Monday, March 08, 2004

Some more stock technical analysis web sites:

Stock picks using technical analysis in the nasdaq stock market
Stock picks using technical analysis to buy tech stocks or sell tech stocks in the nasdaq stock market when the technical indicators point at the trend of the market.. The technical indicators ...

Mystifier's StockWerld.com, stock technical analysis and stock picks for short term traders.
Stock picks, technical analysis, and resources for finding, researching and analyzing high growth stock picks. ... X_DEV INTRO X_DEV Overview How it Works X_DEV Picks X_DEV Board MarketEye CONSULTANT ...

StockCharts.com - Simply the Web's Best Stock Charts
StockCharts.com - Simply the Web's Best Stock Charts ... Bookstore Awards and Acclaim for StockCharts Best Technical Analysis Web Site February 2003 Forbes.com "Best of the Web" August 2003 ...

Compare Prices on Technical Analysis of Stock Trends by at PriceGrabber.com (technical analysis of stock trends)
... All at PriceGrabber.com. Book title: Technical Analysis of Stock Trends . . . . Author: . . . . Number of sellers: 10 . . . . Price range ... technical analysis of stock trends stock trends

Stock market forecast- predicting technical analysis education free trial
Stock market forecast and analysis- A simple way of predicting the ups and downs of the stock market. Is today a good day to buy, sell, or ... More Articles Snippets: STOCK MARKET NEWS:Latest ...

Technical Analysis software and Traded Option Software by Stockguru software
Technical Analysis and Traded Option Software for Stocks,Equities ... or to study books about technical analysis. Stockguru will automatically download the stock quotes you need and you are ...
Welcome to Trading Ideas - Technical Analysis: Trading ideas, swing trading, day trading tools, chart analysis ...
Trading in stocks, daytrader for options and daytrader of indices using innovative daytrading ... Index movers Intra-day Stock recommendations Intra-day technical analysis Sector Watch Support ...

Stock Technical Analysis
... technical analysis and stock screen using tools like fibonacci numbers, volume analysis, candlestick charting and market indicators. Stock technical analysis, RTQ, Charts, LevelII, Stock Screens


Housing assistance payments, aimed at allowing military members to recover a loss on the sale of their home when a base closes or reduces operations, also became tax-free in 2003.

Because much of the pay of those in combat is tax-free — and pay for housing and dependent care assistance also is exempt from tax — those with children and working spouses are likely to qualify for the earned income tax credit, a lucrative break generally reserved for the working poor. This break can provide a refund check, even to those who paid no income tax.

• Home sale rules were altered to accommodate military members.

Homeowners can exclude up to $250,000 in profit per person, or $500,000 per couple, in gains on the sale of a personal residence from tax. However, most homeowners must meet a residency test to claim the exclusion. This residency test requires that they live in the home for at least two of the five years before the sale.

Members of the military who are called to "qualified extended duty" — that's duty more than 50 miles from home — won an exception to this residency rule because Congress recognized that military service sometimes demands a nomadic lifestyle.

This rule allows military members to suspend time while in qualified active service.

For example, say that an enlisted man in the Air Force bought a house in 1994 and lived there for three years before being sent on active duty overseas for six years.

If he sold his house in 2003, he normally wouldn't meet the residency test. However, because he was engaged in "qualified extended duty" he can elect to simply not count the six years he was away, which qualifies him for the exclusion. Up to $250,000 of his home sale profit is tax-free if he's single. Up to $500,000 is tax-free if he's married.

This exception was written into the law in 2003, but it applies retroactively to all home sales by military men and women dating to 1997. Those who paid tax on home sale profits during that time have until November 2004 to file a claim for a refund.

• Those serving in a combat zone, deployed in a "contingency operation" or hospitalized outside the United States because of an injury received while serving get additional time to file. The due date for these returns is extended to 180 days after the completion of combat service or discharge from the hospital. No interest or penalties will be assessed for this delay. (When filing these returns, the taxpayer should write "Combat Zone" in red across the top, to flag the fact that there should be no penalties assessed for late filing.)

• Active duty personnel who are outside the United States but not in a combat zone also have more time to file. Instead of April 15, their returns are due June 15. However, as with other taxpayers, a filing extension is not an extension of time to pay, the IRS cautions. Service members who owe but take extra time to pay will be on the hook for interest on any unpaid tax owed. The current interest rate is 4%.

• Members of the National Guard and reserves can now take a deduction for the cost of service-related travel more than 100 miles from home. The deduction is limited to the federal per diem rate, which varies by location. It is, however, available regardless of whether the service member itemizes deductions.

More details on the Military Family Tax Relief Act and other tax laws that affect members of the armed forces can be found in Publication 3, which can be downloaded at http://www.irs.gov .

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