Saturday, May 1, 2010

Top Stocks For 2011

Looking for a shopping list of new top stock ideas for 2011? Each year for 27 years, TheStockAdvisors.com has turned to the nation's most respected and well-known newsletter advisors and asked them for their single favorite stock or fund ideas for the coming 12 months.
 
With 80 advisors participating in this year's survey, there's something for every type of investor, from high quality blue chips to speculative home runs. 
 
While past performance is never a guarantee of future results, we would note that the stocks chosen by the 75 advisors participating in last year's report outperformed the general market by nearly 80%. 
 
Specifically, the 75 stocks and funds selected for our 2009 Top Picks report recorded an average year-to-date gain of 34%, versus a 19% gain by the broad market over the same period.
 
Gainer's Today tracks stock picks and ranks the accuracy of 120 investment research firms. As of 12/23/09, our 2009 Top Picks report was ranked #1 for the past year. Kudos to all the participating advisors.
 
The stocks and funds chosen for this report are the best ideas of the nation's top advisors at this current time. However, company fundamentals and market conditions change, and a stock that is considered a strong buy today can become a sell based on future events.
 
As always, we caution all investors to only use these ideas as a starting place for your own research and only buy stocks that meet you personal investing criteria, risk parameters, and investment time horizon.
 
To keep updated on the ongoing favorite stocks of the leading advisors, please visit us daily at thestockadvisors.com, a free website that brings you the very best investment ideas of the nation's very best financial experts. You can also sign up for our Daily Digest and have each day's new stock ideas sent directly to your email.
 
We wish you the best of success for your investing in 2011!
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.1 From Kelley Wright : (Altria )

"My definition of safe is to avoid cyclical companies that can be derailed by unexpected economic events or a sudden change in Fed policy," says dividend expert Kelley Wright. 
 
In Investment Quality Trends, he suggests, "Additional requirements are a long history of increased earnings and dividends, broad institutional sponsorship, and ample outstanding shares for trading liquidity. One such company that fits that bill is Altria Group (NYSE: MO), my top pick for 2011.
 
"As attention turns toward 2011, the annual dilemma of 'what do I do now' moves front and center. With the Fed ostensibly sticking to its 'for an extended perio'" mantra, the conventional wisdom is that the recession is behind us and all will remain well as long as interest rates remain low and liquidity plentiful.
 
"While the recession may indeed be over, under the technical definition anyway, and it is investment suicide to try and fight the Fed, the ever-ubiquitous Wall of Worry is steep enough to approach the new investment year with caution. In that vein, my instincts and experience are to play it safe.
 
"My definition of safe is to avoid cyclical companies that can be derailed by unexpected economic events or a sudden change in Fed policy.
 
"Altria Group is a holding company whose operating companies include Philip Morris USA, U.S. Smokeless Tobacco Company, John Middleton and Ste. Michelle Wine Estates. The company's brand portfolio consists of successful and well-known brand names such as Marlboro, Copenhagen, and Skoal.
 
"Trailing twelve months earnings for MO are $1.53 per share, and, based on the recent price of $19.15 per share, the P/E is in the mid-12 range. The cash dividend of $1.36 per share provides an outstanding dividend-yield of 7.10%.
 
"With a payout ratio of about 88% ($1.36 of the $1.58 ttm earnings are paid out in dividends), some investors who have seen some dividends slashed or eliminated over the past year may balk at such a high dividend-yield.
 
"The key to a healthy dividend though is free cash flow and a high return-on-equity (ROE). Altria Group converts about 16% of its revenue into free cash and its ROE is well above average.
 
"The IQ Trends Profile of Value for Altria Group is dividend-yield extremes of 7.0% and 4.0% respectively. Accordingly, whenever the dividend-yield for Altria Group is within 10% of 7.0%, the stock represents good historic value and is appropriate to purchase.
 
"When the dividend-yield declines to 4.0% ($34 based on the current dividend), the top stock has reached its historically repetitive area of overvalue and profits should be harvested."
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.2 From: Melvin Pasternak : Amdocs (NYSE: DOX)

"Fundamentally, Amdocs (NYSE: DOX) has a bargain basement valuation based on its price to growth," says Melvin Pasternak, in selected the stock as his top pick for 2011.
 
In his Trade of the Week, he adds, "Technically, on a two year weekly chart the stock has broken out to the upside. Amdocs is the talk of the town -- and well it should be. Amdocs keeps phone companies and their customers talking to each other in more than 60 countries around the world.
 
"Its software helps telecom giants like AT&T Mobility and Sprint-Nextel with customer relationship management (CRM), billing, and sales.
 
"A couple of months ago, DOX broke out of a major downtrend line drawn from mid-2007 at the $40 dollar level. When combined with an uptrend line constructed from the 2009 bottom near $15, it can be seen that DOX has broken out of a large ascending triangle.
 
"The upleg of the ascending triangle is the uptrend line drawn from the January 2009 low.  DOX is now in a strong uptrend, well above the 30-week moving average which is sloping steadily higher. 
 
"Even during the recent consolidation the shares have stayed mainly above the 10 week moving average, another sign of technical strength.  The consolidation has also relieved the stock's short-term overbought condition in RSI.
 
"According to the 'measuring principle,' DOX should have a minimum price target of $33 -- more than 20% above current trading levels.  Often top stocks in strong uptrends exceed their minimum targets.
 
"In 2009, DOX earned $1.57 a share.  In 2011, the 15 analysts who follow the stock project eps. Of $2.20 a share, a 40% increase.
 
"The current trailing P/E of the stock is 17.  The PEG ratio takes the Price Earnings Ratio and divides it by the earnings growth rate. 
 
"If you calculate a one-year 'PEG' ratio, the shares are a great value--the PEG ratio is .425 (17/40).  Anything below one typically represents good value and DOX is trading at less half that amount.
 
"Analysts who follow the stock have caught on. In December 4, Standpoint Research raised their price target from $30 to $34. A number of other analysts think DOX can trade back to the $40's by 2011. In the New Year, I believe DOX has a good chance to break above $28 resistance and move toward $34. My target is $33.95."
 
 
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.3 From J. Royden Ward: Amedysis (AMED)

J. Royden Ward is the editor of Cabot Benjamin Graham Value Letter, a newsletter that -- as its name suggests -- focuses on stocks that meet the criteria of legendary value investor Ben Graham.
 
For his top pick for 2011, he the advisor looks to Amedisys (NASDAQ: AMED), a provider of home health care and hospice services.
 
"Despite government e?orts, health care costs continue to rise to unacceptable levels in the U.S. But there are alternatives that o?er dependable care at substantially less cost to patients and to taxpayers, and I believe one option, home health care, will become an important alternative to lengthy hospital and nursing home stays. 
 
"My top stock for 2011 is the largest company in the home health care sector whose impeccable reputation for delivering reliable care is providing the company with exciting new opportunities for exceptional growth.
 
"Amedisys is a leading provider of home health care and hospice services. The company typically provides skilled nurses or nurse assistants who coordinate health care with the patient's family and physician.
 
"The company operates more than 500 Medicare-certified home health agencies and 50 hospice agencies in 37 U.S. states and Puerto Rico. "The company's home health care services provide assistance to patients recovering improving patients' quality of life through physical, speech or other therapy.
 
"For example, the company educates patients on how to avoid falls in the home, which are the leading causes of patients re-entering hospitals. Approximately 87% of Amedisys' home health care services are covered by Medicare. 
 
"Amedisys also o?ers hospice home care services for terminally ill patients. Hospice services are designed to provide basic care and comfort to patients and support to family members.
 
"Compared to hospitals and nursing homes, Amedisys can save patients, families and the health care system huge amounts of money. Health care delivered in patients' homes is far less expensive than health services delivered in hospitals and nursing homes.
 
