InvestorWords.com has been featured in over 20 books:
Stock Investing for Dummies
by Paul Mladjenovic
One of the most comprehensive sites on the Internet for beginning and
intermediate investors on learning words and phrases unique to the financial
world.
Trade Options Online
by George A. Fontanills
InvestorWords is a consummate educational site with a full investment glossary
containing more than 5,000 terms and 15,000 links between related terms. Need to
know the difference between a “margin account” and a “margin agreement” or a
“death benefit” and a “dead cat bounce”? This is the place. There are charts,
quotes, investor forums, and a comprehensive investor’s guide all laid out in an
understandable, easy-to-use format.
Site Design: 9/10
User-friendliness: 10/10
Real Use: 9/10
Subscription: Free
Day Trade Part-Time
by John Cook
InvestorWords is the biggest, best investing glossary on the Web. It contains
a comprehensive glossary of investment terms. What is a stop? What is a strike
price? What is a straddle? Excellent Resource. Keep this one bookmarked.
Teach Yourself® Investing Online
by Thomas S. Gray
Couldn't find it here? Try InvestorWords (http://wwww.investorwords.com), the most comprehensive glossary on the Web, with over 5,000 definitions and 15,000 links between related terms.
Investing Online for Dummies, Fourth Edition
by Kathleen Sindell
InvestorWords helps take the mystery out of those financial terms.
AOLTV For Dummies
by Brad Hill
Quick, what is a demand curve? I'm sorry, that's not correct. If you'd like
to do better on next week’s quiz, make InvestorWords a habit. A legendary glossary
of financial terms, the site is almost unbelievably comprehensive. Best of all,
the layout makes it easy to find the word you’re looking for.
Bull! 144 Stupid Statements from the Market's Fallen Prophets
by Greg Eckler
InvestorWords.com defines a bubble as “a description of rapidly rising equity
prices, usually in a particular sector, that some investors feel unbounded. The
term is used because like a bubble, the prices will reach a point at which they pop
and collapse.”
So You Want to Be a Financial Planner
by Nancy Langdon Jones
The only "definition" of Financial Planner I could find came from the
InvestorWords website, and looks like this: "Financial Planner:
An investment professional who helps individuals set and achieve their
long-term financial goals, through investments, tax planning, asset allocation,
risk management, retirement planning, and estate planning."
1001 Incredible Things to Do on the Internet
by Ken Leebow
Besides praising InvestorWords.com, Ken Leebow also mentions InvestorGuide.com, the sister site of InvestorWords.com. He says that InvestorGuide.com will make your financial journey very pleasant.
The Teenage Investor : How to Start Early, Invest Often & Build Wealth
by Timothy Olsen
According to InvestorWords.com, a management fee is "A charge paid to mutual funds managers for their services; usually also includes fund administration costs and investor relations."
The Fast Forward MBA Pocket Reference
by Paul A. Argenti
InvestorWords - A remarkably handy resource for all acronyms or terms that suddenly slip your mind.
Worry-Free Investing: A Safe Approach to Achieving Your Lifetime Financial Goals
by Paul Zvi Bodie
www.investorwords.com - this online dictionary can help you understand any of the technical words you may run into while investing or researching. Simply type in the word, and the site provides a definition.