 Hey, what's up YouTube? I'm Zeke and welcome to The Dream Green Show. Today, I'm going to show you seven different ways that you can buy stocks on Ryber Hood. And as you guys know, this channel just hit 5,000 subscribers. So I want to say thank you to all of you new dreamers. This is the channel where dreams come true. So welcome to the dream team. But enough talking, let's get straight into the video. Welcome back. I have my Ryber Hood pull up. As you guys know, Ryber Hood was one of the first apps where they had commission free trading. So a lot of newcomers and a lot of newbies that just started to invest, they didn't really know anything about buying stocks that were going here and they replaced orders in their buy a couple shares here and there. But today I'm going to discuss seven different ways that can benefit you to help you buy stocks on Ryber Hood. So if we take a look at my portfolio, I'm sitting at $17,982. On the day I'm up said 0.77%. I'm up $137.69 cents. And in the aftermarket hours, I'm up $23.23 cents. Before I show you guys the seven different ways to buy stocks on Ryber Hood. I actually have some free stocks to open. If you guys want to get some free stocks yourself, just click the link down in the description. If you sign up, you get a free stock and I get a free stock. So let's open up these free stocks right quick. Here's one right here. Let's scratch through one on the right. And I got a Helix Energy. Took a symbol HLX. This one is worth $3.57. So thank you, new subscriber. All right. So there we go. A free share of HLX was added to my portfolio. So let's scroll down and take a look at the seven different ways I'm going to explain what each one of them does in order to help you become a better trader. So let's go to my favorite stock in my portfolio, AMD. Right now I'm up 73% on AMD, $1,033.60. So I've been buying AMD for a while, so I've bought AMD in many different ways. I'm about to show you guys how. So what you want to do is hit the trade button at the bottom and then click buy. And this is going to take you to your typical market price buy. I'm going to explain exactly what that is in a second, but let's start from the top to bottom. So what you do to get to your different ways to buy stocks on Robinhood is click the shares button in the top right. And here is all seven different ways. We have buying dollars, buying shares, re-encuring investment, limit order, trailing stop order, stop order, and stop limit order. So let's start at the top and work our way down. And I'm going to explain what each one of these means. So here we go and buy in dollars. Buy AMD in dollars and my starting at $1. So if I click on buying dollars, I'm not buying a full share of AMD. I'm investing the dollar amount that I want. So if I wanted to just buy $1 worth of AMD, that would give me a small percentage of a full share of their stock. If I wanted to buy $20 worth of AMD, that would give me a little bit larger, but not a full share of AMD right now. And their prices is around $51 per share. So I want to gain a full share and I have a percentage of a stock. Let me show you an example of what that would look like right quick. If we take a look at Amazon, I have 1.02 shares worth of Amazon. That means I put in a order for I could buy in dollars worth of Amazon and it gave me a percentage of that share. So let's go back to AMD right quick. So that is buy in dollars. So let's back out and go to buy in shares. This is the most typical one. It's going to give you a market order price. What that means is the share of AMZ price right now is at $52 even. If I hit buy, it'll take me to the market price. This is buying shares. That means if I want to buy one share, the market price is $52. But in order for this order to be fulfilled, the price could go up to $52.05 and then I would make a placement to buy that share at market price, no matter where it's at. So sometimes this order would get filled at $52.05, $52.10 or sometimes I might get lucky and it'll get fulfilled at $51.95. So it's in a range of what I can buy AMD stock is. I know five, 10 cents don't mean a lot right here to just buy one share, but there are a couple of people buying 10,000 shares of AMD and it adds up real quick because if the price is at $52, the moment that it goes to $52.10, now you're paying the extra thousand dollars on your order just to buy 10,000 shares of AMD. So that's why you have to be if you're buying a lot of small shares, it might not add up, but if you're doing a very large sum, it's not smart to do a market order when you're buying a large number of shares. So if you click the question mark on the market price, it'll show you some of these bids and the price of the market of what's going on right now. So right now it's looking like I could get AMD for $51.98, so I could get it for a steal, but sometimes if the market open above then we'll place that order to where I could possibly be purchasing a couple of shares at $52.20 or anything like that. So the market order is very random. So let's go ahead and check out the next way that you could buy on Robinhood. Okay, so the next one is highly recommended. I highly recommend the recurring investment for new beginners, for anybody really. It invests in AMD on a recurring schedule. So we click on recurring investment, you have the option to buy AMD every day, buy AMD every week, buy it bi-weekly, or buy it once a month. So if we take a look if you invested $10 every single month, this last option down here into the S&P 500 since May 1st, 1995, just $10 a month since 1995. If you did not invest it, you would have $3,010 in cash, but if you did invest $10 a month since 1995, you have $6,014.56 in cash. If you reinvested just $10 a month into the S&P 500. So that is the power of recurring investment. It's highly recommended for advanced investors and newbie investors. This is just staying consistent is the best way to grow your account, especially if you're just starting off, just stay consistent. So the next way is the limit order by AMD at a maximum price or lower. So this is a much smarter way to invest than just doing a market order. So setting a limit price means that you're not willing to pay a dime more of what you're saying that you're going to pay for. So if the market price is $52 and I want to say, hey, I'm not going to pay a dime more than $52, Robinhood would not put in a buy. I would not buy any share over $52. It would not be $52 at all. If I think it's overvalued and I say, hey, I buy a couple of shares at $51.50 AMD could go up to $53 tomorrow, $54 the next day, but as soon as it drops all the way down to $51.50, it's going to place my order and then I'm going to have those shares worth of AMD. So if we take a look at the diagram, the stock price goes up, it goes down and goes up and it goes down. As soon as hit the price that you typed in, that's when it's going to place that order for your limit buy. And the next one is a little bit more advanced is the trailing stop order. If AMD rises above its lowest price by a specific amount, it triggers a market buy, not a limit order, but a market buy. Okay, so let's take a look at the trailing stop. If we look, take a look, you have a trail percentage. Okay, so if you say, hey, I want to trail it by 3%, there it goes, the neutral stop price is $53.49. So that means if we take a look at the diagram, if the price goes down, up, down and up, it has a trailing stop at 3%. So when it goes down, it's going to trail down, trail down, but when it comes up, it's not going to move back up. It's only going to trail down. And then once it breaks above that 3% stop, it's going to place a market buy. And if you placed it on the way down, then you should get a pretty decent price on the market buy with a trailing stop. If the price of the stock goes up, as soon as you place the trailing stop, then you're going to be buying it at a more expensive price than you would have if you placed a limit order. This is the trailing stop order. The stop price follows our trails, the lowest price of AMD by a trade that you set. A market buy is triggered when AMD rises to the stop price or higher. So that is the trailing stop order. All right, so the next one is the stop order. If AMD rises to a fixed stop price, it triggers a market buy, a market buy. All right, so example of that is right here. You set a price above of where AMD is at right now. Once it hit that price range, then it'll set a market buy. So the stop order, it sets a stop price above the current price of AMD and market order buy is triggered when AMD rises to the stop price or higher. So we hit continue. AMD prices at $52. I say, Hey, it's probably going to go down a little bit. It's probably going to trade sideways for a little bit. But once it breaks above $58, then I know AMD is going to stay continuing on the rise. And then it's going to place a market buy at $58 per share. So that is an example of a stop order on AMD. And the last way that you could buy stocks on rival hood is the stop limit order. Okay, so it's almost the same thing. But so for now, you get to set a limit and not a market order. So we take a look at the stop limit order. It triggers a limit buy order if AMD rises to let's say $58. All right, so let's take a look at the diagram right quick. If AMD shoots up to $58, it's going to trigger our stop limit. And let's say at the limit, we don't want it to place a market order, we place the limit order and say once it hit $58, I think it might bounce back a little bit. I'm not willing to pay above $55 for AMD. So once it hit $58, it's going to set that trigger. And then as soon as it's able to buy AMD at $55, it's going to place that order. Let me show you guys how to do that right quick. So the stop price is $58 continue. I'm not willing to pay a dime over $55. You hit continue. You said it good to counsel for 90 days, you hit continue. How many shares do you want to buy? Five shares. You'll hit review. And then you'll swipe up to set that order. So that is the last way that you could buy shares on Rymanhood. If we take a look, the one that I mostly use by far is the limit order. Because when I see a price at a certain point, that means I want that stock at that certain price. I'm not going to pay a dime over the price that I'm willing to pay for it. So the smartest one to use is limit order. I reinvest all of my money into Rymanhood and then I also invest $200 every week. So the reincurring investment I pick with stocks I want to invest into that week. But if you guys are not sure, you find a great company that you trust in and invest into that company every single week, every single bi-weekly or every single month. So this is a couple of tips and tricks that you guys can use to buy shares on Rymanhood. All right, guys. So there were seven different ways that you could buy stocks on Rymanhood. Hopefully a couple of those tips helped you out. Let me know which ones you did not know about in the comment section down below. If you have not subscribed yet, go ahead, hit that subscribe button and become a part of the dream team. Because I'm going to be doing a 5000 subscriber giveaway very soon and you guys don't want to miss out. But other than that, the link to Rymanhood would be down in the description. But remember, if you sign up, you'll get a free stock and I'll get a free stock. But other than that, I'm Zeke bringing you the dream green show and I'm out. Peace.