is usually referred to as a
+trader. The word probably originated when it was customary to trade one
+stock for another and later was used to refer to a person who sold one
+stock and bought another. He was a trader; but the person who buys
+stocks for a profit and sells them and takes his profit when he gets an
+opportunity, may not be a trader in the strict sense of the word.
+However, for convenience, we use the word "trader" in this book to refer
+to any one who buys or sells stocks.
+
+Speculator: This word refers to a person who buys stocks for profit,
+with the expectation of selling at a higher price, without reference to
+the earnings of the stock. He may sell first, with the expectation of
+buying at a lower price, as explained in Chapter XVII. on "Short
+Selling." In many cases where we use the word "trader," it would be more
+correct to use the word "speculator."
+
+Investor: An investor differs from a speculator in the fact that he buys
+stocks or bonds with the expectation of holding them for some time for
+the income to be derived from them, without reference to their
+speculative possibilities. We believe that investors always should give
+some consideration to the speculative possibilities of their purchases.
+It frequently is possible to get speculative profits without increase of
+risk or loss of income.
+
+Bull: One who believes that the market price of stocks will advance is
+called a bull. Of course, it is possible to be a bull in one stock and a
+bear in another. The word is used very frequently with reference to the
+market, a bull market meaning a rising market.
+
+Bear: The opposite of a bull is a bear. It refers to a person who
+believes that the market value of stocks will decline, and a bear market
+is a declining market.
+
+Lambs: "Lambs" refers to that part of the public that knows so little
+about stock speculating that they lose all their money sooner or later.
+The bulls and bears get them going and coming. If the lambs would read
+this book carefully, they would discover reasons why they lose their
+money.
+
+Long and Short: Those who +own+ stocks are said to be long, and those
+who +owe+ stocks are said to be short. Short selling is explained in
+Chapter XVII.
+
+Odd Lot: Stocks on exchanges are sold in certain lots. On the New York
+Stock Exchange, 100 shares is a lot; and on the Consolidated Stock
+Exchange, 10 shares is a lot. Less than these amounts is an odd lot.
+When you sell an odd lot you usually get 1/8 less than the market price;
+and when you buy an odd lot, you usually pay 1/8 more than the market
+price; that is, 1/8 of a dollar on each share where prices are quoted in
+dollars.
+
+Point: It is a common expression to say that a stock went up or down a
+point, which means a dollar in a stock that is quoted in dollars, but a
+cent in a stock that is quoted in cents, as many of the stocks are on
+the New York Curb. In cotton quotations, a point is 1/100 part of a
+cent. For instance, if cotton is quoted at 18.12, it means 18 cents and
+12/100 of a cent per pound, and if it went up 30 points the quotation
+would be 18.42.
+
+Reaction: Every person who has traded in listed stocks probably is
+familiar with this word. It means to act in an opposite direction, but
+it is used especially to refer to a decline in the price of a stock that
+has been going up.
+
+Rally: "Rally" is the opposite of the sense in which "reaction" usually
+is used. When a stock is going down and it turns and goes up, it is
+called a rally.
+
+Commitment: This term is used referring to a purchase of stock. It is
+more commonly used by investment bankers when they contract to buy an
+issue, but the term sometimes is used by traders.
+
+Floating Supply: The stock of a company that is in the hands of that
+part of the public who is likely to sell, is referred to as floating
+supply.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+A CORRECT BASIS FOR SPECULATING
+
+
+We maintain that there is only one basis upon which successful
+speculation can be carried on continually; that is, never to buy a
+security unless it is selling at a price below that which is warranted
+by assets, earning power, and prospective future earning power.
+
+There are many influences that affect the movements of stock prices,
+which are referred to in subsequent chapters. All of these should be
+studied and understood, but they should be used as secondary factors in
+relation to the value of the stock in which you are trading.
+
+If the market price of any stock is far below its intrinsic value and
+there is no reason why the future should bring about a change in this
+value that will decrease it, then you may be certain that important
+influences are working against the market price of the stock for the
+time being. In the course of time the market price will go up towards
+the real value. This matter will be more fully explained in subsequent
+chapters.
+
+You always should keep in mind the fact that when you buy a stock at a
+higher price than its intrinsic value, you are taking a risk. The stock
+may have great future possibilities, but it is risky to buy stocks when
+present assets and earnings do not warrant their market prices, no
+matter how attractive prospective future earnings may appear. However,
+the possibilities of profit sometimes are so great that one is justified
+in taking this risk.
+
+It is our belief that the majority of traders buy stocks because they
+are active in the market and somebody said they were a good buy, even
+though the real values may not be nearly as much as the market prices.
+
+As an example of this kind of trading, we want to call your attention to
+a news item that appeared in a New York paper. It stated that on April
+1st, some brokers in Detroit, as an April Fool joke, gave out a tip to
+buy A. F. P., meaning April Fool Preferred, but when asked what it
+meant, replied "American Fire Protection." Of course, there was no such
+stock, but there was active trading in it until the joke was discovered.
+Evidently it is not necessary to list a stock on the Detroit Stock
+Exchange in order to trade in it.
+
+This story may or may not be true, but we believe the statement that
+people trade in stocks they do not know anything about is true. You
+should be careful not to buy a stock merely because somebody says it is
+a good thing to buy, unless the person making the statement is in the
+business of giving information on stocks, because it may be only a rumor
+with no substantial basis. Of course, if many people act on the rumor,
+there will be active trading in the stock, and it is frequently for that
+purpose that such rumors are started.
+
+
+
+
+_PART TWO_
+
+WHAT and WHEN TO BUY and SELL
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+WHAT STOCKS TO BUY
+
+
+In deciding what stocks to buy, it is well to consider first the classes
+of stocks, and then what particular stocks you should buy in the classes
+you select. We would first of all divide all stocks into two classes,
+those listed on the New York Stock Exchange and those not listed on the
+New York Stock Exchange. As a rule, it is better to buy stocks listed on
+the New York Stock Exchange, although there are frequent exceptions to
+this rule.
+
+Then, the stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange may be divided
+into classes, such as railroad stocks, public utility stocks, motor
+stocks, tire stocks, oil stocks, copper stocks, gold stocks, and so
+forth. At certain times certain stocks are in a much more favorable
+condition than at other times. In 1919, when the industrial stocks were
+selling at a very high price, the public utility stocks and gold stocks
+were selling low, because it was impossible to increase incomes in
+proportion to the increase in operating costs. But since the beginning
+of 1921, the condition of these two classes of stocks has been improving
+and the market has reflected that improvement.
+
+At the time of this writing (early in April, 1922) we are recommending
+the stocks of only a very few manufacturing companies; but we are
+recommending a number (not all) of the railroad and public utility
+stocks, and a few specially selected stocks among the other classes.
+
+In every instance, when you make a selection, you should consider the
+company's assets, present earnings, and prospective future earnings, and
+then take into consideration all the influences that affect price
+movements, as explained in subsequent chapters.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+WHAT STOCKS NOT TO BUY
+
+
+A great deal more can be said about stocks you should not buy than about
+stocks you should buy, because the list is very much larger.
+
+Stocks not listed on the New York Stock Exchange, as a rule, should not
+be bought by a careful speculator, but as stated in the previous
+chapter, there are exceptions to that rule. Billions of dollars have
+been lost in the past by buying stocks that have become worthless. A few
+years ago a list of defunct securities was compiled, and it took two
+large volumes in which to enumerate them. New ones have been added to
+them every year. Therefore, it is very important that you should give
+careful thought to the subject of what stocks +not+ to buy.
+
+Nearly all promotion stocks (stocks in new companies) are a failure. An
+extremely small percentage of them are very successful, and the
+successful ones are referred to in the advertising of the new ones; but,
+on the basis of average, the chances are you will lose your money
+entirely in promotion stocks. We believe that most of the promotion
+companies are started in perfectly good faith, although some of them are
+swindles from the beginning; but no matter how honest and well meaning
+the organizers are, the chances of success are against them. Therefore,
+we say that promotion stocks should not be bought by the ordinary man
+who is looking for a good speculation, because his chances of making a
+large profit with a minimum risk are very much better when he buys
+stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange and uses good judgment in
+doing so.
