Growth Investing

Are you an income investor or a growth investor? It’s pretty much been accepted as common knowledge that a stock either offers great dividends, or great potential for price appreciation, but not both. If you look hard enough though — and far enough down the market cap scale… Read More

On Tuesday I told you about one of the easiest ways I know of to make a fortune in stocks. In short, the idea is to take a tiny chunk of your discretionary cash and “swing for the fences.” I’m talking about investing in a few small stocks with the potential to return many times your money. Just one big winner — one home run — could more than make up for losses on your other bets. Here’s what I mean… In just four days, one of the… Read More

On Tuesday I told you about one of the easiest ways I know of to make a fortune in stocks. In short, the idea is to take a tiny chunk of your discretionary cash and “swing for the fences.” I’m talking about investing in a few small stocks with the potential to return many times your money. Just one big winner — one home run — could more than make up for losses on your other bets. Here’s what I mean… In just four days, one of the stocks I featured in my article: “3 Small Stocks That Could Make Investors Rich” is down 3%. Another is down 5%. But the third, BioLase Technology (Nasdaq: BLTI), has already jumped 96%.   Let’s say you had put $1,000 into each of these stocks. With your $3,000 investment you’d be sitting on $3,880 today — an $880 profit in less than a week. And that came from getting only one out of three stock picks right. Not bad. I don’t know of any other way to… Read More

Oil, technology, minerals and banking. Those are the industries that are host to the world’s most richly-valued companies. In fact, with a market cap of more than $250 billion, these companies are larger than the gross domestic product (GDP) of countries such Portugal, Egypt or Chile. Read More

Despite economic challenges, the United States remains as a compelling hotbed of innovation. So many items in everyday use — especially in the field of medicine — got their start here. [In fact, Andy Obermueller recently revealed his favorite game-changing medical picks in the latest issue of Game-Changing Stocks]… Read More

Are you locked and loaded with the financial industry’s so-called “Top Stocks for 2011?” If you are, or even if you’re just mulling them, you may want to look beyond those names — these stocks don’t always pay off no matter how reputable their pickers may be. You don’t even have to look too far back for proof. Last year, Assured Guaranty (NYSE: AGO), Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL), Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ), and Comcast Corp. (Nasdaq: CMCSA) were among the most-suggested picks for 2010. Yes, Apple and Comcast gained 54% and 29%, respectively, but Hewlett-Packard fell 19% last year,… Read More

Are you locked and loaded with the financial industry’s so-called “Top Stocks for 2011?” If you are, or even if you’re just mulling them, you may want to look beyond those names — these stocks don’t always pay off no matter how reputable their pickers may be. You don’t even have to look too far back for proof. Last year, Assured Guaranty (NYSE: AGO), Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL), Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ), and Comcast Corp. (Nasdaq: CMCSA) were among the most-suggested picks for 2010. Yes, Apple and Comcast gained 54% and 29%, respectively, but Hewlett-Packard fell 19% last year, while Assured Guaranty lost 22%. By comparison, the broader market gained 11% during this timeframe. That’s not meant to be a critique of the folks who picked those names in early 2010. It’s difficult to see the future. On the other hand, if the odds of success are 50/50 and the losing stocks lagged as badly as the winning names outpaced the market, what’s the point? So which equities were last year’s actual leaders? And to be clear, we’re not talking about any wild and illiquid (not to mention unlisted) penny stocks either —… Read More

Ten years ago, people would have laughed at you for saying we would soon be walking around with mini-computers tethered to us. Now millions of people won’t step out the door without their beloved BlackBerry or iPhone. If you had put $10,000 into Research… Read More

You can’t blame a number of retailers for waving the white flag. Already battered by tight-fisted consumers throughout the year, they had to contend with a traffic-sapping massive East coast snowstorm as the year came to an end. The predictable result: same-store sales for many retailers were pretty lousy in December. The unpredictable reaction: investors seemed caught off-guard by the results, handing some stocks their biggest pounding in quite some time in Thursday trading. Wet Seal (Nasdaq: WTSLA) and Pacific Sunwear (Nasdaq: PSUN) shed more than 10% on Thursday, while Zumiez (Nasdaq: ZUMZ) and Gap Inc. (NYSE:… Read More

You can’t blame a number of retailers for waving the white flag. Already battered by tight-fisted consumers throughout the year, they had to contend with a traffic-sapping massive East coast snowstorm as the year came to an end. The predictable result: same-store sales for many retailers were pretty lousy in December. The unpredictable reaction: investors seemed caught off-guard by the results, handing some stocks their biggest pounding in quite some time in Thursday trading. Wet Seal (Nasdaq: WTSLA) and Pacific Sunwear (Nasdaq: PSUN) shed more than 10% on Thursday, while Zumiez (Nasdaq: ZUMZ) and Gap Inc. (NYSE: GPS) fell by almost as much. Yet for investors willing to take a broader view than monthly sales trends, these sell-offs have created a compelling entry point for some of these stocks. As a quick recap of an article I wrote six months ago, many retailers have taken advantage of the downturn to tighten up their operations by reducing inventories, throttling back risky growth plans and cutting any fat from overhead. Some retail stocks are already benefiting from this trend, especially the ones that cater to upscale shoppers. But many teen-focused retailers have yet to mark… Read More

It never ceases to amaze me. Each January, my staff and I breath a collective sigh of relief with the start of each new year. It’s not because we’re glad the holidays are over, but rather because it means that the exhaustive research we put into our annual Top 10 issue for my Market Advisor newsletter is finally over. You see, my staff and I put in countless hours, starting months in advance to ensure that the annual Top 10 issue has only the absolute best picks that we think will pummel the market in the coming year. Read More

It never ceases to amaze me. Each January, my staff and I breath a collective sigh of relief with the start of each new year. It’s not because we’re glad the holidays are over, but rather because it means that the exhaustive research we put into our annual Top 10 issue for my Market Advisor newsletter is finally over. You see, my staff and I put in countless hours, starting months in advance to ensure that the annual Top 10 issue has only the absolute best picks that we think will pummel the market in the coming year. After all, we’ve got a lot to live up to. StreetAuthority co-founder Paul Tracy started this tradition for Market Advisor back in December 2002. Incidentally, that inaugural list of recommendations went on to deliver an impressive return of 38.4% in the next 12 months. And every December since, my team and I have presented readers with a fresh batch of our best and brightest ideas for the year ahead.  Aside from the crash of 2008, these picks have outpaced the benchmark S&P 500 every single year — and by no small margin. Read More