"The home health care industry is fragmented with 9,200 home health care agencies and 3,000 hospice agencies operating in the U.S. Amedisys is actively acquiring smaller home health care agencies that fit the company's acquisition plans, as well as opening their own new agencies at a rapid pace. 
 
"The growth opportunities in the home health care industry are obvious. The growing numbers of elderly, and the need for less expensive health care including home health care, will likely create industry growth of 15 to 20% during the next several years and decades. 
 
"Revenues climbed 39% and EPS soared 57% during the 12 months ended 9/30/09. Analysts are forecasting 14% sales growth and 11% EPS growth for the next 12 months, but we believe Amedisys will produce sales and earnings growth exceeding 20%.
 
"We base our growth projections on the company's aggressive acquisition program along with its ability to open new agencies e?ciently and profitably. AMED shares are clearly undervalued at 8.3 times our EPS estimate for the next 12-month period."
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.4 From Vivian Lewis: BCE (BCE)

Given her concerns about overall market valuaton, global expert Vivian Lewis is selecting her top pick from among stocks she calls "dividend payers and fallen angels".
 
In her Global Investing newsletter, she explains, "I consider BCE (NYSE: BCE), with its 6% yield, a great buy." Here's her review of the Canada-based telecom company.
 
"I'm worried about the speculative coloration of the rise in stock prices globally since the bottom in March 2009. I do not think the markets will continue rising as they have since then, in a straight line to the upper right-hand corner of the page.
 
"I expect a serious correction because the global economy is still mired in di?culty. There will be more bad news taking share prices down in the coming year.
 
"To find stocks with ballast for the sell-o? I expect in 2011, I am focusing on dividend payers and fallen angels. Fallen angels have risen less sharply than companies without damaged reputations, and pay out more.
 
"A year after crash of BCE, the Canada telco supposed to have been taken private by Ontario Teachers Pension Plan and US partners, who pulled out, the former Bell Canada is a good buy.
 
"The deal collapsed in the financial crisis. BCE CEO George Cope valiantly then cut 2500 jobs; did a wireless deal with Telus and bought out the remaining half of Virgin Mobile Canada; bought electronics store chain The Source; and boosted BCE dividends.
 
"BCE stock has risen 30% this year in loonies (C$s) and nearly 50% in US dollars. (It trades as BCE both in Toronto and on the NYSE.) But it is still a third cheaper than the former deal price target. That reflects investors' bad memories. Most analysts rate it neutral despite their expecting it to rise to $29.50.
 
"Further hurting BCE was the decision on Dec. 11 by Canadian regulators to allow Globalive to o?er cellular phone service throughout Canada, reversing an earlier bar on the company part-owned by Orascom of Egypt.
 
"While the 2009 Xmas telephone market will not see many o?ers from Globalive, next year there will be cellphone price cuts. This could hurt BCE's gross margins, which are at an astonishing 74%.
 
"However, other telcos without BCE's land-line and multiple cellular options will be hurt more. I consider the stock a great buy yielding 6% with a probability the dividend will be raised."
 
 
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.5 From Leo Fasciocco: Blue Coat (BCSI)

"My pick for 2011 is Blue Coat Systems (NASDAQ: BCSI), a company that provides web security," says Leo Fasciocco, a leading technical analyst known for his focus on stocks that are breaking out of basing patterns.
 
In his The Ticker Tape Digest, he explains, "We consider the stock an excellent intermediate-term play because of its strong profit outlook. Blue Coat, based in Sunnyvale, Ca., provides software and services for networking, with annual sales of $444 million. 
 
"Its products enable its end user customers to secure their Internet gateways and remote computer systems by providing protection from malicious code, or malware and objectionable content.
 
""The company is benefiting from an expansion of its products. In 2008, BCSI acquired Packeteer, a provider of WAN tra?c prioritization technologies. It most recently came out with an expansion of its Webpulse cloud service for Arabic web content.
 
"Looking out to fiscal 2011 ending in April, the Street projects a 44% jump  in net to $1.30 cents a share from the 90 cents anticipated for fiscal 2011.
 
"The top stock has been trending higher the past few months recovering from the bear market. The  long-term chart for BCSI shows the stock with a cyclical tendency. It is now in the up trend part of its cycle. We see that as favorable for bulls at this time with the stock now trending higher.
 
"In our view, BCSI is an outstanding stock poised to breakout. It is holding in its base and poised to show massive earnings gains.We are targeting BCSI for a move to 36 after a breakout. A protective stop can be placed near 24 after a breakout."
 
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.6 From Dow Theory: BMC Software (BMC)

 Dow Theory Forecasts is one of the most respected and venerable players in the financial newsletter community; the service has been published continuously for well over 5 decades.
 
Editor Richard Moroney looks to BMC Software (NYSE: BMC) as his top pick for 2011. He explains, "BMC develops products that run corporate data centers, which house critical computer systems.
 
"BMC's long-term contracts sustained stable profits during the downturn. Over the next 12 months, results should benefit as clients resume spending on technology. "Consensus estimates project per-share profits will advance 15% in fiscal 2011 ending March - and grow 14% annually over the next five years.
 
"Recent acquisitions have bolstered BMC's promising segment for automating datacenter activities. Fortune 500 companies comprise more than 85% of BMC's client list, and such companies are unlikely to abandon cost-cutting initiatives once the environment improves.
 
"Reflecting this optimism and better-than-expected results for the September quarter, BMC in October raised profit guidance for fiscal 2011. With a trailing price/earnings ratio of 15, BMC trades at a discount to its three-year average P/E of 22 and five-year average of 27.
 
"If the P/E returned to the three-year average and BMC matched consensus profit estimates, the top stock would trade at $58 next year.
 
"While that target seems a stretch, BMC seems fully capable of reaching $45 to $50. BMC is a Focus List Buy and a Long-Term Buy."
 
 
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.7 From Nicholas Vardy: Brazil Small Cap (BRF)

"The global bull market is back in Brazil," says international investing expert Nicholas Vardy.
 
In The Global Bull Market Alert, he explains, "Global markets recovered in the beginning of November; at that time, we looked to one of the hottest markets on the planet, Brazil, through the Market Vectors Brazil Small-Cap ETF (NYSE: BRF). The ETF remains our top pick for 2011. 
 
"Brazil, as its place on the cover of Economist magazine recently confirmed, was the flavor of the month in emerging markets. Brazil had recently won the right to host the Olympics in 2016, raising its profile much like the Beijing Olympics did for China. Investors were pouring in.
 
"Its currency, the real, gained 50% against the U.S. dollar since the prior December, with the economy firing on all cylinders, posting an 8%-10% growth in Q3. My forecast has been that, overall, Brazil's economy will grow by 5% in 2011.
 
"In December, the Inter-American Development Bank approved a $3-billion conditional credit line with Brazilian small and mid-sized businesses on Thursday.
 
Around 75% of the new jobs created in Brazil this year were created by small and mid- sized businesses.
 
"With the market already up 76.9% in local currency terms at the time, betting on Brazil was clearly a momentum play. That's also why I recommended a small cap ETF, which had outperformed its large cap ETF counterpart this year.
 
"Looking ahead, Brazil's biggest enemy is likely to be its own hubris -- getting too cocky for its own good. But before it does, I'm betting the market has further to go. After all, it went up almost 6-fold in dollar terms during its last bull run starting in 2003.
 
"This is the reasoning behind my recommendation for Market Vectors Brazil Small- Cap ETF. For a potentially bigger upside, I recommended the April $45 call options. For full disclosure, this is a position that I hold on behalf of my clients at Global Guru Capital."
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.8 From Karim Rahemtulla: Electronics Arts (ERTS)

"I've been tracking the companies I feel are best positioned to sustain the market's upward momentum into next year," says Karim Rahemtulla.
 