+
+Among the listed stocks there are many you should not buy. First of all,
+eliminate them by classes. Do not buy the classes of stocks that are
+selling too high now. You may say that there are some exceptions in all
+classes. That may or may not be so, but in any event, you have a better
+chance of profiting by confining most of your purchases to the classes
+of stocks that are in the most favorable position.
+
+As a rule, when stocks are first listed, they sell much higher than they
+do a short time afterwards. Of course, that is not always true. It is
+more likely to be true when a stock is listed during a very active
+market, when prices are more easily influenced by publicity. The high
+price of it is usually due to the fact that publicity is given to it,
+and as soon as the effect of this publicity wears off, the market price
+of the stock declines.
+
+It is a good rule never to buy stocks that brokers urge you to buy. Your
+own common sense ought to tell you that a stock that is advertised
+extensively by brokers is likely to sell up in price while the
+advertising is going on and will drop in price just as soon as the
+advertising stops.
+
+Many people notice that and they think they can profit by buying when
+the advertising starts and sell out when they get a good profit, but the
+majority of them lose money. The stock may not respond to the
+advertising, or if it does go up, they may wait too long before selling.
+Those who do sell and make 200% or 300% profit in a very short time are
+almost sure to lose it all in an effort to repeat the transaction. Many
+of those who read this know it is true from their own experience.
+
+You should leave such stocks strictly alone. You may win once or twice,
+but you are sure to lose if you keep it up. As a rule stocks of this
+kind have very little value and the brokers who boost them make their
+own money from the losses of their foolish followers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+WHEN TO BUY STOCKS
+
+
+Stocks should be bought when they are cheap. By being cheap, we mean
+that the market price is much less than the intrinsic value. In Chapters
+X. to XV. we talk about influences that affect the price movements of
+stocks. By studying these carefully you should be able to decide when
+stocks generally are cheap. Of course, not all stocks are cheap at the
+same time, but the majority of listed stocks do go up and down at the
+same time, as a rule.
+
+At the time of this writing (in the early part of April, 1922) there are
+a great many stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange that are
+selling at prices much less than their intrinsic values, but there are
+some stocks that should not be bought now, nor at any other time. There
+are some stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange now that perhaps
+have no intrinsic value and never will have any. Nevertheless we
+consider that right now[1] is one of the times for buying stocks. There
+are unusual bargains to be had, although keen discrimination is
+necessary in order to be able to pick out the bargains.
+
+As a usual thing, it is a good time to buy stocks when nearly everybody
+wants to sell them. When general business conditions are bad, trading on
+the stock exchanges very light, and everybody you meet appears to be
+pessimistic, then we advise you to look for bargains in stocks. The last
+six months of 1921 was an unusually good time for buying stocks.
+
+It is well known that the large interests accumulate stocks at such
+times. They buy only when the stocks are offered at a low price and try
+not to buy enough at any one time to give an appearance of activity in
+the market, but they buy continually when the market is very dull. It
+seems to be characteristic of human nature to think that business
+conditions are going to continue just as they are. When business is bad,
+nearly everybody thinks business will be bad for a long time, and when
+business is good, nearly everybody thinks business will be good almost
+indefinitely. As a matter of fact, conditions are always changing. It
+never is possible for either extremely good times nor for extremely bad
+times to continue indefinitely.
+
+You can buy stocks cheaper when there is very little demand for them,
+and you should arrange your affairs so as to be prepared to buy at such
+times.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] In our advisory Letter of April 25, 1922, we advised our clients to
+refrain from margin buying for a while, because the market was advancing
+too rapidly. Shortly after that there was a decided reaction in the
+market.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+WHEN NOT TO BUY STOCKS
+
+
+There are times when stocks should not be bought, and that is when
+nearly all stocks have advanced beyond their real values. It is doubtful
+if there ever is a time when all stocks have advanced beyond their real
+values, but when the great majority of stocks have so advanced, there is
+likely to be a general decline in all stock prices. The stocks that are
+not selling too high will decline some in sympathy with the others.
+Therefore, there are times when we advise our clients not to buy any
+stocks.
+
+Some organizations giving advice in regard to the buying of stocks,
+advise their clients to refrain entirely from buying for periods of a
+year or longer, but we think it is seldom advisable to refrain entirely
+from buying for any great length of time. There usually are some good
+opportunities if you watch carefully for them. It is our business to
+watch for these opportunities and tell our clients about them.
+
+There are also times when the technical condition of the market is such
+that we advise our clients to refrain from buying for a while. See
+Chapter XIV.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+WHEN TO SELL STOCKS
+
+
+You should sell stocks when the market price is too high. That is a
+general rule, but it is necessary for you to study all the influences
+affecting stock prices to be able to decide more accurately when you
+should sell your stocks. We give you, in future chapters, much more
+information on judging the markets.
+
+Another general rule, is to sell stocks when nearly everybody is buying
+them. It is a well known fact that the great majority of people buy
+stocks near the top and sell near the bottom. Naturally when everybody
+is optimistic, stocks will sell up high, but sooner or later they will
+come down again, and when everything looks very promising is a good time
+to sell. It is better to lose a little of the profit that you might have
+made by holding on longer than not to be on the safe side. The man who
+tries to sell at the top nearly always loses, because stocks seldom sell
+as high as it is predicted they will, or, in other words, the
+prediction of higher prices is advanced more rapidly than the prices.
+
+We remember reading in 1916, when U. S. Steel sold up around $136 a
+share, a prediction that it was going to sell up to $1000 a share.
+Probably many people who read such news items consider them seriously.
+Of course, that was a most exaggerated prediction, but during the
+extreme activity of a bull market, it seems that nearly everybody is
+talking in exaggerated terms of optimism. That is why most traders
+seldom ever take their profits in a bull market. They wait until stock
+prices start to come down, and then they are likely to think there will
+be rallies, and keep on waiting until they lose all their profits.
+
+On the other hand, some people make the mistake of selling too soon.
+Just because your purchase shows a liberal profit is no reason why you
+should sell. The stock may have been very cheap when you bought it. In
+1920, Peoples Gas sold below $30. Those who bought it then were able to
+double their money by the close of 1921, and many sold out and took
+their profits. Of course, if they invested the proceeds in other stocks
+that were just starting upward, they may not have lost anything, but
+there was no particular reason for selling Peoples Gas at that time. The
+public utilities generally were coming into their own, and nearly all of
+them were regarded by economic students as having unusual opportunities
+for profit.
+
+Then again, it is not always a mistake to sell a stock in order to get
+funds to put into something else that seems more promising, even though
+the stock you sell is likely to go much higher.
+
+It is very important that you should try to sell your stocks at the
+right time. That is the main thing to keep in mind and it is better to
+sell too soon than too late. Don't be too greedy and hold on for a big
+profit. Read Chapter XXIV. on the "Possibilities of Profit."
+
+
+
+
+_PART THREE_
+
+
+INFLUENCES AFFECTING STOCK PRICES
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+MOVEMENTS IN STOCK PRICES
+
+
+It is due to the fact that stock prices constantly move up or down that
+speculation is possible. Sometimes certain stocks remain almost at a
+standstill for a long period of time, but at least a part of the stocks
+listed on the Exchanges move either up or down. If one always could tell
+just what way they were going to move, it would be comparatively easy to
+make a fortune within a short time.
+
+In the last twenty years, a great deal of time and money has been spent
+by statistical organizations in checking up statistics for the purpose
+of ascertaining a definite basis upon which to predict future movements
+in stock prices. Several of these organizations use very different
+statistics upon which to base their conclusions, and yet their
+conclusions are very similar. They have proved beyond any question of
+doubt that some of these movements are clearly indicated by laws that
+never fail.
