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Old 08-15-2005, 02:40 AM
squiffy squiffy is offline
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Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 816
Default Re: WSJ.com/Barron\'s worth $99/year?

I subscribe to the hardcopy WSJ. Then you get the online for free.

I cannot figure out if the online is identical to the hardcopy. I find it more difficult to read the online version. For some reason, it seems easier for me to just flip real pages.

But, assuming the websites have the complete hardcopy editions, $99 for both Baron's and WSJ sounds like a great deal, and is also great for the environment. You don't have to pay for paper, printing, mailing, and delivery.

If you want to invest successfully, I think it's absolutely essential to follow what is going on with the economy, the markets, stocks, etc. If you spend $99 a year, the knowledge you gain may be worth many more times that.

Assuming 20 work days a month, 12 months in a year.

That's only about 41 cents per day for access to two outstanding financial publications.

You can read lots of Fortune and Businessweek online. And you can watch CNBC business news. If you work during the day, you can tape it or if you have TIVO even better.

If you have a long commute, you can get satellite radio and CNBC is one of the channels. But I hate listening to so many of the stupid commercials.

Wish I could get CNBC on my computer at work. But we have some kind of firewall so I cannot download everything I want to. And many websites are blocked.

I cannot access this website anymore. They have some kind of smart system that figures out what you are accessing and blocks it if there are too many adds or if it finds the site is associated with gambling.

I cannot get motley fool anymore. But ironically you can still get ebay, amazon, and other things. I would rather have fool so I can read their articles.

I guess, given how valuable I think WSJ is, I would put it this way, if you are serious about investing, how can you NOT afford to be reading them on a regular basis.

I guess the alternative, if you want to save money, is to read them at the library. But that takes time. And time is money too.
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