The options expert with Investment U suggests, "One such company is Electronic Arts (NASDAQ:ERTS) – a major player in the video game industry. ERTS is one of the largest creators and sellers of multi-platform content in the industry and it finally o?ered some guidance for the year ahead. 
 
"Expectations for earnings for 2011 are 87 cents per share with revenues of $4.26 billion. EA came out and said that revenues should fall between 4.2 and $4.4 billion with earnings ranging from $0.70 to $1. 
 
"That type of wide range never sits well with Wall Street, which likes much narrower ranges and more specific guidance. 
 
"There are three reasons to buy EA now: 
 
"First, share prices do not usually wait for numbers to come through before they move higher. They move higher in anticipation of better earnings ahead. This should happen after the company reports numbers for the first and second quarter of next year.
 
Second, if this economy and market are really recovering, one of the prime beneficiaries will be a company like EA, which is solidly in the consumer discretionary space. 
 
"Third, EA has been the subject of many takeover rumors, specifically by the likes of Microsoft. Currently the shares are trading at $16.50 per share, down from highs of more than $50 just over a year ago. It is flush with cash, very little debt and a dominant market position. 
 
"While a takeover would be the least likely outcome, there still is that chance and in the current climate of mergers and acquisitions, I wouldn't be surprised to see a bid made for EA. 
 
"While shares themselves look to be a good buy, I prefer to play this one using the Electronic Arts January 2012 $20 LEAPs."
 
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.9 From Martin Hutchinson: Eldorado Gold (EGO)

"While my primary focus is on the international financial markets, it's the glint of gold that has caught my eye for 2011," says Martin Hutchison.
 
 The contributing editor to both Money Map Report and Money Morning, explains, "Gold – or mining companies like Eldorado Gold (NYSE: EGO) – an especially compelling investment for 2011.
 
"There hasn't really been a commodity bubble like the current one since the late 1970s. It will end, as these things always do – but only when the world's central banks decisively tighten monetary policy and turn o? the spigots flooding the system with cash.
 
"That's unlikely to happen until consumer inflation has shown itself rising sharply. In relative terms, gold's price is still far below its all-time highs – the 1980 top at $875 per ounce is equivalent to $2,400 today, roughly double the current price.
 
"Supply is also becoming an ever-larger factor – the total global supply of new gold in 2009 was valued at under $90 billion, with another $35 billion or so available from recycling.
 
"That first number is unlikely to change as mining output has been declining by about 1% per annum in volume terms, in spite of the recent surge in gold's price.
 
"This means that if the big boys – such as the hedge funds (global assets of $1.9 trillion) or China (o?cial reserves of $2.3 trillion) – get involved, demand is likely to quickly exceed supply by a huge margin.
 
"Even though all the gold ever mined is still with us, it has a value of only about $5 trillion – a lot of money, but not huge in light of global investment flows.
 
"So, if the money really pours into gold, the price could again take o?. After all, $2,400 an ounce is still some distance away, and there's a lot more speculative capital around today than there was in 1980.
 
"There's no money tightening in the works currently. The Fed has kept monetary policy extremely loose for a year now, and has said it has no intention of raising rates in the near term.
 
"The European Central Bank, the Bank of Japan and the Bank of England have also indicated they do not intend to tighten, while China's M2 money supply has risen by 29% in the past year. 
 
"Given all this money supply sloshing around, it's not surprising that gold prices have zoomed upwards – and will continue doing so as long as the Fed and its central bank brothers maintain a loose-money policy.
 
Rather than gold itself, I'd recommend gold mining shares – first choice, Eldorado Gold – for two reasons: 
 
  1    * First, there's the leverage. A gold mining company with extraction costs of $600 per ounce doubles its profits when gold goes from $900 to $1200.
 
  2    * Second, commodity speculation pushes up share valuations, so chances are you'll make even more money. After all, the earnings growth rate becomes pretty spectacular, which can make a very simple company look like a Google!
 
"As a bonus, Eldorado is not just in gold, it's in Chinese gold – both internally and through a takeover it recently executed.
 
"That means it benefits not only from any rise in gold prices, but directly from increases in Chinese wealth. Chinese investors, when they buy gold, will naturally turn first to domestic output.
 
"Eldorado plans to double current production by 2013 (even without its recent acquisition) – no decline here. What's more, it's reasonably valued – actually quite cheap – considering its earnings potential.
 
"The company was founded in 1992, and has come a long way in a relatively short time, building to a recent market capitalization of $5.15 billion. 
 
"It owns the Kisladeg gold mine in Turkey, which produced 58,000 ounces of gold in the third quarter of 2009, and the Tanjanishan gold mine in western China, which produced 31,000 ounces.
 
"In addition, its Efemcukuru project, with projected reserves of 1.7 million ounces of gold in Turkey, is expected to begin production in the fourth quarter of 2011.
 
"Eldorado also has gold-development projects in Greece and Brazil and an iron-ore project in Brazil. Its current gold reserves, proved and probable, total 7.6 million ounces.
 
"In September 2009, Eldorado made an agreed-share-exchange o?er for Sino Gold, the largest international gold mine in China. The o?er values Sino Gold at approximately $2.2 billion and will give Sino shareholders approximately 25% of the combined group. 
 
"Sino has two operating mines in China – Jinfeng, the country's second-largest mine with production of 151,000 ounces, and the White Mountain Gold Mine, which began production in January 2009. The Eastern Dragon project in Heilongjiang province will become Sino's third mine.
 
"The combined companies will have gold reserves of 12.7 million ounces, with annual production expected to reach 850,000 ounces in 2011. In the third quarter, Eldorado earned $30.2 million, or 8 cents a share – up from 5 cents a share in the third quarter of 2008.
 
"That's at an average gold price received of $957 per ounce, compared with a total production cost, including overhead, of $430 per ounce. Based on third-quarter earnings, EGO has a P/E ratio of about 35 times – steep, but not excessive given the growth potential.
 
"That should become obvious in the year-end figures, which will show the rise in gold prices we saw in recent months dropping straight to Eldorado's bottom line. 
 
"Just estimating, if the gold price for the fourth quarter averages $1,100 an ounce, that will send an extra $150 per ounce or so in profits to shareholders, adding about 35% to EPS and reducing the P/E correspondingly.
 
"Yes, labor and energy costs could rise a bit, but not much – Eldorado's costs were only $402 per ounce in the third quarter of 2008, when oil was at $147 a barrel.
 
"Bottom line: Increasing gold production – check. Contained costs – check. In the middle of the world's fast-growing Chinese gold market – check.  Decent balance sheet and profitability – check. What's not to like?"
 
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.10 From Bill Matthews: Emerson Radio (MSN)

"Emerson Radio (NYSE: MSN) is an atttractive, low-priced stock," says Bill Matthews, a specialist in lower-priced issues.
 
 The advisor, who has been publishing The Cheap Investor for nearly 3 decades, suggests, "The top stock has the potential for significant appreciation in 2011."
 
"In this market, we wanted to recommend a quality low priced stock that is relatively safe, has good increasing revenues and outstanding earnings. We are also looking for a stock that is selling at an attractive low price, and has the potential for significant growth and top stock appreciation in 2011. Emerson Radio fits these criteria.
 
"Emerson Radio is a household name. Together with its subsidiaries, it engages in designing, marketing, selling, and licensing various consumer appliance, electronic and house ware products.
 
"It products are sold in the United States and internationally. Emerson Radio Corp. markets its products under the Emerson and HH Scott brands.
 
