Knowledge is not Power
Knowledge + Action = Power
This site is designed to assist you, but that does not mean I will always be right. Even the professionals get it wrong sometimes. As well as my tips, I urge readers to do their own research as you might disagree with my opinions. There is so much information out there, and the quicker you can get it, the quicker you can respond to it.
No one can correctly predict the future, but you can certainly see red flags ahead if you interpret information well.
X (formerly Twitter) - Some great accounts to follow:
Bloomberg: @business
Elon Musk: @elonmusk
Financial Times: @FT
City A.M.: @City AM
David Buik: @truemagic68
This is Money: @thisismoney
Federal Reserve: @Federalreserve
Martin Lewis: @MartinSLewis
Morning Brew: @MorningBrew
Yahoo Finance: @YahooFinance
CNBC: @CNBC
Business Week: @BW
Reuters Business: @ReutersBiz
Market Watch: @MarketWatch
FT Economics: @fteconomics
Money Week: @MoneyWeek
Investors' Chronical: @IChronical
Motley Fool: @TheMotleyFoolUK
Donald J Trump: @realDonal Trump
Investing.com - https://uk.investing.com/
A great tool for data, graphs and setting up watchlists etc.
Yahoo Finance - https://uk.finance.yahoo.com/
Very similar to the above but worth checking for a different take on the same information.
This is Money - https://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/index.html
Very useful for news that relates to your investments.
City AM - https://www.cityam.com/
What is a daily prinited newspaper in the City, is also a great website for constanly being alert to the going ons in the markets, and certainly worth reading daily.
The Motley Fool - https://www.fool.co.uk/
A site that publishes investment articles as well as a data source. My issue with this site it that is can be contradictory with one article saying buy and the next saying sell.
Trading Economics - https://tradingeconomics.com/
For those who love economics, indicators, as well as market data, this is a very useful website.
London Stock Exchange - https://www.londonstockexchange.com/
I strongly suggest that you create an LSE account, where you can set up alerts to notify you when a share price hits a low or high point of your choice. Below is an example.