+
+We do not attempt in this book to explain the fundamental statistics
+upon which the predictions of business cycles are based, but in the next
+five chapters we explain some of the influences that affect the
+movements in stock prices. Read these chapters very carefully, for your
+success in stock speculation will depend very largely upon your correct
+prediction of these movements.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+MAJOR MOVEMENTS IN PRICES
+
+
+Stock prices move up and down in cycles. These are the major movements
+in prices, but there may be many minor movements up and down within the
+major movements. These stock price movements nearly always precede a
+change in business conditions; that is, an upward movement in stock
+prices is an indication that business conditions are going to improve,
+and a downward movement in stock prices is an indication that business
+conditions are going to get worse.
+
+At the present writing, we are in a period of improvement. Stock prices
+began to go up in August, 1921. The upward movement has been slow, but
+gradual. In a period of seven months, forty representative stocks show
+an upward movement of about 20 points, although business has not shown
+much improvement. A steady upward movement in stock prices is a sure
+sign that business conditions are beginning to improve, even though that
+improvement is not noticeable.
+
+These major stock movements are not an exact duplicate of any previous
+ones, and it is impossible to tell how long they will last or just what
+course they will take. Certain influences could change a period of
+improvement into a period of prosperity very quickly.
+
+A period of prosperity is noted for high prices, high wages, and
+increasing production in all lines. Everybody is optimistic. Most people
+spend their money freely, and that makes times better. As prices go up
+and business increases, more money is required in business and interest
+rates go up. As a consequence, when interest rates go up, bond prices go
+down. During this period, speculative stocks are selling at their
+highest prices; and under the influence of this movement, many stocks
+that have no actual value sell up at high prices. Of course, wise
+speculators sell all their stocks during this period.
+
+Following a period of prosperity comes a period of decline. The first
+sign of it usually is a severe break in the stock market. At that time
+general business is running along at top speed and there is no sign of a
+let-up, but this break in the stock market should be a warning. Most
+people think the break is merely a temporary reaction--they may refer
+to it as a HEALTHY reaction--and they start buying stocks again, and put
+the market up, but it does not go up as high as it was before the break
+occurred. When stock prices do not rally beyond the prices at which they
+were before the break occurred, it is a sign that the turning point has
+been reached and that the bear market has started, although the majority
+of people do not realize this until a long time afterwards.
+
+Next comes a period of depression, when we have low prices, low wages,
+hard times, tight money, and many commercial failures. Many people who
+lost all their money during the speculation period, become thrifty and
+economize during the period of depression, and start in to save again.
+Nearly everybody is pessimistic during this period. Trading on the Stock
+Exchange is irregular and as a rule very light.
+
+This is the time to get stock bargains, but the general public as a rule
+doesn't take advantage of it. People are scared and think prices will go
+still lower. The big interests accumulate stocks during this period, and
+sell them during the period of prosperity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE MONEY MARKET AND STOCK PRICES
+
+
+Perhaps no other one thing influences the movement of stock prices so
+much, in a large way, as money conditions. It is impossible to have a
+big bull market without plenty of money. During a bull market nearly all
+stocks are bought on margin, which is explained in Chapter XVI. This
+makes it necessary for brokers to borrow large sums of money. When money
+is tight, it is impossible to get enough to carry on a large movement in
+stocks.
+
+You will see, therefore, that the Federal Reserve Bank has it in its
+power to regulate the stock market to some extent. In 1919 speculation
+was carried very much further than it should have been, but undoubtedly
+it would have been much worse had the Federal Reserve Bank not raised
+interest rates and urged member banks to withdraw money from Wall
+Street. While there was considerable criticism of that action, it
+certainly was a good thing for the entire country.
+
+In a period of depression, the banks accumulate money, and there always
+is an abundance of money at the beginning of a bull market. During a
+period of prosperity the banks' reserves decrease and their loans
+increase. When you see these reserves go down to a very low point, it is
+usually time for you to sell your stocks.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+MINOR MOVEMENTS IN PRICES
+
+
+Within the major movements of stock prices, there always are several
+minor movements, which are caused by various influences. One of the
+important causes is the technical condition of the market. Another cause
+might be called a psychological one. When stocks are moving up steadily
+in a bull market, people closely connected with the market expect a
+reaction and watch for it. The newspapers predict it. Consequently,
+there is sufficient let-up in buying to allow the pressure of selling by
+the bears to bring it about. However, the desire to buy during reactions
+is so general, many people rush in to buy and this buying, in addition
+to the covering by the shorts, puts the market up again; and if
+conditions are favorable for a bull market, prices will go up much
+higher than they were before.
+
+In like manner, we have rallies in bear markets. Of course the
+professional bears sell during these rallies, with the expectation of
+buying later at a cheaper price.
+
+These minor price changes mean more to the majority of traders than the
+major movements. The major movements are so slow that people get out of
+patience, and yet those who are guided only by the major movements are
+operating on a much safer basis. We believe that a greater amount of
+money can be made, with a minimum risk, by being guided principally by
+the major movements, while taking advantage of the minor movements in a
+minor way. However, stocks do not move uniformly and there frequently is
+an opportunity to buy some particular stock at a bargain when nearly all
+stocks are selling too high. We try to pick out these opportunities for
+our clients.
+
+Reports of earnings by various companies influence stock prices, as does
+also the paying of extra dividends or the passing up of dividends. A
+peculiar psychological influence is noticed when a company declares an
+extra dividend. The price of the stock usually goes up, while as a
+matter of fact the intrinsic value of the stock is decreased by the
+amount of this dividend; and sometimes it is advisable to sell a stock
+shortly after an advance in its dividend rate.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+TECHNICAL CONDITIONS
+
+
+Technical conditions refer to the conditions that usually affect the
+supply and demand, such as short interests, floating supply, and stop
+loss orders.
+
+It is sometimes said that supply and demand must be equal or else there
+could not be any sales, but that is not so. There are always some people
+who are willing to sell at some price above the market who will not sell
+at the market; and when the demand for stock is greater than the supply,
+it goes up until it is supplied by some of these people who are holding
+it at a higher price.
+
+It works the same way when the supply is greater than the demand. There
+are always some people who will buy at some price below the market.
+Therefore, when the supply is greater than the demand prices must go
+down.
+
+A stock may have an intrinsic value of $100 a share and yet be selling
+at $50 a share, and it can never sell higher than $50 until all stock
+that is offered at that price is bought.
+
+However, you should keep this in mind: if the real value is $100 a
+share, sooner or later the market price will approach that figure. That
+is why we so strongly urge our clients to buy stocks that have actual
+values, or at least prospective values far greater than their market
+prices, and either to buy them outright or margin them very heavily, and
+then hold them until the prices do go up.
+
+Of course, when one finds that a mistake has been made, the sooner one
+sells and takes a loss the better.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+MANIPULATIONS
+
+
+Stock prices are influenced largely by manipulation. Years ago when the
+volume of trading on the New York Stock Exchange was small compared with
+what it is today, it was possible to influence the entire market by
+manipulation, but it would be very difficult to do that today. It is
+only certain stocks that are manipulated; but if conditions are
+favorable, many other stocks may be influenced by them.
+
+There are different kinds of manipulation. One is for the insiders of a
+company to give out unfavorable news about their company if they want
+the price of the stock to go down, so that they can buy it in; or to
+give out very favorable news if they want the price to go up, so that
+they can sell out. This method is not practiced now to the extent that
+it was years ago. Public opinion is strongly opposed to it, and we
+believe business men are acquiring a higher standard of business ethics.
+Methods of this kind are legal but they are morally reprehensible.
+
+Another method of manipulation is the forming of pools to buy in the
+stock of a company and force it up. If the market price of a stock is
+far below its real value, we believe it is justifiable for a pool to
+force it up, but the ordinary pool is merely a scheme to rob the public.
