1. select a market,
2. select a stock & trade!
If you think one outcome is more probable than its current value indicates, buy some shares to increase its price.
You can buy either by entering the amount of money you want to invest or the number of shares you want to buy.
You believe a price is too high? Sell some stock! But remember: you can only sell stocks that you already own.
Mint
Mint is an online money manager that is aimed at being “the first free, easy and secure way to manage and save money online.” The service is accessible anywhere, anytime over the web.
Users can get up and running in under five minutes. Mint automatically pulls bank, credit card, mortgage, loan and investment transactions and gives an up-to-date view of your money. Mint’s patent-pending technology categorizes all transactions, showing how much you spend on gas, groceries, restaurants, and more; what your bank and credit card and investment account balances are; how much interest you’re earning/paying, etc. It automatically calculates budgets by spending category and shows you for cash flow each month.
Mint also tries to save users money by suggesting ways to save that are unique to you. The site claims that users are presented with an average of $1,000 in savings opportunities in their first session. The site also alerts you 24/7 about upcoming bills, low balances or unusual spending. For those worried about security, Mint uses the same online banking services providers and physical and encryption security practices as top US banks and registration is anonymous.
market created by
G. Tziralis
and closes on 2009-09-28, or the moment one of the outcomes proves to be true
Remember: Prices equal probabilities. Think a price is too low? Go buy!