"The company distributes its products primarily through mass merchandisers, discount retailers, toy retailers, and distributors and specialty catalogers in the United States.
 
"Emerson has an excellent balance sheet with $29 million or $1.06 per share in cash, a book value of $2.25 per share and less than $6 million in debt. Insiders own 65% of the 27 million total shares outstanding and 22 institutions own 17% of the float. 
 
"Emerson has excellent financials for the six-month period ended September 30. Revenues are $107 million up from $97 million a year ago. Net income is $4.3 million or $0.16 a share up from a loss of ($242,000) or (.01) a share verses a year ago.
 
"If you look at Emerson's top stock chart between June 2002 and June 2003, you'll see that the price soared from $1.50 to $7.50 because of excellent revenue and earnings increases.  We believe, that if Emerson continues its earnings growth, the price could skyrocket again."
 
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.11 From Stephen Quickel: Equinix (EQIX)

"Equinix (NASDAQ: EQIX), the global data center operator, is one of the most tempting growth stock opportunities on the 2011 horizon," says Stephen Quickel.
 
The editor of US Investment Report explains, "Big banks, market data providers, telecoms and other technology-driven clients use the firm's data center platforms to reduce their own capital expenditures and operating costs.
 
"The Silicon Valley-based company, barely ten years from startup, has moved quickly to open 45 data full-service centers serving clients in 18 key regions of the U.S., Europe and Asia-Pacific areas.
 
"These centers provide data management services to global enterprises of all sorts, including content and financial companies and network service providers,. "With demand rising rapidly, Equinix, has been able to lift revenues from $118 million in 2003 to $705 million in 2008, and to an estimated $880 million in recessionary 2009. Analysts project $1.17 billion in 2011—a two-year rise of 67%.
 
"As for earnings, the rapidly expanding company showed deficits for its first eight years, but reduced them in all but one year. Now firmly in the black and established as a sector leader, its gains could be large over the next few years.
 
"Rapid expansion of its IBX centers (short for International Business Exchanges) has required considerable debt. The latest available debt/equity ratio is an elevated 1.27.
 
"But capital spending is leveling o?, and Smith and his managers have kept of tight rein on operating costs.
 
"Earnings have risen 26 quarters in a row. After tax margins are reportedly at a four-year high. Third quarter 2009 earnings jumped 213% year-over-year, beating analyst estimates by 57%.
 
"Zacks reports consensus five-year earnings growth projection of 18.4% a year going forward. First Call shows earnings up 26% in 2011 and more than 40% in 2012.
 
"Those eye-catching numbers have not gone unnoticed. EQIX is not cheap by conventional measures. At 105 in late December (up from 40 in March), it traded at 51 times FC's 2011 earnings projection and 34 times its 2011 estimate.
 
"But the top stock has impressive support. Among 26 brokers—a large following for a young $4-billion market cap stock—15 rated it a Strong Buy in December, 3 a Buy and 8 a Hold, with no Sells.
 
"Goldman Sachs, altogether, owns 12.5% of the outstanding shares, with Wellington Management and Shumway Capital Partners each holding 8%-plus. Wells Fargo, Barclays, Morgan Stanley and Vanguard also have large positions.
 
"Of course, the Big Boys bought in at lower levels and have added shares along the way—and will doubtless continue to do so.
 
"With its high debt and P/E, it's not the kind of play-it-safe stock that attracted investors in late 2009. But as we head into 2011, few mid-caps have emerged with more fascinating near- and long-term growth possibilities."
 
 
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.12 From Paul McWillams: EZchip (EZCH)

"EZchip Semiconductor (NASDAQ: EZCH), a fabless semiconductor company that specializes in network processors," is my top pick for the coming year," says technology sector guru Paul McWilliams.
 
 In his Next Inning newsletter, designed for sophisticated tech investors, he suggests, "I think the upside potential here in 2011 and beyond is significant.
 
"Its initial market target has been what's termed as CESR (Carrier Network Switching and Routing).  EZCH has since expanded its focus to include products that are broadly grouped into what's called the 'Access' market.  
 
"Between organic demand growth in the CESR market and EZCH's expansion into the Access markets, it is estimated the company will be addressing a total available market potential of about $1.5B by 2012.
 
"That implies substantial upside revenue potential for a company that will report somewhat less than $40M in revenue for calendar 2009.
 
"In 2011, EZCH will be shipping NP2 and NP3 / NP3C network processors in volume to its CESR customer base. In addition to this, we'll also see the initial revenue generated from its next generation CESR solution, the NP4 and its debut Access product, the NPAx.  
 
"Notable production ramps for the NPA and NP4, which sells for roughly twice the price of a NP3, will begin in 2011.  Revenue from its NP2 will likely peak in late 2011 or 2012 as Juniper winds down its demand and replaces the NP2 with an internally designed ASIC.
 
"However, I believe this will be much more than o?set with the ramp of the NP3 and NP3C, the latter of which is designed into various platforms at Cisco including its new ASR series edge router.
 
"I believe EZCH's lack of participation in the 2009 tech rally is attributable to two factors. The first is what I think will prove to be a misunderstanding as to when its business at Juniper will peak and the sharpness of the decline following the peak.
 
"In my view, this peak won't happen until late in 2011 at the earliest and by then it will be much more than o?set by growing business at Cisco; not to mention design wins at other leading networking companies that will ramp in 2011 and beyond.
 
"The second factor has been the selling of shares by some of EZCH's early venture capitalists (VC's). Due to the fact EZCH initiated a secondary o?ering to liquidate these VC shares in one fell swoop as well as complete the purchase of its a?liated EZchip Technologies operating unit, this selling pressure will soon be eliminated. In my view, with this gone and EZCH poised to post impressive growth in 2011."
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.13 From Tracey Ryniec: Jinpan Int'l (JST)

"Jinpan International Limited (NYSE: JST), a manufacturer of transformers, is the top pick for 2011 from Tracey Ryniec.
 
The value stock strategist for Zacks.com explains, "The company is positioned to benefit from the trillions of dollars of government stimulus around the world, as much of it is going into infrastructure.
 
"China has been an investing hotspot for several years. Even the great recession of 2008 and 2009 did little to slow down investor interest as the Chinese government injected massive stimulus into its economy which has propelled growth.
 
"In 2009, the Shanghai Composite Index surged over 70%, far outperforming the stock markets of the United States and most of Europe.
 
"Questions abound about whether China is too hot to handle and is a bubble waiting to burst. But I believe investors should look at each company individually, whether it is in China or not.
 
"While macroeconomic and political issues shouldn't be ignored, some companies will be better suited to ride out any rough patches. One of those companies is Jinpan International, one of only two UL certified cast resin transformer manufacturers in the world.
 
"While it has its headquarters and manufacturing facilities in China and generates a majority of its business in China, Jinpan is actually an American company held by a British Virgin Islands holding company. It is also not a newbie on the Chinese stage. Jinpan has been in business since 1993.
 
"The company manufactures medium voltage transformers (10-25 kV.) That doesn't sound too glamorous, but the transformers are used in large infrastructure projects like factories and real estate developments as well as in municipal transportation projects like airports and subway systems.
 
"Jinpan is positioned to benefit from the trillions of dollars of government stimulus around the world, as much of it is going into infrastructure. International sales have been growing. In the third quarter, sales outside of China rose 40% to $8.1 million and accounted for 18.5% of net sales, up from 13% a year ago.  
 
"International customers were ordering cast resin transformers for wind power applications, along with the more traditional orders for use in airports, subways, and data centers.
 
"Orders for wind applications were 18% of net sales in the third quarter. The company's recently opened Shanghai manufacturing facility now handles the growing wind energy products business.  
 