+
+There are four periods to the operation of such pools. First is the
+period of accumulation. A number of large holders of stock in a certain
+company will pool their stock, all agreeing not to sell except from the
+pool, in which all benefit proportionately. Then they give out bad news
+about the company. That is very easy to do, because financial writers
+usually accept the news that is given to them without much
+investigation, especially writers on daily papers, because they have not
+the time to investigate. Their copy must be ready in a few hours after
+they get the information. See Chapter XXV. on "Market Information" for
+fuller explanation of the reason why financial news usually is
+misleading. The manipulators of stock prices can have financial news
+"made to order."
+
+When the general public reads this news and sees the stock going down,
+many of them get discouraged and sell. It is just the time they should
+not sell, but it is a well known fact that the majority of people do in
+the stock market just what they should not do. The more they sell the
+more the price goes down, and the pool operators accumulate the stock.
+
+Having secured all the stock they want, they give out good news and
+continue to buy the stock until it starts to go up. The public reads
+this favorable news, and seeing the stock go up, will go into the market
+and buy, which puts it up higher. All the time financial writers are
+supplying good news about the stock and the public buys it. After they
+have sold all of it, the public may still be anxious for more, and the
+pool operators may go short of the stock. Then they will begin giving
+out bad news, so that they can buy in stock at a lower price to cover
+their short interests.
+
+After that they have very little interest in the market. If it is
+declining too fast, they may support it occasionally by buying some
+stock and giving out some favorable news. That will make the market
+rally and they will sell out the newly acquired stock near the top of
+the rally.
+
+Manipulations of this kind appear to be going on nearly all the time,
+and there does not seem to be any limit to the number of suckers who
+fall for them. But then, one can't blame the public when you realize how
+thoroughly unreliable is most of the market information given to them.
+
+Still another kind of manipulation is "one-man" manipulation, where one
+man controls companies, which are known as "one-man" companies. Usually
+the directors of these companies are friends or employees of his, and in
+many instances he has their resignations in his possession, so that they
+must do whatever he wants them to do. Owing to the strict rules of the
+New York Stock Exchange, it is rather difficult for such manipulations
+to be carried on there. But there have been many of them on the New York
+Curb. When the Curb was operating on the street and was not under very
+much control, manipulations of this kind were very frequent.
+
+As an example, suppose a man of this kind has a mining company. When he
+wants the stock to go up, he sends the stockholders a great deal of
+information about the work at the mine, and perhaps sends them a
+telegram when a new vein of rich ore is found. The stockholders rush in
+to buy more stock, and that puts the price up. Then he unloads stock on
+them to the extent that they will buy it.
+
+In a day or two, the stock may drop back to less than one half of what
+it was selling at. If this "one-man" manipulator wants to buy any stock,
+he will give out a little unfavorable news, and he can get stock at his
+own price.
+
+After that the news is good or bad according to whether the manipulator
+wants to buy or sell, but as a rule he has an abundance of stock that he
+wants to sell, and is continually giving out good news.
+
+A few years ago there was a man operating in New York who promoted
+several companies and manipulated them in a large way. He is out of
+business now, but the same thing is still done in a smaller way.
+
+It is our opinion that more money is lost by the public in manipulated
+stocks than in promotion stocks, and we read a great deal about the
+enormous losses in them. Promotions that are failures may be perfectly
+legitimate and conducted in the utmost good faith, but manipulations are
+nearly always for the purpose of swindling the public. However, the lure
+of them is so great many people cannot withstand the temptations of them
+even after they have been "trimmed" several times.
+
+
+
+
+_PART FOUR_
+
+TOPICS OF INTEREST TO SPECULATORS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+MARGINAL TRADING
+
+
+Most people who trade in stocks buy on margin. The ordinary minimum
+margin is about 20% of the purchase price, because banks usually lend
+about 80% of the market value of stocks.
+
+If you put up 20% of the purchase price of your stocks with your broker,
+he has to pay the other 80%, but he can do that by borrowing that amount
+from his bank, and putting up the stock as security. In this way brokers
+are able to handle all the margin business that comes to them, as long
+as money can be borrowed. Of course, there are some stocks that are not
+accepted by banks as collateral for loans, and you should not expect
+your broker to sell such stocks on margin. In fact, if he offers to do
+so, it looks as though he were running a bucket shop. See Chapter XVIII.
+
+Many people think that buying stocks on margin is gambling and that
+people should not do it for that reason, but buying on margin is done in
+all lines of business, although it may not be known under that name. If
+you bought stock outright, but borrowed 80% of the purchase price from
+your banker to complete your payment for it and put up the stock with
+him as security, you would be buying on margin just the same.
+
+In like manner, if you bought a home and paid 20% with money you had and
+borrowed the other 80% of the purchase price, you would be buying a home
+on margin. The principal difference is that when you buy from a broker
+on margin, one of the conditions of his contract is that he has the
+right to sell your stock provided the market price drops down to the
+amount that you owe on the stock, whereas if you borrow money on a home,
+it is usually for a certain specified time and the lender cannot sell
+you out until that time expires. However, in principle, there is very
+little difference between the two transactions.
+
+Most margin traders do not put up sufficient margin. If you put up only
+the minimum margin, your broker has the right to call on you for more
+margin if the price of the stock declines at all. Unless you are fully
+prepared at all times to put up an additional margin when called upon,
+you should make smaller purchases and put up a heavy margin when you
+buy. The amount of margin depends upon the transaction, but we advise
+from 30% to 50%, and at times we advise not less than 50% margin on any
+purchase. In fact there are times when we advise not to buy stocks on
+margin at all.
+
+Those who wish to be entirely free from worry should buy stocks when the
+prices are very low, pay for them in full, get their certificates, and
+put them away in a safe deposit box. However, when stocks are low the
+risk in buying on a liberal margin is very small, and the possibilities
+of profit are so much greater, we do not see any objection to taking
+advantage of this method of trading.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+SHORT SELLING
+
+
+By short selling, we mean selling a stock that you do not possess, with
+the intention of buying it later. Short selling in general business is
+very common, and we think nothing of it. Manufacturers frequently sell
+goods that are not yet made, to be delivered at some future time.
+Selling stocks short is a similar transaction, except that in a majority
+of cases delivery of the stock must be made immediately.
+
+However, your broker can attend to that by borrowing the stock. As
+explained in the preceding chapter, when the market is active most of
+the trading is done on margin. Your broker buys a stock for you, but as
+he has to pay for it in full, it is customary for him to take it to his
+bank and borrow money on it. A bank usually lends about 80% of the
+market value, but if some other broker wants to borrow this stock, he
+will lend the full value of it. If that particular stock is very scarce
+and hard to get, the lender of the stock may get the use of the money
+without any interest.
+
+Therefore, there is an advantage to the broker in lending stock, and for
+that reason it is nearly always possible for a broker to arrange
+delivery of stock for you if you wish to sell short. When you instruct
+him later on to buy the stock for you, he will do so and deliver it to
+the broker from whom he borrowed it, who will return the money he
+received for it.
+
+When you sell stock short and the price goes up, you will have to pay a
+higher price for it. Therefore, to protect himself against the
+possibility of losing, your broker demands a payment from you just the
+same as you pay margin when you buy stock.
+
+Short selling is something that we do not recommend very much to our
+clients. We think it is not advisable to do any short selling as long as
+there are good opportunities to make money by buying; but when all
+bargains disappear, as they do sometimes, you must either sell short or
+else keep out of the market entirely. At such times, there may be many
+opportunities to make money by short selling, and we do not consider
+that there is any reason why our clients should not take advantage of
+them.
+
+Of course, great care must be exercised in selling stocks short. You
+might sell a stock short because you know the market price is 100%
+greater than its real value, but it is possible for manipulators to
+force it up a great deal higher; and if you are not able to put up
+sufficient money with your broker to protect him, he will buy at a high
+price and you will lose the money you have put up with him. In some
+instances, stocks are cornered and the short interests are forced to buy
+the stocks at prices that represent enormous losses.
