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Let the Insiders Hand You an “Unfair Advantage”
Posted on March 5th, 2012 No commentsby Insider Alert Research Team
Everyone in the stock market is looking for the ‘magic signal.’ That single factor that indicates an unequivocal BUY with guaranteed profits ahead.
The honest truth is there is no magic signal. You won’t find one by drawing lines on a chart. You won’t find one with a mathematical formula. And you certainly won’t find one by using the ratings of the big brokerage houses.
The financial markets are probably the most-competitive field of endeavor on the planet. There is a lot of brainpower and financial muscle trying to “win.”
You need to look at the market differently to beat it.
One of the best predictors of wealth creation is ownership by the people in charge. Hardly anyone focuses on ownership.
It’s a simple thing, yet nearly all the financial world’s eyes focus on everything but this. By following the signals of the ‘people in the know,’ you dramatically increase your chances of making a profit.
That’s why we follow insider buying.
Definition of ‘Insider Buying’
The purchase of shares of stock in a corporation by someone who is employed by the company. Insider buying should not be confused with insider trading. Insider trading refers to corporate insiders trading on private information, an activity that is illegal. However, insider buying is based on public information in a situation where insiders believe that their stock is undervalued.
The Inside Track
The fact of the matter is there are always people who know more about a company than you can glean from months of reading financial statements and industry reports. People with more knowledge than the most highly paid and qualified professional analysts. Individuals who are privy to a treasure trove of information that is not even available to the public.
So, who are these guys?
As you may have already guessed, these “enlightened ones” are the corporate officers and board members that head up every single company. And if you like, you can make the exact same moves that they do.
Admittedly, there are all kinds of investment strategies. People put their faith and funds into strategies like “Dogs of the Dow,” seasonal investing, index investing, or simply, buy and hold.
But we have found that insider buying (when properly interpreted) is the most powerful predictor of investment success.
Research shows that sound companies with widespread insider buying tend to outperform the market by a substantial margin. In fact, a comprehensive study at the University of Michigan revealed that stocks with insider buying generally triple the performance of the market over the next six months.
Follow The Leader
Some of the most successful investors of our era attribute part of their success to following this signal.
Legendary fund manager Peter Lynch believes there is no better tipoff to the probable success of a stock. George Soros, one of the most successful hedge fund managers ever, has used the strategy to help earn returns of 36% annually… (at that rate, money doubles every two years).
Warren Buffett, too, is a big believer in what he calls “the biblical standard” (quoting Matthew 6:21: “For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also”).
Buffett’s own Berkshire Hathaway is stacked with insiders who own significant amounts of stock. (At one point, several years ago, Buffett wrote in his annual shareholder letter that every director of Berkshire Hathaway was a member of a family owning at least $4 million in stock. None of them acquired shares with options or grants). By the way… Berkshire Hathaway shares have delivered a compound annual growth rate of 15% since 1990.
And our own Alexander Green, the Investment Director of The Oxford Club, has used this technique with great success in his Insider Alert.
You can do the same in the stock market by limiting yourself only to companies that exhibit one of the chief characteristics of wealth creation: significant ownership by the people in charge.
Following insider buying is one of the investment world’s crown jewels – certainly the purest and simplest way to make money in the stock market. When insiders are piling their money into their own companies it’s because they believe the company is poised for a huge gain in profits.
And usually… they’re dead on.
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Warren Buffett Just Said “Buy!”
Posted on November 22nd, 2011 No commentsWarren Buffett Just Said “Buy!”
by Alexander Green, Investment U Chief Investment Strategist
Monday, November 21, 2011: Issue #1647If you needed heart surgery, you’d try to find the most talented heart surgeon around.
If you were about to be subjected to a full audit by the IRS, you’d hire the most capable tax advisor you could find.
And if you needed investment advice? I hope you’re not one of them, but I know some folks who would read financial blogs by complete unknowns, take hot tips from friends and colleagues, or listen to a sales pitch from someone selling insurance or other financial products.
Big mistake. It makes a lot more sense to listen to the world’s smartest investors, instead. And one of the very best – if not the best – is Berkshire Hathaway Chairman Warren Buffett. (Ten thousand dollars invested in Berkshire Hathaway when Buffett took the helm in 1965 is worth well over $65 million today.)
And thanks to disclosures last week, we now know what Buffett has been doing during the last few months of crazy market activity. He’s been buying.
Specifically, Buffett has plowed $10.7 billion into IBM. He has increased his stake in Wells Fargo from 361.4 million shares to 352.3 million shares. He has boosted his Dollar General stake to 4.5 million shares from 1.5 million. And he has increased his holdings in insurer Torchmark to 4.2 million shares from 2.8 million.
There are a few interesting things to note here. The first is that while most investors have been either running to cash or nervously sitting on their hands lately, Buffett has been actively capitalizing on fresh opportunities. You should be doing the same.
Second, it’s worth mentioning that Buffett has generally avoided technology stocks like IBM. But upon reading not some super-secret briefing but rather the firm’s annual report, he learned that IBM enjoys an entrenched position providing technology services to major businesses.
Buffett likes companies with a “moat” like this and has famously said that his favorite holding period is “forever.” Indeed, he recently told The Washington Post that “IBM fits all my principles … it’s something we’d like to own indefinitely.”
Then there’s the price he paid for IBM. I often get emails from readers who are baffled that I sometimes recommend companies trading at or near their highs. Buffett bought IBM as it hit new highs – even as the broad market was cratering. Indeed, the stock has more than doubled since the depth of the 2008 recession.
Buffett’s response? He says the fact that IBM has doubled doesn’t bother him. Indeed, over the years he could have bought the firm at a tiny fraction of its current price. “What matters is what the company does in the future,” says Buffett.
There are a number of important lessons here:
1. As Buffett often points out, you should be greedy when other investors are fearful.
2. You shouldn’t be reluctant to modify your investment approach a bit (as Buffett has with one of his first significant forays into technology).
3. You shouldn’t fret about how much cheaper a stock was in the past if the business is sound and growing today.
And when it comes to investment advice, history shows it pays to listen to the best of the best. That’s one reason we’ve owned Berkshire Hathaway in our Oxford All-Star Portfolio for well over a decade.
Good investing,
Alexander Green