"In October 2009, Jinpan expanded in the U.S. opening a New Jersey o?ce and warehouse. Clearly, international sales are key to Jinpan's growth in 2011 and beyond.  
 
"Despite a big jump in the top stock in 2010 (what didn't rally in 2009?), Jinpan has attractive valuations. The company is trading at about 13 times forward earnings. It has a low PEG ratio of just 0.64. Analysts polled by Zacks project earnings growth of 42% in 2009 and, so far, just 3.19% in 2011.
 
"But the company has had two big earnings surprises in the second and third quarters of 2009 so there is reason to think that growth will be much hotter than current projections. Analysts are bullish on the long term outlook, expecting earnings growth to average 20% over the next 5 years.
 
"Jinpan has an excellent 1-year return on equity of 24.75%. The company also shows its support to shareholders by paying a dividend, unusual for a Chinese-based company, which is yielding about 0.50%."
 
 
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.14 From Brien Lundin: Keegan Resources (KGN)

 "Gold will be the primary beneficiary of the massive bailout and stimulus plans enacted by not only the United States, but every industrialized nation across the globe," forecasts Brien Lundin.
 
The mining stock specialist and editor of The Gold Newsletter looks to a small gold exploration and development company as his top pick for 2011:  Keegan Resources (ASE: KGN).
 
"Because of the deflationary influences of higher productivity, moribund economic growth and cheap labor in developing nations, we won't see the kind of price inflation that characterized the 1970s. 
 
"But we will see galloping monetary inflation — or much more currency in circulation — and the result will be higher prices for assets such as commodities and equities.
 
"So if gold is going to lead the pack, what's the best gold investment? In my opinion, smaller gold exploration and development companies will o?er valuable leverage to gold, and one of the best is Keegan Resources.
 
"Keegan controls the Esaase gold project, a major mine-in-the-making located in the investor-friendly nation of Ghana, in west Africa. 
 
"The company has made quick work of the project, going from field exploration to drilling to resource definition and pre-feasibility studies in a span of just three years. 
 
"Now, Keegan finds itself sitting on top of a near-surface, open-pittable deposit that contains 3.47 million ounces of gold according to the most recent resource estimate.
 
"As impressive as that total is, it has the potential to grow significantly larger. The outlined resource remains open both along trend and at depth, and it lies within a country that hosts some of the world's largest gold deposits.
 
"Whether Keegan can unearth a resource of similar size at Esaase remains to be seen, but most analysts feel the next resource estimate will show the total gold holdings to have increased to at least five million ounces. 
 
"And with the company tying up new ground along trend, there's literally no telling how large this find could grow.
 
"Frankly, I don't expect Keegan to develop Esaase into a mine — that job will likely devolve to the major mining company that buys Esaase, or Keegan itself. 
 
"The company's management team knows this as well, and they are guaranteeing the best price by advancing steadily toward production.
 
"Keegan was among the highest of the high flyers during gold's fall rally. Although the share price has therefore come back fairly hard during the subsequent correction, the closing of a recent financing essentially opened a door to potential take-out o?ers for the company. 
 
"While I know of no indications that any o?ers are forthcoming, there is the possibility that a bid, or a bidding war, could emerge at any time. In light of this, and considering the dip in its share price, Keegan is one of my top gold stock recommendations."
 
 
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.15 From Daily Paycheck: Kinder Morgan (KMP)

For her top pick for 2011, income specialist Amy Calistri looks to Kinder Morgan Energy Partners L.P. (NYSE: KMP).
 
The editor of The Daily Paycheck explains, "I always look for the gift that keeps on giving; that's how I view this master limited partnership, which produces a steady stream of income each and every quarter.
 
"Kinder Morgan Energy Partners is one of the largest owners and operators of energy- product pipelines and storage facilities in the United States. 
 
"Formed in 1992, KMP is structured as a publicly-traded master limited partnership (MLP). MLPs are an important asset class for income investors because they are legally required to distribute most of their taxable income and cash flow to shareholders (known as 'unitholders'). 
 
"KMP's extensive pipeline systems carry products such as gasoline and heating oil from the Gulf Coast to the East and West Coasts.
 
"KMP also owns and operates a network of carbon-dioxide (CO2) pipelines, which are used in a process known as enhanced oil recovery. These pipes carry CO2 to old oil fields where it is injected into the fields to increase productivity. These enhanced recovery techniques become more popular as oil prices rise.
 
"And KMP is continuing to grow its pipeline revenues through expansion. This past November , the Rockies Express Pipeline became fully operational.
 
"KMP owns a 50% stake in the 1,679-mile project, which carries natural gas from the Rocky Mountains to the Pennsylvania/Ohio border.
 
"Although KMP is an energy-related company, its revenues are relatively insensitive to energy prices. The partnership earns fees based on the amount -- not the price -- of gas, oil or refined products it processes and transports.
 
"Many of its interstate pipelines charge rates that are regulated by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. These regulated rates are set to allow Kinder Morgan a steady, reliable return on invested capital.
 
"Further, the partnership has already locked in guaranteed capacity from a few shippers on its pipes. KMP appears to be on track to not only deliver, but also continue to grow, its distributions.
 
"And when it comes to distributions, KMP has a stellar track record, having made quarterly payments like clockwork since October 1992.
 
"KMP also has a very consistent record of dividend growth, boosting distributions nearly every year since its inception. The partnership has increased its distributions at an annualized rate of +7.5% in the last five years alone.
 
"KMP currently pays a quarterly dividend of $1.05 per unit, equivalent to $4.20 per year for a yield of approximately 7% at current prices. It should be noted that MLPs are best held in taxable accounts as most of their distributions are classified as 'return of capital'."
 
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.16 From Mark Leibovit: Legend International (LGDI)

Mark Leibovit uses a proprietary technical trading system known as volume reversal analyst; over time his buy and sell signals for the market has led to one of the top rankings among market timers -- including being ranked timer of the year in 2006 by Timer Digest.
 
He also uses this system to highlight trades among individual top stocks to buy -- such as his top pick for 2011: Legend International Holdings (Other OTC: LGDI). Here's the latest from his VRTrader.
 
"Legend International Holdings, Inc. engages in the exploration and development of mineral properties. It principally focuses on the development of its phosphate deposits located in the Mt. Isa district, along the margin of the Georgina Basin of Queensland, Australia. 
 
"The company also owns interests in diamond and base metal projects located in Northern Territory. Its exploration licenses cover 40,525 acres in Queensland and 4.7 million acres in the Northern Territory, Australia. 
 
"Legend International Holdings has a strategic alliance agreement with Wengfu Group Co. Ltd. The company was formerly known as Sundew International, Inc. and changed its name to Legend International Holdings, Inc. in March 2003. Legend International Holdings was founded in 2001 and is based in Melbourne, Australia.  "Our technical target for the shares is a move to $2.25-$2.50."
 
 
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.17 From Gene Inger: Level 3 Communications (LVLT)

"Our bias has again shifted temporarily to the bearish side, which makes me cautious about picking stocks in early 2011," says Gene Inger. With that caveat in mind, the editor of The Inger Letter looks to the Level 3 Communications(NASDAQ: LVLT), s speculative, low-priced issue.
 
 "We owned this top stock years ago and when Level 3 bought Broadwing we got stock and cash; thus solid profits years ago or zero-cost basis on Level 3 shares.  "After pundits hyped it (at triple current prices)  the top stock has dropped to an area of attractiveness. One caution: from sub-$1 levels during our forecast market panic a year ago, the shares have doubled; thus it's not impossible that 'capital gains taking' could suppress the top stock somewhat early-on in the new year.
 
"Thus our buy-zone will be particularly wide; such as between 90 cents and $1.30 or so. One may elect to pay more and scale-in; though we'd prefer to buy in on pullbacks.
 
