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| *The Commerce Journal>>>Investing |
Would you, as investor, buy shares in the corporations reputed to have "unscrupulous, amoral" attitude? |
Hypothesis: if you were a day trader/investor/stockbroker and the prediction for Halliburton, KBR, Wal-Mart, AT&T, GE, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Raytheon and Monsanto stock bound to rise percentage 150% will be fulfilled, would you buy the hundreds or thousands of shares or avoid the companies in question due to ethical qualm? Is ethical investing completely irrelevant because it interferes with the express purpose of making profit as a matter of political statement in staunch far right-wing laissez-faire capitalist outlook? Frankly if I knew a stock were going to go up 150% I would invest in it... You can actually make considerably more than a 150% profit on a move like that if you have an options account... Of course situations where you get guaranteed 150% returns don't show up much in real life... Haha (Not laughing at you). I never really looked at it that way. I guess it is good to keep into consideration being ethical companies usually outperform unethical ones over the long-term. But hey, some people think eating meat is the most evil thing in the world. Will that keep you from buying shares of a company like McDonalds? Or some people might think soda is the evil of the world. Would that keep you from buying Coke? Some people might think people wearing shoes is against us as being children of the Earth. Will this keep you from buying Crocs? Just being alive in our society, you're already helping all these companies by purchasing their products, so what does it matter? i don't buy companies that I think are unethical.........I don't buy tobacco companies,,,,,,,,,, What is "ethical" or "amoral" is a completely subjective judgement. I tend to stay away from companies that I think have shady business practices. Like HAL or KBR and their undue influence on getting no bid contracts for the Iraq war. Or WMT and their union busting practices. Stuff like that scares me into thinking there's much more going on that the public might not know about yet, and the greedy executives at those companies might be covering something up. I don't want to invest in the next Enron! I have a "dirty money" idea in my mind and don't invest in companies that are in businesses that I don't like. My list includes handguns, commercial prisons, pawnshops, casinos, distillers. Probably more if I stop to think about it. Companies that profit from the misery or stupidity of others. |
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Yes until 1 pm EST. "The NYSE Trading Floor will close early on Tuesday, July 3rd, 2007; Friday, November 23rd, 2007 (the day after Thanksgiving); and Monday, December 24, 2007. The Tradin... Tech will lead all the way up to 2010. Laggards will be financial and real estate, because of the sub-prime crisis. ...Yes, they pay good dividends. With stock prices not rising like they did a year ago, it is good to have a 3-4% dividend even if the stock does not go up. My local utilities include EXC and GAS. ... I am not sure what you mean by an "options trader" in your question. If you mean anyone who buys or sells options at any time, there are many different things done with options. For ex... well, its kind of inversely proportional. The higher guarantee the lower the return potential-- compared to higher risk investments ,that is. Trust funds are good investments in that the trust ag... NO! When you buy stock you are only liable for your original investment. If the stock becomes worthless you are only out your original investment. If the company is found to be knowingly poisoni... Your bank will determine when your interest is paid. A majority of the times, you will find that it is monthly. I put a source to a very good article explaining interest rates. ...Usually this info is on the company ( PCZ) website. ... |
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