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  2. What happens to your investment accounts after you die? - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/what-happens-to-investment...

    However, if I hold onto the account and sell the stock at $150 per share, I will have to pay capital gains taxes on the $50 I made by holding onto the stock. — Kelsey Simasko Attorney at Simasko Law

  3. Stepped-up basis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stepped-up_basis

    However, in the case of a beneficiary who receives an asset from a benefactor after the benefactor's death, the beneficiary's basis in the asset is "stepped up" to the FMV on the date of the death. For example: If, on the date of a taxpayer's death, he had a basis of $35,000 in the house and the house's FMV was $100,000, and the taxpayer's ...

  4. Read Stock Charts Like a Pro: The ‘Death Cross’ and Other ...

    www.aol.com/news/read-stock-charts-pro-death...

    Obviously, if everything you needed to understand when to buy or sell a stock could be boiled down to a single article, everyone would be rich. The truth is that there's no simple answer when it ...

  5. Black Monday (1987) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Monday_(1987)

    Foreign investors participated, attracted by New Zealand's relatively high interest rates. From late 1984 until Black Monday, commercial property prices and commercial construction rose sharply, while share prices in the stock market tripled. [73] New Zealand's stock market fell nearly 15 percent on the first day. [75]

  6. Market data - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_data

    The market data for a particular instrument would include the identifier of the instrument and where it was traded such as the ticker symbol and exchange code plus the latest bid and ask price and the time of the last trade. It may also include other information such as volume traded, bid, and offer sizes and static data about the financial ...

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  8. Jesse Livermore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesse_Livermore

    In 1892, at the age of 15, Livermore made his first trade when he bet on five shares of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad for $5 [7] [8] at a bucket shop, a type of establishment that did not buy or sell the stock, but instead took bets on whether a particular stock's prices would rise or fall [1] — essentially, a gambling parlor ...

  9. The stock market's recent death cross isn't as scary as its ...

    www.aol.com/news/stock-markets-recent-death...

    "After 48 occurrences since 1929, the average return on a three-, six-, and 12-month timeframe were all positive for the S&P 500," Fundstrat said.