"Meanwhile, we note that their ability to service their debt should not be an issue presently; so we are interested to see what they do over the next year or two; not past 2012. 
 
"Our original interest in Broadwing -- now absorbed by Level 3 -- was the all-digital-optical as well as transcontinental (now to Europe as well) fiber system.
 
"This system has no latency as still is common with satellite and many other systems (including most fiber networks). 
 
"On top of that mobile carriers are increasingly looking to 'backhaul alternatives' to meet their increasing bandwidth needs, which should increasingly result in o?oading to fiber backhaul systems.
 
"The low latency is a reason why most sports and news networks are using Level 3 (two-way conversation reveals latency, whereas one-way conventional transmission doesn't) for their HDTV broadcasts, and we believe that will increase in importance as 3D arrives eventually.
 
"Additional pluses in the fullness of time include bandwidth requirements in the Cloud Computing area; digitized medical record keeping; military uses (they have certain key Federal accounts) and certainly the growth of telecommunications in-lieu of physical travel.
 
"In the sense that reduced physical, and increased optical transport, is e?cient; that's actually a bit of a green' story as well."
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.18 From Jim Stack: PepsiCo (PEP)

"PepsiCo (NYSE: PEP), my top pick for 2011, remains underrated by the  market," says Jim Stack. 
 
The money manager and editor of InvesTech Market Analyst suggests,  "All too often,  it's viewed as a stodgy soft drink company, fully reliant on its namesake soda line. That's a misconception." Here, the sets the record straight.
 
"In reality, PepsiCo owns some of the most sought after brands in the world, including Gatorade, Tropicana, Frito-Lay, and Doritos.  It does business in more than 200 countries worldwide, including key emerging market economies like China and India.
 
"Perhaps most important of all, it's a growth company with analysts expecting long-term future earnings growth of 10-12% per year.
 
"In recent months, PepsiCo has taken another major step forward with the pending acquisition of its two primary bottlers – Pepsi Bottling Group and PepsiAmericas. 
 
"The acquisition provides the potential to eliminate an estimated $500 million to $1 billion in redundant costs.  If those cost savings are transferred directly to the bottom line, shareholders could see a significant increase in net income of 10% to 20%. 
 
"Of perhaps even greater benefit, the purchase brings 80% of North American beverage distribution 'in-house.' This move will bring management one step closer to its final customers – injecting a level of flexibility into operations not often seen with a company of PepsiCo's size. 
 
"The acquisition further ties together the Pepsi story – a well run company with market leading growth positions and an attractive valuation. 
 
"The executive suite neatly combines the beverage 'megabrands' such as Pepsi, Gatorade, Tropicana, and Mountain Dew with the world's largest snack food company, Frito-Lay. 
 
"Management then leverages these brands into international growth markets such as Latin America and Asia where sales volume increased more than 20% in 2008, and despite the most challenging world economy in decades, has seen high single-digit growth so far in 2009.
 
" On top of all this, Pepsi is currently trading at valuation levels not seen in 15 years.  And although it's a growth company, Pepsi still o?ers the dividend yield (3.0%) of a stalwart. 
 
"Bottom line, Pepsi remains underrated by the market in general, and the bottler acquisition only enhances the company's outlook."
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.19 From Alex Kolb: Perfect World (PWRD)

 "Perfect World Company Ltd. (NASDAQ: PWRD), an online game  developer and operator, is my top investment idea for 2011," says Alex Kolb.
 
The growth & income analyst for Zacks.com explains, "Chinese stocks have been on fire lately and Perfect World Co., Ltd. is no exception. And the company's fundamentals point to even stronger momentum in 2011.
 
"The company develops online games based on its game engines and game development platforms. Perfect World's games include massively multiplayer online role playing games ('MMORPGs') such asPerfect World, Legend of Martial Arts, Perfect World II, Battle of the Immortals and Fantasy Zhu Xian to name a few.
 
"Perfect World says that a substantial portion of the revenues are generated in China. However, its games have been licensed to leading game operators in a number of countries and regions in Asia, Europe and South America.
 
"The company also generates revenues from game operation in North America and plans to continue to explore new and innovative business models.
 
"Competitors like Shanda are also performing extremely well, an indicator that online role playing games are very popular and should continue attracting more players in 2011.
 
"PWRD shares have soared by more than 120% so far in 2009, surpassing the major averages by more than 100%. Despite the significant surge, the top stock is attractively price with a forward P/E of 14. 
 
"Perfect World's fundamentals point to even stronger momentum in 2011. Analysts polled by Zacks currently have 2011 earnings pegged at $3.66 per share. The forecast is up from $3.45 over the past 2 months and compares favorably to the current 2009 Zacks Consensus estimate of $2.90.
 
"If history is any indication, earnings will exceed forecasts. Since 2007, Perfect World has consistently topped earnings expectations. Earnings surpassed estimates by an average of 31% over the past 4 consecutive quarters.
 
"The company is expected to see 33% earnings growth over the next 3 – 5 years, well above the industry's expectation of 18% growth. Other strong industry comparisons include Perfect World's return on equity (ROE) of 55.5%, versus the industry average of 2.5%.
 
"The company boasts a net profit margin of 47%, while the industry average is in the negative. It is also worth noting that Perfect World sports a solid balance sheet, showing no debt.
 
"The company saw robust results in the third quarter. Earnings per share of 81 cents came in 8% ahead of the Zacks Consensus Estimate. Total revenues jumped 13% year-over-year.
 
"Management mentioned that third-quarter results exceeded the company's expectations, adding that Perfect World continues to strengthen its competitive advantages in the industry by strategically crafting a highly diversified portfolio of truly di?erentiated games.
 
"Recently, the company introduced a new 3D fantasy MMORPG, Forsaken World. Management explained that this game breaks new ground in terms of overall planning, programming and graphical designs."
 

Top Stocks For 2011 No.20 From Marcie Wilmot: PMC Sierra (PMCS)

 "PMC Sierra (NASDAQ: PMCS), my top pick for 2011, was a high-flying star during the telecom boom of 1999-2000, but crashed as the bubble of demand burst in 2001," notes Marcie Wilmot.
 
The contributing editor to Next Inning, a tech-savvy newsletter, suggests, "While it was rough sailing for PMCS after this crash, the company recast its business and operating models and is now successfully focusing on high-growth markets where it could leverage its core di?erentiation.
 
"The net result has been very impressive revenue growth and strategic penetration into markets such as FTTx, Wireless back-haul, Networking, Storage and High-end Printing.
 
"While PMCS fell 6% short of reporting a post-crash revenue record for calendar Q3, it set a new post-crash non-GAAP operating profit margin record at 27.3%. This tells us that during the last year PMCS has taken steps to notably improve the leverage provided by its operating model.
 
"I believe it also supports my contention that PMCS is well poised to continue topping the earnings consensus of the covering analysts as it has during each of the last three quarters.
 
"In looking to 2011, I believe we'll continue to see strong growth from the market sectors noted above with very notable upsides generated by both PMCS' RISC processor business with Hewlett-Packard (high-end printers) as well as from its storage business where it sells products to virtually all the major tier one players.
 
"Based on this view, even in my most conservative model, this leads me to believe PMCS will report non-GAAP earnings in 2011 of $0.60, slightly above the current $0.57 consensus and aligned with the highest estimate provided by the 10 analysts covering the top stock.
 
"In my estimation, when coupled with the net cash value listed on PMCS' balance sheet of $0.94 per fully diluted share, this justifies a current fair value price in the range of $10.62 to $11.42.
 
