heibel@esseye.UUCP (Russ Heibel) (04/17/91)
Does anyone out there know of a dial-up source for obtaining daily stock, bond, mutual fund, and/or stock option prices? I'm looking for something that can be used as an alternate source for looking at stock prices for those of us that don't get the Wall Street Journal or for those who don't get the Wall Street Journal delivered until late afternoon.... Thanks Russ!!!
PZ2@psuvm.psu.edu (David L. Phillips) (04/18/91)
In response to Russ' question about dial-up stock market info: Both CompuServe and GEnie have sections that provide stock market quotations an and other information. You can also - at great expense - subscribe directly to Dow Jones.
kristoff@genbank.bio.net (David Kristofferson) (04/19/91)
Supposedly Prodigy does too and has some kind of on-line brokerage. Having never used this I'd like to hear how that service compares to something like Charles Schwab. How do commission fees compare and what about the range of services?
nataraj@celebrity.Eng.Sun.COM (Nataraj) (04/19/91)
In article <91108.082025PZ2@psuvm.psu.edu>, PZ2@psuvm.psu.edu (David L. Phillips) writes: |> In response to Russ' question about dial-up stock market info: |> |> Both CompuServe and GEnie have sections that provide stock market quotations an |> and other information. You can also - at great expense - subscribe directly to |> Dow Jones. Being new to the PC world, i would like to know if any of the major vendors like Compuserve, GEnie or prodigy offer full stock quotes which i can download at the end of the day . I am talking all stocks trading not the important 200 or 300. Do they also provide a way to look at news on companies ?? I am talking little bit old news. I am aware that to get news instantanesously, ishould subscribe to the DJ News service. nataraj/.
wayne@teemc.UUCP (Michael R. Wayne) (04/19/91)
In article <91108.082025PZ2@psuvm.psu.edu> PZ2@psuvm.psu.edu (David L. Phillips) writes: >In response to Russ' question about dial-up stock market info: > >Both CompuServe and GEnie have sections that provide stock market quotations an >and other information. You can also - at great expense - subscribe directly to >Dow Jones. But if you open an account w/ Fidelity, you can use their Investor's Express (runs on top of Dow Jones) for a flat $12/month. No per minute fees, no access charges. Also, Dow Jones has a $25/month flat fee for people who want current and historical quotes but only from 21:00-07:00 (or some such). /\/\ \/\/ -- Michael R. Wayne --- TMC & Associates --- wayne@teemc.tmc.mi.org Operator of the only 240 Horsepower UNIX machine in Michigan