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  • Let the Insiders Hand You an “Unfair Advantage”

    Posted on March 5th, 2012 admin No comments

    by 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.

     

  • Does Low Volatility Put Your Portfolio At Risk?

    Posted on January 28th, 2012 admin No comments

    Does Low Volatility Put Your Portfolio At Risk?

    by Alexander Green, Investment U Chief Investment Strategist
    Friday, January 27, 2012: Issue #1695

    The stock market gyrated so wildly in 2011 that many investors finally threw in the towel.

    How else can we read the massive equity fund redemptions that occurred in the second half of last year?

    But, apparently, the market has taken its anti-anxiety medication. After last year’s gut-wrenching swings, U.S. stocks have been surprisingly tranquil. For 13 straight days, the Dow has moved up or down less than 100 points.

    This is good news for bullish traders and bad news for those who have been making money trading the VIX. Let me explain…

    The VIX is the ticker symbol for the CBOE Market Volatility Index, a popular measure of volatility in S&P 500 index options. According to The Wall Street Journal, this so-called “fear gauge” has fallen 20% to levels unseen in six months.

    Why? One reason is that the U.S. economy appears to be getting back on its feet. Despite all the pessimism in the Eurozone, U.S. corporations are busy reporting yet another quarter of all-time record profits. (Just how long will mom-and-pop investors ignore this salient point?)

    The Dow is up almost 500 points for the month. Fund companies report that money is flowing back into equities again. Yet the calm makes some investors nervous. I hear many analysts crying out that the market is about to plunge again.

    Deluded, Ignorant, or Both

    Let’s start with the straightforward declaration that anyone who claims to know “what the market is going to do next” is, by definition, someone who is ignorant, deluded, or both. The market will rise or fall next week or next month based on next week’s or next month’s news. Yesterday’s news has already been discounted. (As Legg Mason’s Bill Miller likes to say, “If it’s in the papers, in the price.)

    Moreover, there’s no historical evidence to show that a market pause generally precedes a correction. And the data go back pretty far.

    For example, market analyst Mark Hulbert has loaded the Dow’s daily returns – all the way back to its creation in 1896 – into his statistical software. For each trade date since, he calculated the Dow’s trailing volatility and then looked to see if the stock market performed any different following periods of low volatility than it did at all other times.

    The short answer? Nope. He came up empty. Perhaps that’s the reason for the old Wall Street saw: “Never sell a dull market short.”

    There are two things to conclude here:

    • The hair-raising volatility that made trading (going long) the VIX like taking a tootsie roll from a toddler is over, at least for now…
    • The other important takeaway is that traders and investors have no historical reason to believe that the recent pause portends a market downturn ahead.

    Sure, a spike in oil prices, a hedge fund blow-up or a nasty surprise from across the pond could change that in a nanosecond. But bolts out of the blue are just one of the many short-term hazards of trading and investing.

    For now, the market is taking a breather. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t about to get a second wind.

    Good Investing,

    Alexander Green

  • Will You Fall Prey to “Headline Risk”?

    Posted on September 3rd, 2011 admin No comments

    Will You Fall Prey to “Headline Risk”?

    by Alexander Green, Investment U Chief Wealth Strategist
    Friday, September 2, 2011: Issue #1592

    In the last couple of months, millions of investors have done a 180. It happens all the time. And – just as in the past – they will surely come to regret it.

    The story is as old as equities themselves. When the market is an uptrend, investors focus on opportunity and considerations of risk go out the window. When the market is in the tank, they focus on risk and forget about opportunity.

    This is the very opposite of what you should be doing.

    During my 16-year career as an investment advisor and portfolio manager, I used to show new clients a 200-year chart of the stock market and ask them to identify the best buying opportunities.

    Invariably, they pointed to the periods when the market had cratered.

    I asked if they would be willing to step up and take advantage of such opportunities in the future. Most nodded vigorously and assured me that they would.

    Few actually did.

    Why? Because you can never imagine the news backdrop that will accompany a major stock market decline.

    When the market recovered – as it always does – these same investors kick themselves for not scooping up bargains when stocks were cheap. Yet when the market declined again, they would generally react the very same way.

    Nothing could be simpler than to say, “buy low, sell high.” But pulling the trigger when times are tough isn’t easy.

    How to Avoid Headline Risk

    It’s easy to fall prey to “Headline Risk.” Here’s what I mean…

    On August 9, national newspaper and television headlines shouted that the Dow had plunged 634 points the previous day. That was not an insubstantial drop. It amounted to a 5.5 percent decline in the index.

    Yet few sources reminded investors that the Dow was still up 66 percent (excluding dividends) from the market lows 2 ½ years ago. Or that the drop wasn’t even in the top 50 for largest daily percentage losses.

    Similarly, the media made a big deal about the market sell-off the week of August 1 to 5 representing an evaporation of more than $4 trillion in world equity values. That’s a big number. (Unless you’re a Congressman, apparently.) Yet the total value of all stocks worldwide is approximately $55 trillion. And, for the overwhelming majority of investors, these were temporary paper losses.

    Where was the context? There wasn’t any. The media needs sensationalism to grab viewers’ attention. Newspapers, magazines and television shows aren’t interested in helping you reach your financial goals. They’re interested in helping their marketing departments sell advertising. Sensationalism does just that.

    Understand this and you can inoculate yourself against “Headline Risk.” Scary headlines create strong emotions. But strong emotions are usually the prelude to bad investment decisions.

    Flee common stocks – the greatest wealth creator of all time – and where will you go? Into 10-year Treasuries yielding 2 percent? Into money market accounts paying next to nothing? Into gold which has already risen six-fold in the past 10 years? Into residential real estate which is mired in a sea of foreclosures?

    High quality stocks are still your best bet to meet your long-term financial goals. National headlines are screaming just the opposite, of course, just as they have during every major buying opportunity of the past 75 years.

    The truth is your greatest risk is not market fluctuations. It’s that your money fails to keep up with inflation – or that your investment portfolio kicks the bucket before you do.

    Consider that before extravagant headlines prompt you to do something foolish.

    Good investing,

    Alexander Green