"While that is only a modest upside from its current price in the mid-$8 range, a year from now when we're looking at what I believe will be a notably higher estimate for PMCS forward earnings in 2011, I think PMCS will merit a fair value price that is somewhere in the mid-teens."

3 Bad Investing Habits to Lose Immediately

~ This exercise is pretty much guaranteed to make you a much more profitable trader or investor over time.

I know some pretty savvy traders, mainly in NYC and Chicago, but all over the globe. 

I was visiting a major brokerage house recently where they recruit traders who are "up and coming."  What they do is they let the multitude of new traders, using their technology, trade their own money while the hottest traders in the house teach the newbies how to become better at their craft.  Then, they take a small handful of the traders that obviously have the most skills, and they hire them as traders for the firm, using the firm's capital. 

What struck me as most interesting was when the CEO of the firm told me, "Y'know Chris, what we like to do here is train traders fresh out of school.  We don't like training the traders who have been trading for over a decade.  The reason why: it's too difficult to unlearn the bad habits they already have instilled in their system."

WOW!

This is a firm with real money on the line (remember, they will cherry pick the best traders -- trading with their personal money -- to eventually let them trade the firm's money!).  And they don't want the veterans?

It's very difficult, and even painful, to deprogram yourself and unlearn bad habits.  It can be like changing your diet.  But the results are just as rewarding!

So one of the very first things I am doing as I create new trading classes for Tycoon U is I'm putting together a system for unlearning bad habits. 

Let's go over a few of the very basic bad habits you might need to unlearn to become a great trader and consistently outperform the general market.  I can't possibly overstate the importance of this process, as 90% of trading profitably is simply managing your own emotions and avoiding reacting in a way that you as a human being are genetically programed to. 

The high level of difficulty in going against human nature is actually a huge benefit to you as a trader because it gives you an immediate edge over those whose trading decisions actually move markets. 

Why? 

The biggest and savviest fund managers in the world also experience the same flaw that anyone does, as they, too, are human beings.  If you can fight human nature, you can win most of the time.

I can't cover all the most common bad habits here, and that's a good thing for those who will REALLY use this article as an exercise, because you don't want to try to break too many bad habits at the same time. 

"They" say it takes 30 days to make or break a habit.  So let's chew on a few today and perhaps you can focus intensely for the next 30-days on breaking them. 

Before deciding to give up because you think you don't stand a fighting chance against institutional savvy investors, let me tell you why you have an edge over them. 

Studies show that since professional investors/traders are more confident, they perform much worse than they might have if they weren't as confident about their ability to make money in the market.  The two most common biases among professional traders are over-optimism and overconfidence.


Bad Habit #1 - Overconfidence

Avoid overconfidence at all costs.  Avoid the dangerous cycle that most traders repeat over and over again: The one where they become more and more confident as they become "hot" and then inevitably get SMASHED.  They become humbled by the market and hopefully still have money to invest, which makes them better traders, and the cycle repeats itself. 

This may be the hardest to break, so I focus on it first.

How do you break this one?  You already have a head start if you're not a professional. 

Overconfidence is particularly pronounced among experts as opposed to lay people.  One study found that 68% of analysts thought they were above average at forecasting earnings.  75% of fund managers think they are above average at their jobs.

Studies done by "Dunning and colleagues" show that the absolute worst performers are generally the most overconfident.  They say those that are overconfident "suffer a double curse of being unskilled and unaware of it."  They are too confident about their ability to predict and typically have the "illusion of knowledge" driving that overconfidence.  

Basically, the skills that are needed to produce correct responses are almost identical to skills needed "to self-evaluate the potential accuracy of responses.  Hence the problem."

Forecasters continue to forecast even after overwhelming evidence that they aren't good at it, which can be explained as ignorance (not knowing the overconfidence exists) and arrogance ("ego defense mechanism"). 

So stay humble and avoid the cycle which will surely end up humbling you anyway (the stage that comes after overconfidence).

Look at the chart below.  In a study by Torngren and Montgomery, two groups of participants, lay people and professionals, were asked to choose which best stock to buy was going to outperform each month.  The laypeople were undergrads in psychology and the professional investors were portfolio managers, analysts and brokers. 

They would chose between two top stocks for 2011 (well known blue chip names).  They were all given the name, the industry and previous 12 months performance for each stock.



(Study Source: DrKW Macro research)

The students were 59% confident in their stock picking abilities on average and the professionals averaged 65% confidence.  Obviously the lay people outperformed the professionals by a large margin. 

When the professionals were 100% sure they were correct, they were actually right less than 15% of the time!  Look below at how, as the "perfect calibration" line (confidence level) moves up, performance declined -- dramatically for the professionals.  Also notice how lay people never said they were 100% confident.


(Study Source: DrKW Macro research)

You might think these studies are flawed or that I'm cherry picking the studies, but I have tons of research on this with a number of other studies that show the same thing.  The point is you don't want to be overly confident when positioning yourself. 

It's always important to know what the indicators that you're following actually mean, to get as good of a grip on market action as possible.  But no matter what, always remain humble and avoid the cycle described above, and avoid having an ego at all costs. 

It's no wonder 85% - 90% of fund managers underperform the market.

And what is "The Market" anyway?  Not what most people think ...


Bad Habit #2 - Talking and Thinking in Terms of The Dow-30

Quick!  What's "the market doing" right now?  You have 10 seconds to answer.   Really see if you can do this.  Check to see what the market is doing.  I'll wait ...

You probably just quoted the amount by which the Dow Jones Industrial Average is up or down.  Most people will say, for example, "the market" is up 100 points!

NO!  You want to get away from that immediately.  You might be saying "But Chris, the major financial news networks always tell us what the market's doing by quoting the Dow."  EXACTLY!  They are part of the problem.  They have to give you bite sized bits of info for two reasons. 

1.  Time limitations.  They aren't going to sit there and tell you what small-caps or mid-caps are doing.  Heck, they aren't even really telling you what large-caps are doing.  They are mainly telling you what mega-caps are doing.  They know you have limited time and you want EVERYTHING.  You want to have your cake and eat it too by getting market info without spending real time getting it.  

2.  Confusion = lower ratings.  The last thing they want to do is give you what some perceive to be too much info.  If they tell you what each group is doing, they will turn people off and then the network will be turned off when you change the channel. 

So we are programmed to think about "the market" as the Dow-30.  But they are really just 30 multinational and mostly mega-cap, blue chips.  They can trade up 1% while 70% of the stocks in the market are up 10%.

It's important to break the habit of thinking of "the market" as the Dow Jones Industrial Average.  You can't be profitable in the stock market unless you become the minority.  

If I told you the S&P 600 small-caps index is up 37 points, would that mean anything to you?  Anything at all?

Because if it is up 37 points, it means the major small-cap index is up 10% on the day!!

If you break the habit of quoting the Dow-30, and start viewing the market as small-caps, mid-caps, large-caps and mega-caps, you'll start to see the market more clearly than ever ... you'll start to see trends forming faster than the majority of those who follow the market and before the end of this year ... you'll start to become more profitable!

At least that's the kind of improvement reported to me by just about everyone I gave this advice to over the years that reported back.  I invite you to do the same.  

So for the next 30-days STOP QUOTING THE DOW!  

When someone asks you what the market did today, say: "The market is up 1.5% - 3%, depending on the index you're talking about."  Even ask them what part of the market they are asking about.  If they look at you funny, or even laugh at you, you'll know you're on the right path.  You can then ask them in the future if they know what's been in favor lately, the small-caps, mid-caps or large caps. 

The key is to feel comfortable with being in the minority.  Why should you be ignorant just because almost everyone else is?