+
+It is a common thing to read about the short interests in certain
+stocks. All stocks that are sold short must be bought sooner or later,
+and when that buying takes place, it may affect the market very much.
+Therefore, if it is known that there is a big short interest in a
+certain stock, we should expect the stock to sell at a higher price; but
+sometimes the short interests break the market and force the price down,
+especially when general conditions are in their favor.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+BUCKET SHOPS
+
+
+There has been so much publicity given to bucket shops, nearly everybody
+is familiar with the term. A broker runs a bucket shop when he sells
+stock to his clients on margin and either never buys the stock for their
+accounts, or else sells it immediately after buying it. The bucket shop
+simply gets your money on the supposition that you are more likely to be
+wrong than to be right. Of course, if you take the bucket shop's advice
+you surely are likely to be wrong. Bucket shops get their clients into
+the very speculative stocks, where there is likely to be a great deal of
+fluctuation in the price of the stocks, which gives them frequent
+opportunities to sell out their clients.
+
+When the market is going down or when there are many movements up and
+down in the price of stocks, the bucket shops make money rapidly, but
+occasionally there is a long period when the market is working against
+the bucket shops, and unless they have a great deal of money they must
+fail.
+
+In August, 1921, Stock Exchange stocks started to go up. The upward
+movement was very slow but it was continual. Up to the time of this
+writing, there has not been a three-point reaction, except in a few
+stocks, in all of that time. Without a fluctuating market, the bucket
+shop has no chance to clean out its customers. As a consequence, the
+bucket shops began to fail in the early part of 1922, and up to the
+present writing (April, 1922) there have been more than fifty of these
+failures. However, it is not likely that all the bucket shops will be
+put out of business. The more successful ones are likely to "weather the
+storm."
+
+Many laws have been enacted against bucket shops, and we believe some
+way will be found to get rid of them at some future time; but we do not
+expect that to happen soon, and we warn our readers not to get into
+their hands, because if they do not get your money away from you one way
+they are likely to get it some other way. The man who runs a bucket shop
+usually has no conscience, and it certainly is an unfortunate thing for
+anyone to get mixed up with such a man.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+CHOOSING A BROKER
+
+
+It is very important that you choose a good broker. No matter how
+careful you are, it is possible to make a mistake. However, if you
+choose a broker who is a member of the New York Stock Exchange, you have
+eliminated a very large percentage of your chances of getting a wrong
+broker.
+
+Occasionally a member of the Stock Exchange fails and once in a while
+one is suspended for running a bucket shop or being connected with one,
+but these instances are very rare compared with the number of brokers
+who get into trouble who are not members of the New York Stock Exchange.
+The rules and regulations of the Stock Exchange protect you to a great
+extent.
+
+When you buy stock on margin, you leave your money in the hands of a
+broker, and you should know that he is responsible. No matter who your
+broker is, you should get a report on him. If you are a subscriber to
+Bradstreet's or Dun's Agencies, get a report from them. If you are not a
+subscriber to any mercantile agency, you perhaps have a friend who can
+get a report for you, or your bank may get one for you. Banks make a
+practice of getting reports of this kind for their clients. When asked
+to do so, we send our clients the names of brokers who are members of
+the New York Stock Exchange, but we prefer not to recommend any broker.
+Of course, we cannot guarantee that a broker is all right. We simply use
+our best judgment, but, as we said before, you eliminate a large
+percentage of your chances of going wrong when you trade with a broker
+who is a member of the New York Stock Exchange.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+PUTS AND CALLS
+
+
+A "put" is a negotiable contract giving the holder the privilege to sell
+a specified number of shares of a certain stock to the maker at a fixed
+price, within a specified time. A "call" is the exact reverse. It is a
+negotiable contract giving the holder the privilege to buy a specified
+number of shares of a certain stock from the maker at a fixed price,
+within a specified time. The price fixed in a put or call is set away
+from the market price a certain number of points, depending upon the
+stock and the condition of the market. When the market is steady and not
+fluctuating, the price fixed is frequently only two points away, but in
+a more active market it is considerably more.
+
+For instance, at the present time, U. S. Steel is selling at about 95,
+and you can buy a call on it at 97 or a put at 93. That is by paying a
+certain amount, which at present is $137.50, you can have the privilege
+of buying 100 shares of U. S. Steel at 97, within thirty days of the
+date of the purchase of your call. If Steel should go up to 101 you
+could have your broker buy it at 97 and sell it at the market, and you
+would make a profit of four points, less the cost of your call and
+commissions.
+
+As a method of operating in the stock market, we do not recommend the
+buying of puts and calls. Professional speculators may be able to use
+them to advantage sometimes, but for the outsider, who is not in close
+touch with the market, there is nothing about them to recommend.
+
+Here is one point: the people who sell puts and calls fix the terms. If
+the market is irregular, they will set the point of buying or selling
+far away from the market price. These people are shrewd traders and they
+make the terms in their own favor. It is generally said that nearly all
+the buyers of puts and calls lose, and that is our opinion. Therefore,
+we advise you to leave them alone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+STOP LOSS ORDERS
+
+
+A "stop-loss" is an order to your broker to sell you out if the market
+sells down a certain number of points. Many speculators place stop loss
+orders only two points from the market price. The idea is that when the
+market starts to go down it is likely to continue going down, and by
+taking a two-point loss you may save a much greater loss. It also can be
+applied to a short sale, when you give your broker instructions to buy
+in the stock for you if it goes up a certain number of points.
+
+We read so much in the financial news about stop-loss orders or merely
+stop orders, which is the same thing, the average reader is likely to
+get the idea that it is something he must use for his own protection,
+but it is our opinion that it is something that should be used very
+seldom by those who trade along the broad lines recommended by us. If
+your purchases were made in stocks that were very cheap, you should
+continue to hold them in case of a reaction. If you bought them
+outright or on a substantial margin, you are not in danger, and you
+should look upon your loss merely as a paper loss. In the great majority
+of cases, you will be a great deal better off to hold on to your stocks
+than you would be if you had a stop-loss order.
+
+A large number of stop-loss orders is a good thing for the short
+interests. Let us take U. S. Steel again, as an example. Suppose it is
+selling at 94 and it is believed that there are a large number of
+stop-loss orders at 92. The short interests may sell the stock heavily
+and force it down to 92. Then the brokers with stop-loss orders would
+begin to sell; that would force the price down still lower, and the
+short interests could buy in to cover at this lower price.
+
+Therefore, we believe that stop-loss orders are a bad thing and, as a
+rule, do not recommend them.
+
+There is one instance where a stop-loss order can be used to advantage,
+and that is near the top of a bull market. It is impossible to tell when
+the market has reached the top. If you sell out too soon, you may lose a
+profit of several points. Of course, it is better to do that than to
+take a chance of a large loss. In that case, you might instruct your
+broker to place a stop-loss order at two or more points below the
+market, and keep moving it up as the market price moves up. Then when
+the reaction does come, he will sell you out and prevent you from losing
+a large part of your profit. That is about the only instance where we
+recommend a stop-loss order, but we do recommend it to our clients
+sometimes, although seldom.
+
+If the stock you own is selling at more than 100 we would suggest that
+you make the stop loss order at least three points from the market, but
+for stocks selling below 100, a two-point stop-loss order might be used.
+However, the number of points should be decided upon in each particular
+case. In the special instructions to our clients, we tell them when we
+think they can use a stop-loss order to advantage.
+
+
+
+
+_PART FIVE_
+
+CONCLUDING CHAPTERS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+THE DESIRE TO SPECULATE
+
+
+It is said that the desire to speculate is very strong in the American
+people. That is why our country has made greater progress than any other
+country in the world, because progress is the result of speculation. We
+are not referring merely to stock speculations, but to the word in its
+broadest sense. Every new undertaking is a speculation.
