What Are You Buying When You Invest in the Stock Market?

In the stock market, in the markets, if you buy a piece, you are taking an ownership interest in the pie. Now, this might sound simple in pie terms, but there are trading courses Australia way (or wherever you might be based) that you can take to learn more about everything trading. Yes, it’s the share, and the pie being cut is capital and debt, and it’s often leverage, but the pie itself is actually the capital, the equity and the stock market. It might seem like buying a position when you place a bet on a new casino and anticipate the outcome of the spin.

If you look at the pie, like you always do, as being the pie of capital, interest rates, profits, and gains, the pie is actually the market. It’s not even remotely in the nature of a pie, because it is growing to a point where it is actually getting less and less of the pie as you take more and more ownership interest.

The pie is a bigger pie, it’s less of a pie, and it’s no longer the stock market that is the interest rate on capital and debt. It is actually the stock market that is the pie, and the pie actually happens to be the pie for capital, profit, and gain. The pie is the market, the market is the interest rate on capital, and the market is the pie for the stock market.

No, you don’t have to buy the pie, but you need to make sure that you are getting a slice of the pie. Because if you’re getting one piece of the pie, you’re not getting enough to stay ahead of the game. In fact, you are probably even reducing the slice of the pie you’re getting. It’s like buying the cheapest apples in the market, but you are not buying the best apples.

The market is not the best apples. The market is the cheap apples, and you’re buying cheap apples. It is a cheap slice of the apple pie. The market is the cheap slice of the pie. You get the best pie, the market is the cheap slice of the pie. It’s really not that complicated.

This all comes down to the notion of buying an interest in the pie, and the fact is you have to make sure that the pie gets bigger, because that’s going to mean paying less interest and less profit and less gain to own a slice of the pie.

Of course, you can get more interest on capital than the market can pay, and you can get more profit than the market can pay, but if the market is just taking the small slice, you aren’t going to have enough of the pie to stay ahead of the game. That’s where diversification comes in.

This is really what you are trying to buy into, this is really the stuff that helps you buy into this bigger pie, this bigger pie that doesn’t get sliced smaller, and that is really the big thing. The big thing is that it takes this pie, and it takes this interest in the pie, and it takes this ownership interest, and you buy it not by buying a slice of the pie, but by buying a larger piece of the pie. If you do that, you are buying into that bigger pie that looks like it’s actually getting bigger, and that is where the profit, the interest, and the profit in the pie all happen to flow. The more you own of the pie, the more you make of the pie, and that’s the wonderful reward for you as a stock market investor. It’s the privilege of ownership. That’s why you buy in the market. That’s why you buy in the pie. That’s what you get in the market and that’s what you get in the pie.

Author: Oliver Curtis

Hi there. I’m Oliver. I’m just a young boy from the outskirts of… Okay, that’s a lie, I’m not a young boy anymore, although I certainly feel that way at heart.