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Stock Traders Almanac 2008 by Jeffrey A. and Yale Hirsch
Stock Traders Almanac 2008 by Jeffrey A. & Yale Hirsch
For more than 40 years, traders and investors have used The Stock Trader’s Almanac as a practical investing tool to foresee market movements with precision and confidence. The 2008 Edition, which is set up in an accessible calendar style, features historical stock market price data, offers daily and monthly reminders, and warns users of seasonal possibilities and risks. The Stock Trader’s Almanac is unmatched as a resource for wise investment due to the volume of information it contains and the reliability of its sources.
“With this unsurpassed almanac of Wall Street statistics, Jeff Hirsch continues his father, Yale Hirschlongstanding ,’s heritage of excellence. For investors who wish to reflect on the past while they make plans for the future, it is a treasure.
Wall Street Week’s late original host, Louis Rukeyser
Investors “will find the Almanac a chock-full source of need-to-know facts and will discover information to be the key to successful investment.”
-Steve Forbes, CEO, Editor-in-Chief, and President of Forbes
“In my bookcase, I have every issue dating back to 1976. Having access to The Stock Trader’s Almanac is essential.
author of Martin Zweig’s Winning on Wall Street
Every investor’s workstation should have a copy of The Stock Trader’s Almanac. It is a priceless resource for learning about trading strategies, investing advice, and Wall Street legend. Reading it is enjoyable too. All year long, I constantly refer to it.
– Myron Kandel, CNN’s first finance editor
Printed on the back cover
2008 Stock Trader’s Almanac
For more than 40 years, traders and investors have used The Stock Trader’s Almanac as a practical investing tool to foresee market movements with precision and confidence. The 2008 Edition, which is set up in an accessible calendar style, features historical stock market price data, offers daily and monthly reminders, and warns users of seasonal possibilities and risks. The Stock Trader’s Almanac is unmatched as a resource for wise investment due to the volume of information it contains and the reliability of its sources.
“With this unsurpassed almanac of Wall Street statistics, Jeff Hirsch continues his father, Yale Hirschlongstanding ,’s heritage of excellence. For investors who wish to reflect on the past while they make plans for the future, it is a treasure.
Wall Street Week’s late original host Louis Rukeyser
Investors “will find the Almanac a chock-full source of need-to-know facts and will discover information to be the key to successful investment.”
—Steve Forbes, CEO, Editor-in-Chief, and President of Forbes
“In my bookcase, I have every issue dating back to 1976. Having access to The Stock Trader’s Almanac is essential.
Author of Martin Zweig’s Winning on Wall Street Marty Zweig
Every investor’s workstation should have a copy of The Stock Trader’s Almanac. It is a priceless resource for learning about trading strategies, investing advice, and Wall Street legend. Reading it is enjoyable too. All year long, I constantly refer to it.
— Myron Kandel, CNN’s first finance editor
Who the Author Is
Yale Hirsch, an Old Tappan, New Jersey native, formed The Hirsch Organization in 1967 after publishing The Stock Trader’s Almanac, a book that gives investors historical data. President of The Hirsch Organization and a Yale alumnus with more than 15 years of experience, Jeffrey A. Hirsch comes from South Nyack, New York. He became president and editor in 2001. He regularly speaks on market cycles and seasonal tendencies on CNBC and CNNfn. He also oversees the weekly Almanac Newsletter for The Hirsch Organization. Vice President of The Hirsch Organization is Judd Taylor Brown (Nyack, NY).
What is Stock?
Stock (also capital stock) is all of the shares into which ownership of a corporation is divided. In American English, the shares are collectively known as “stock”. A single share of the stock represents fractional ownership of the corporation in proportion to the total number of shares. This typically entitles the stockholder to that fraction of the company’s earnings, proceeds from liquidation of assets (after discharge of all senior claims such as secured and unsecured debt), or voting power, often dividing these up in proportion to the amount of money each stockholder has invested. Not all stock is necessarily equal, as certain classes of stock may be issued for example without voting rights, with enhanced voting rights, or with a certain priority to receive profits or liquidation proceeds before or after other classes of shareholders.
Salepage : Stock Traders Almanac 2008 by Jeffrey A. and Yale Hirsch
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