+
+An inventor speculates on what he is going to invent. Often such
+speculations result in losses, because many inventors, or
+would-be-inventors, never accomplish very much. They spend their money,
+time, and efforts, and probably live years in poverty, and then if the
+invention is not profitable, they are heavy losers. Many inventors spend
+the best years of their lives in poverty and never succeed. We hear a
+great deal about some of those who do succeed, but very little about
+those who fail--those whose speculations were unsuccessful--except when
+somebody accuses them of being crooks because they solicited money for
+the promotion of their inventions and did not succeed.
+
+It is the same thing with every new business. It is purely a
+speculation. It is a common saying that 95% of commercial undertakings
+fail. We do not know that that statement is correct, but there is no
+question but that the number of failures is very great, which shows the
+great risk in going into a new undertaking. It is far greater than the
+risk involved in stock speculating when it is done in accordance with
+the advice given in this book.
+
+Yet, there would be no progress without speculating of this kind. If
+those entering a new business would make a careful study of the venture
+before entering it, and would exercise greater care and judgment in
+conducting it, the number of failures would be very much less. The same
+thing is true of stock speculating. The failures in stock speculating
+are caused mainly by ignorance and greediness. Many people who would be
+satisfied with a fair return on their money in a business enterprise,
+think they ought to make a 100% profit in a few weeks in stock
+speculation.
+
+There is something about stock speculation that appeals to the
+greediness and pure gambling instincts of people. In the chapter on
+Manipulation, we have told you how stock prices are put up and down.
+Some outsider accidentally buys one of these stocks just before the
+price starts up. In thirty days he has made several hundred per cent
+profit. He does not realize that it was purely accidental as far as he
+was concerned, and he tries to do the same thing again, and loses all of
+his profits and probably all of his capital as well.
+
+A stock gambler (we use the word "gambler" to refer to a man who
+operates ignorantly) is watching a large number of extremely speculative
+stocks and suddenly notices one that takes a big jump in price. Then he
+says to himself, "If I only had bought that stock on a ten-point margin,
+I would have made several hundred per cent profit." He picks out another
+stock that some one tells him is going to do equally as well. He buys as
+much of it as he can and puts up all the money he has as a margin, but
+the price doesn't go up. Perhaps the price goes down and he loses his
+margin; but, it may remain almost stationary for a long period,
+sometimes for a year or more, and during all of this time, this man is
+worrying for fear he will lose his money. If he does not lose his money,
+it is tied up for a long time where he cannot use it to take advantage
+of real opportunities that come his way.
+
+It does not pay to take big risks. That is true in stock speculating the
+same as in any other undertaking. Most speculators are keeping their
+minds all the time on the possibilities of profit and not thinking about
+the possibilities of losing.
+
+If you want to be successful in stock speculating, there is one thing
+you must learn to do, and that is never to think about the big profits
+you might have made if you had bought such and such a stock, because the
+probabilities are you could not have afforded to take the necessary risk
+in buying that stock.
+
+Of course, after it is all over, it may look to you as though the buying
+of that stock was a sure thing, but the buying of such stocks is never a
+sure thing. The risk always exists. There is an old saying, and we
+believe a very true one, that a man who speculates with the idea of
+getting rich quickly loses all his money quickly, but that the man who
+speculates with the idea of making a fair return on his money usually
+gets rich.
+
+In our advice to our clients, we seldom recommend highly speculative
+stocks, because we consider the avoidance of loss more important than
+the making of profits. You may object to that statement, because you
+speculate to make profits, and not for the purpose of avoiding losses.
+Nevertheless, if you are careful in keeping your losses down to a
+minimum, your profits are likely to be very liberal. Any trader who
+trades for any great length of time is likely to make large profits
+sometimes, and yet the majority of them have greater losses than
+profits. It is said that more than 80% of all margin traders lose; but
+we do not consider that an argument against trading on margin, because
+these losses are mostly due to ignorance, greediness, and the taking of
+too great chances.
+
+Do not suppress your desire to speculate. All progress would stop if
+people did not speculate. But do not speculate in stocks nor in anything
+else without any knowledge of what you are doing, and try to use as
+much good judgment and care as possible in all of your transactions. If
+you do not know what to do, get advice from someone who is supposed to
+know and who is not interested in having you buy or sell. Stock
+speculating with safety is possible for those who make the effort to be
+guided by correct principles.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+TWO KINDS OF TRADERS
+
+
+There are two kinds of stock traders. One kind nearly always makes a
+profit, and the other wins sometimes and loses other times, but
+eventually loses all if he does not change his methods. The first kind
+buys stocks on liberal margin or outright and is not worried when the
+market goes against him, because he has good reasons for believing that
+prices eventually will go up. If he does have to take a loss
+occasionally, it is likely to be small compared with his profits. The
+second kind wants to make a big profit quickly, and he buys stocks that
+he thinks are going to make big gains in the near future, but his
+selections are not based upon good judgment.
+
+We might designate these two traders as the careful trader and the
+reckless trader.
+
+The careful trader tries to get good advice on the markets and the
+values of stocks. If the advice appears to him to be conservative, he is
+guided by it; but if the reckless trader gets advice on stocks, he is
+not guided by it if it is of a conservative nature. If he does take
+advice, it is likely to be from one of those unreliable market tipsters
+who is very emphatic in his statements about what the market is going to
+do. The reckless trader lets his greed and desire for large and quick
+profits influence his judgment.
+
+Once in a while one of these reckless traders realizes that he has made
+a great mistake, and he wants to change his attitude. Usually he is
+holding several stocks that show a big loss and he does not know what to
+do with them. He reasons that they are selling so low now they surely
+will sell higher some time. Perhaps his reasoning is good and perhaps it
+is not. The stocks may have no chance of going up for a very long time,
+if at all, but even though they have a good chance to go up later, it is
+better for him to sell them now if he can put the money derived from the
+sale into something else that has a better chance to make a profit.
+
+Our advice is never to hesitate to sell and take a loss if you can put
+the proceeds from the sale into something better rather than leave it in
+the stock in which it is now. It is not so much a question whether or
+not the stock you are holding will go up, as it is whether or not you
+would buy that particular stock if you were just coming into the market
+to make a purchase. Of course there is a loss of commissions when you
+sell a stock and buy something else, and for that reason we sometimes
+recommend holding a stock when we would not recommend buying it.
+
+If you have been a reckless trader in the past, the only thing for you
+to do is to change your methods and try to become a careful trader. It
+is much better to go to the extreme in carefulness and be satisfied with
+very small profits than to take great risks.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+POSSIBILITIES OF PROFIT
+
+
+What are the possibilities of profit in stock speculation? That question
+is frequently asked but it is difficult to answer. James R. Keene is
+quoted as having said: "Many men come to Wall Street to get rich; they
+always go broke. Others come to Wall Street to operate intelligently for
+fair returns; they usually get rich."
+
+While it is true that nearly all stock traders who try to make unusually
+large profits in a very short time in stock trading lose, yet unusual
+profits can be made if you exercise good judgment and have patience.
+
+Roger W. Babson, in his book entitled, "Business Barometers," speaks of
+the possibilities of profit in language that would be considered greatly
+exaggerated if used by a promoter, and yet he is extremely conservative
+in his advice to traders. He advises never to buy on margin, never to
+sell short, and staying out of the market entirely, neither buying or
+selling, for a great part of the time. Here is a quotation from his
+book, which follows a detailed statement of an investment of $2,500 over
+a period of fifty years:
+
+ "The preceding example shows that $2,500 conservatively invested in
+ a few standard stocks about fifty years ago would today amount to
+ over $1,000,000. These are not only strictly investment stocks, but
+ are also stocks which have fluctuated comparatively little in price.
+ This, moreover was possible by giving orders to buy or sell only
+ once in every three or four years.
+
+ "If other stocks which were not dividend payers and which have shown
+ greater fluctuations were purchased, and advantage had been taken of
+ the intermediate fluctuations, the $2,500 would have amounted to
+ much larger figures. By intermediate movements is not meant the
+ weekly movements which the ordinary professional operator notes, but
+ the broader movements extending over many months and possibly a year
+ or more. Nevertheless, these broader intermediate movements should
+ not be noticed by a conservative investor, as it is possible to
+ correctly diagnose only the movements extending over longer periods.
+ Many brokers believe that it is possible to discern also these
+ intermediate movements of six or eight months; and if so, the
+ following results would have been possible.
+
+ "$5,000 invested in 'St. Paul' in 1870 would
+ amount to over $10,000,000 today.
+
+ "$5,000 invested in 'Union Pacific' in 1870
+ would amount to over $15,000,000 today.
+
+ "$5,000 invested in 'Central of New Jersey'
+ would amount to over $30,000,000 today.
+
+ "$5,000 invested in 'Northern Pacific' would
+ amount to over $50,000,000 today.
+
+ "These figures are not based on the supposition that the investor
+ was selling at the top of every rise or buying at the bottom of
+ every decline, but that the transactions were made at average 'high'
+ and average 'low' prices based upon the study of technical
+ conditions."
+
+If such large profits can be made by following Babson's advice, of
+course larger profits can be made by buying on conservative margin and
+by selling short when all the conditions are in favor of it.
+
+While there are possibilities of making extremely large profits without
+taking great risks, by those who are patient and exercise good judgment,
+one should be satisfied with a small profit, if it is the result of
+great care, in an effort to eliminate risk. Of course, you can afford to
+take a much greater risk with a small part of your speculative fund than
+you can with all of it. The less money you have with which to speculate,
+the more careful you should be. Some people cannot afford to speculate
+at all. They should invest their funds in good, safe investments, but
+this book is written for speculators.
+
+Careful stock speculation carried on regularly over a period of years,
+we believe brings larger returns than almost anything else, and in the
+next chapter we tell you something about where to get information to
+guide you.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+MARKET INFORMATION
+
+
+Where do you get your market information? Perhaps most people get it
+from the daily papers. When you look over the financial news of one of
+the leading metropolitan papers and see how much there is of it, you can
+get some idea of the enormous volume of work necessary to get this
+matter ready for the press in a few hours. There is no time to confirm
+reports. It is necessary that many of the articles be written from pure
+imagination, based on rumors.
+
+Weekly and monthly periodicals can be more accurate in their
+information, but even they are not always dependable. Much of the
+financial news published comes from agencies that are not reliable. Read
+what Henry Clews says about them:
+
+ "Principally among these caterers are the financial news agencies
+ and the morning Wall Street news sheet, both specially devoted to
+ the speculative interests that centre at the Stock Exchange. The
+ object of these agencies is a useful one; but the public have a
+ right to expect that when they subscribe for information upon which
+ immense transactions may be undertaken, the utmost caution, scrutiny
+ and fidelity should be exercised in the procurement and publication
+ of the news. Anything that falls short of this is something worse
+ than bad service and bad faith with subscribers; it is dishonest and
+ mischievous. And yet it cannot be denied that much of the so-called
+ news that reaches the public through these instrumentalities must
+ come under this condemnation. The 'points,' the 'puffs,' the alarms
+ and the canards, put out expressly to deceive and mislead, find a
+ wide circulation through these mediums, with an ease which admits of
+ no possible justification. How far these lapses are due to the haste
+ inseparable from the compilation of news of such a character, how
+ far to a lack of proper sifting and caution, how far to less
+ culpable reasons I do not pretend to decide; but this will be
+ admitted by every observer, that the circulation of pseudo news is
+ the frequent cause of incalculable losses. Nor is it alone in the
+ matter of circulating false information that these news venders are
+ at fault. The habit of retailing 'points' in the interest of
+ cliques, the volunteering of advice as to what people should buy and
+ what they should sell, the strong speculative bias that runs through
+ their editorial opinions, these things appear to most people a
+ revolting abuse of the true functions of journalism."
+
+Of course, every trader gets market letters from one or more brokers.
+These are many and varied in character. Some of them are prepared with
+great care and give reliable information, but you must remember that a
+broker's market letter is published for the purpose of getting business,
+and business is created only by the customers' trading. Therefore it is
+to the broker's interest to have his customers make many trades instead
+of a few trades. In his book "Business Barometers," Roger W. Babson
+reproduces a letter written to him by the Manager of the Customers' Room
+of a Stock Exchange House. We consider this letter so important to all
+traders, we are taking the liberty to reproduce it here:
+
+ "Hearing on every hand about the fortunes made in Wall Street, I
+ decided, upon being graduated from college, to devote myself to
+ finance. With this end in view, I secured a position with a
+ first-class New York Stock Exchange House, finally becoming the
+ 'handshaker' for the firm; that is, 'manager' of the customers'
+ room. So I had an exceptional opportunity to size up the stock
+ business. The chief duties of the manager are to meet customers when
+ they visit the office, tell them how the market is acting, the
+ latest news from the news-tickers and the gossip of the Street. But
+ the real duties are to get business for the house. Once a most
+ peculiar man came to the office. He was about forty-five years of
+ age, dressed in a faded cutaway coat, high-water trousers, and an
+ East Side low-crown derby hat. In a high squeaky voice he said that
+ he knew our Milwaukee House and would like to open an account. Of
+ course, we were all smiles, for here was a new 'customer.'
+
+ "One day while in Boston he called us up on the long-distance
+ telephone to make an inquiry about the grain market. One of my
+ assistants, desiring to get a commission out of him, said 'We hear
+ that Southern Pacific is going up; you had better get aboard.' He
+ said 'All right; buy me a hundred at the market.' The stock was
+ bought, but he never saw daylight on his purchase, for the market
+ declined steadily afterward and by the time he got back from Boston
+ it showed a heavy loss. The man who advised its purchase had no
+ special knowledge about the stock, but simply took a chance, knowing
+ that the market had only two ways to go, and it might go up, in
+ which case, besides making twenty-five dollars in commissions for
+ the house, he would be patted on the back for his good judgment. If
+ the market went down, as it did, he would still make twenty-five
+ dollars.
+
+ "I venture to say that 99% of the speculations on the New York Stock
+ Exchange are based on such so-called 'tips'. The manager has got to
+ get the business to keep his position and salary, and this can only
+ be done by 'touting' people into the market. So he draws on the
+ 'dope' sheets of the professional tipsters and his own feelings, and
+ gives positive information to the bleating lamb that the Standard
+ Oil is putting up St. Paul, or that certain influential bankers are
+ 'bulling' Union Pacific. The lamb buys the stock, the broker gets
+ the commission, and then the lamb worries his heart out as he sees
+ his one-thousand-dollar margin jumping around in value. Now it has
+ increased to eleven hundred dollars, then declined to nine hundred
+ and fifty dollars, then nine hundred dollars, eight hundred dollars,
+ then back to eight hundred and fifty dollars and then it takes the
+ 'toboggan' to three hundred dollars upon which the broker calls for
+ margins, and sells the customer out if they are not forthcoming, the
+ whole speculation being based on the manager's 'feeling' that stocks
+ ought to go up.
+
+ "Men of affairs who will not play poker at home, and are shocked at
+ the mention of faro and roulette, which any old-timer will tell you
+ are easier to beat than the stock market, think they are using
+ business judgment when they try to make money on stock market
+ 'tips'. Anyone with common sense can see that a 10% margin has no
+ more chance in an active market than a brush dam in a Johnstown
+ flood. One of the causes for this kind of speculating on a margin
+ is that a broker's commission is only 12-1/2 cents per share and it
+ does not pay to do small-lot business. The one-thousand-dollar
+ margin would only buy ten shares outright and net the broker but
+ $1.25 for buying and $1.25 for selling, whereas that same amount as
+ margin on one hundred shares yields the broker $12.50 each way
+ besides interest on the balance, the net result being that for any
+ given amount of money a speculator on 10% margin multiplies his
+ profits by ten and his losses by ten over those that would occur
+ were he to buy the stock outright and take it home. The broker on
+ his side multiplies his commission by ten over what he would receive
+ were he to do an investment business."
+
+From the above letter you get an idea of the attitude of an employee of
+the average broker's office. He would not be considered loyal to his
+employer if he had a different attitude. When an attitude like this
+influences the broker's market letters, they are not reliable.
+
+You may ask whether there is any reliable information about the market.
+Yes, there is. There are several large organizations that make a study
+of fundamental statistics and statistics of different companies and give
+information to their subscribers based upon this knowledge. We believe
+that is the only kind of information that is worth very much to a
+trader, except the statistical information--the number of shares sold
+and the prices at which they are sold--he gets from his daily or weekly
+papers. Some of the principal organizations of this kind are as follows:
+
+ _Standard Statistics Company, Inc.
+ Babson's Statistical Organization.
+ The Brookmire Economic Service.
+ Harvard Economic Service.
+ Poor's Investment Service.
+ Moody's Investors Service.
+ Richard D. Wyckoff Analytical Staff._
+
+The above are the principal organizations of this kind. Subscriptions to
+their service cost from $85 to $1000 a year. In addition to these there
+are a few other organizations besides our own and individuals giving a
+somewhat similar service, but we know of none that gives such a service
+at as low a price as ours.
+
+You should not confuse the service given by the above organizations with
+that given by many organizations and individuals who attempt to tell you
+what the market is going to do from day to day. In other words, they
+give 'tips' on the market. There are a number who issue daily market
+letters of this kind and charge from $10 to $25 a month for their
+service, but it is a line of service that we do not recommend at all,
+because we consider that you would be taking a very great risk if you
+followed advice of that kind. You might make enormously large profits
+occasionally, but you would also have frequent losses, and when the
+losses did come they might be greater than all the previous profits. We
+want you to understand that that kind of advice is entirely different
+from what we are recommending.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+SUCCESSFUL SPECULATION
+
+
+Success in stock speculation depends upon a few things that are very
+simple.
+
+If you know what to buy, when to buy, and when to sell, and will act in
+accordance with that knowledge, your success is assured. You may think
+it is impossible to know these things, but it is not so difficult as it
+is supposed to be.
+
+Many people buy stocks at the wrong time, and most of those who do buy
+them at the right time, buy the wrong stocks. Right now (early in April,
+1922) is buying time in the stock market, and it is possible that this
+buying time may continue--with some interruptions--for another year or
+two, or even longer.
+
+It is more difficult, however, to tell you WHAT stocks to buy. First of
+all, we advise you against buying stocks that are put up to high prices
+by manipulation. Of course, if you get in one of those stocks right and
+get out right, your profits are very large, but you take a great risk,
+and those who win once or twice by this method are almost sure to lose
+everything sooner or later in an effort to do the same thing again. Your
+chances are not much better than if you gambled at Monte Carlo. The
+chances in buying manipulated stocks are invariably against the
+outsider.
+
+There always is so much publicity about these very active speculative
+stocks that the public is attracted towards them. Newspapers and
+brokers' market letters give altogether too much space to them. Such
+stocks sell far too high, and when the break comes, it brings ruinous
+losses to many people.
+
+On the other hand, by following a conservative course, you really have a
+chance to make large profits with a minimum risk. We are giving below
+sixteen stocks that we recommended in our Advisory Letter of February
+14th, 1922, with the approximate prices of them then and the approximate
+prices on March 31st.[2] In arriving at these prices, we took the
+closing prices on February 13th and on March 31st, and omitted the
+fractions. We recommended only sixteen stocks on that date, and you will
+see that every one of them made substantial gains.
+
+ Approximate Approximate
+ Price Price
+ Stock Feb. 14, 1922 Mar. 31, 1922 Profit
+
+ C. R. I. & P. pfd (6) 75 79 4
+ C. R. I. & P. pfd (7) 88 93 5
+ New York Central 76 88 12
+ Pacific Gas & Electric 64 68 4
+ Consolidated Gas 90 109 19
+ American Telephone & Telegraph 118 121 3
+ General Motors Deb. (6) 70 78 8
+ General Motors Deb. (7) 81 91 10
+ U. S. Steel 87 95 8
+ Dome Mines 23 26 3
+ Laclede Gas 50 63 13
+ Missouri Pacific Pfd 48 54 6
+ C. R. I. & P. Common 33 40 7
+ Am. Smel. & Refining 45 53 8
+ Anaconda 47 51 4
+ Erie Common 10 11 1
+ ---- ---- ---
+ Total 1005 1120 115
+
+Let us suppose you bought ten shares of each of these stocks on February
+14th. They would have cost you $10,050. We recommended 30% margin on the
+first ten, all of which were dividend payers; and 50% margin on the last
+six, because they were more speculative and would have been more
+affected by a reaction in the market. To buy ten shares of each on that
+margin basis would have required a little less than $3,500, but let us
+suppose you put up $3,500. After allowing for buying and selling
+commissions and interest on the balance of $6,550, but crediting you
+with dividends paid, your profit would be about 32% or at the rate of
+about 250% per annum.
+
+Of course, we do not claim that by following the conservative course we
+advise, you always will make such large profits, although you might do
+just as well as that if you took advantage of some of the opportunities
+so frequently to be found in the market; but keen discrimination in what
+you buy always is necessary. However, let us suppose you made annual
+profits of one-fifth the above amount, or 50%, which is easily possible
+without taking the risks that are usually taken in stock speculating. If
+you invested $1000 and made 50% profit per annum, reinvesting your
+profit at the same rate each year for twenty years, you would have more
+than THREE MILLION DOLLARS.
+
+When there is a possibility of making such enormous profits as that by
+following careful methods, surely there is no argument in favor of
+taking the extreme risks that people do take in buying the highly
+speculative stocks, the prices of which are put up for the purpose of
+unloading them on the public. Ten of the stocks we selected in the above
+list were dividend payers, and while the other six were not, they were
+considered worth much more than their market prices, and the list as a
+whole was conceded by conservative people as a safe one to buy.
+
+Very frequently we are able to recommend a list of stocks that we
+believe will yield equally large profits, but the stocks you should buy
+are not the ones that are the most active nor the ones that are
+mentioned most frequently in the financial news and brokers' market
+letters. The stocks that most people buy are usually the very stocks
+that should be left alone. The stocks you should buy are usually the
+ones you hear very little about.
+
+There is only one SAFE way to speculate, and that is to be guided by a
+knowledge of the fundamental conditions of each stock and also of the
+industries they represent. There are several large organizations giving
+information of this kind, and those who have been guided by the
+fundamental statistics issued by them, almost invariably have made money
+in stock speculating. The value of that kind of service has been
+thoroughly demonstrated beyond any question. However, a subscription for
+the service of most of these organizations costs more than the average
+person can afford to pay. Usually it is anywhere from $100 to $1,000 a
+year.
+
+We are giving a service for the purpose of guiding our clients to
+successful speculation for a fee of only $25 a year, $15 for six months,
+or $10 for three months. For this fee we tell you what stocks to buy,
+when to buy, and when to sell. We send you our recommendations at least
+twice a month, but send you additional Advisory Letters and lists
+oftener if conditions make it necessary. You also have the privilege of
+unlimited personal correspondence regarding your market problems. The
+cost of our Service is very small, compared with what other reliable
+organizations charge.
+
+Our Service is based on the principles expounded in this book. We try to
+select stocks having the greatest possibilities of profit with minimum
+risk, and the sample of our Service given in this chapter is proof of
+our success.
+
+
+ NATIONAL BUREAU OF FINANCIAL
+ INFORMATION
+
+ 395 Broadway, New York City
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[2] We did not advise the sale of these stocks on March 31st, but the
+author figured profits to that date because this book was written
+shortly after that. If these stocks had been bought on or about February
+14th, on the margin basis suggested by us, and sold six months later,
+the profit would have been more than 60%, or 120% yearly.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Successful Stock Speculation, by John James Butler
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SUCCESSFUL STOCK SPECULATION ***
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