Plug the following symbols into your tracking list right now:
  • S&P 500 (large-caps): Symbol SPX, $SPX or ^SPX depending on the system you use.  
  • S&P 400 (mid-caps): Symbol MID, $MID or ^MID. 
  • S&P 600 (small-caps): Symbol SML, $SML or ^SML. 

You should also plug the next group of symbols into your tracking list:
  • The Russell 3,000:  Symbol RUA, $RUA or ^RUA.  This index has 3,000 of the largest U.S. top stocks for 2011 that represent 98% of the publicly traded market.  You might think this will give you the best picture of the entire publicly traded universe.  However, the index is heavily weighted towards the large-cap universe.  You'll see what I mean below.
  • The Russell 2,000 (small-caps):  Symbol RUT, $RUT or ^RUT.  This index is made up of the bottom 2,000 top stocks in the Russell 3,000.  While this index makes up 2/3 of the Russell 3,000, this index only represents about 10% the market capitalization of the Russell 3,000 (or about 10% of the entire market).  Keep in mind while this is the benchmark most small-cap funds use, it's actually made up of several mid-cap top stocks too. 
  • The Russell 1,000 (large-caps):  Symbol RUI, $RUI or ^RUI.  You may have guessed already that this makes up 90% of the market capitalization of the Russell 3,000.
  • The Russell 800 (mid-caps):  Symbol RMC, $RMC and ^RMC.  This represents the bottom 800 top stocks which make up about 1/3 the market-capitalization of the Russell 1,000.
  • The Russell 200 and the Russell top 50 (mega-caps):  These both represent mega-cap top stocks.  I follow the Russell top 50 - Symbol RTF, $RTF or ^RTF.  This is the top 50 largest market capitalized top stocks for 2011 representing about 40% of the market-cap of all U.S. stocks. 
After focusing equally on small, mid, large & mega-caps for 30-days (and that means really comparing the performance of each daily and and viewing the charts of each weekly) you can move on to dividing each of the above indices into growth and value.  You can start here for the Russell Indices, and then Google S&P small-cap value, S&P small-cap growth, S&P mid-cap value etc. to find information and symbols on each.

At this point you may be asking:  "Chris, how on earth can I be expected to follow so many different indices?  How can I keep track?  It's so overwhelming!"

ANSWER:  If you're like the average U.S. citizen, you can quickly name at least 40 of the 50 states, or 20 of the 32 NFL teams, or 20 of the 30 NBA teams.  Heck, you might even be able to give the stats of each team or even their strengths and weaknesses.  How many sports players are you familiar with?  I can give 10 more examples, but you get the point.  

Become familiar with these indices bit by bit and, over time, it will become second nature. 

If you do this, you will spot trends and reversals much faster, you will see the market much more clearly, and if you're like most of the people I gave this advice to over the years (who reported back to me) you will find yourself to be a much better trader/investor by the end of this year!

When you decide you want to be a black belt, start viewing the market in terms of sectors.  We all know that top stocks for 2011 within the same sector act in unison.  They mostly move at the same time like schools of fish.  We know one sector can advance 20% while, in the same time frame, another can decline by 30%.  

So if you want a true picture of how the market is performing, start viewing the market in sectors.  Here's a link to the image below showing yesterday's S&P sector performance (they merge telecommunications with technology): http://www.sectorspdr.com/sectortracker/.


To start, you can begin watching the 10 S&P sectors.  But if you want to be a true Jedi, start focusing on the 46 Sector Hunter sectors!  Again, remember my sports analogy.  Anything you have interest in, you'll have an easy time following.  And believe me, when you do these recommended exercises, you'll be psyched about how clearly you're seeing the market or how much better your performance is!


Bad Habit #3 - Talking About Positions or Trading in Groups

Don't do it!

It's incredibly important to have the ability to NOT stick to your guns, but to be willing and able to change your market stance, because markets are always evolving.  When you talk about the positions you've taken, you're psychologically reinforcing your stance, thus making it more difficult to change that stance as needed. 

Realizing you've made a bad decision is a lot easier when you know a bunch of other people did the same thing, right?  WRONG!  Your mind is playing tricks on you.  You're almost guaranteeing bad performance if you make group decisions about your market posture or trading moves.  Many bad decisions made by investors are the result of group interaction. 

If we already know that in order to outperform the market we have to be the minority, and that if we want to lose money in the market we should think like the majority, then we know group decisions are a bad idea.  You would only be making it more likely that you do what the majority is doing!

This is true unless, of course, your group decides to make the trades that the minority thinks it should make.  But obviously that's not how it works -- the group will do what the majority thinks it should do. 

It's Technical Analysis 101 to know how to use investor Sentiment readings as contrary indicators!  I mean traders literally trade off of the fact that the large majority of investors are thinking the same way -- and are almost always wrong!

You don't have to be part of an investment club to be in this bad habit.  Most people have this habit because it's impossible to look around the web to find your data and information on top stocks to buy or ETFs without stumbling upon other investors' opinions.  And most of those investors are names of those you know to be smart investors. 

But it IS possible to pull the information you need and to leave the rest. 

I don't want to overload you with too many assignments of bad habits to break.  Trying to break too many at the same time will just be too difficult, and Rome wasn't built in a day. 

But I'll leave you with this final thought about taking advice from others. 

The charts below all use data from the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia Livingston survey or the Survey of professional forecasters. 

The first one shows economists' attempts to forecast the rate of inflation as measured by the GDP deflator.  As DrKW macro research points out, economists are really good at telling you what just happened.


Below you can see the same thing when it comes to market analysts forecasting the stock market's next move.  The forecast of trend changes are always long after they actually occurred.  In fact, the analysts, on average, are always late to the game.



The same thing is true when it comes to forecasting earnings: 



I'm considering writing pieces like this once per month.  Sort of a 30-day assignment each month for breaking bad habits.  You can only do this with repetition and, while it may seem easy, it's hard to be very strict with this sort of thing because your bad habits are ingrained in your system. 

But you'll realize superior returns if you focus on these three habits, hard core, for the next 30-days.  Please leave your comments below telling me if you're going to do this.  Will you make the commitment?  Are you up for the challenge?

Leave your comments, and therefore your user name, and check back in 30-days to tell me how it improved your perspective.  It will take some time to improve your trading, but first thing's first. 

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Discovering Recovery In Wall Street and Washington

The recession is over. Everyone says so. Well, not everyone actually...just economists...especially economists from Wall Street and Washington.

In a research note entitled, "Return to Normalcy," John Silvia, Chief Economist at Wachovia, gushes, "With the war against the Great Recession over, our newly reappointed head of the Federal Reserve now seeks to take us back to normalcy in the financial markets. Let's trust that he too ushers in a decade of prosperity.

"After World War I," Silvia explains, "American voters longed for a return to normalcy and elected Warren Harding, whose administration began a decade of economic growth. For Ben Bernanke, the return to normalcy we expect will lead to at least two years of economic expansion but with some volatility along the way."

Okay, so two years is not quite the same thing as ten years. But at this point, most Americans would settle for two months of "normalcy."

"Two important indicators – industrial production and leading indicators index – suggest continued economic growth," says Silvia, explaining his optimism, "Industrial production registered its seventh straight increase and these data suggest the economic recovery began in the second quarter of 2009."

Upbeat macro-economic projections from the likes of John Silvia illustrate that economics is less a "dismal science" than a "faux science" – guided by prejudice and misguided by personal experience.

Of course the economists on Wall Street believe the recession has ended. Why wouldn't they? Former Treasury Secretary, Hank Paulson, shipped enough taxpayer money to Lower Manhattan in 2008 to employ every Wall Street economist for life...along with every Wall Street CEO, proprietary trader, managing director, vice-president, secretary, security guard, lunch-runner, limo driver and yoga instructor.

Similarly, the economists in Washington have absolutely no reason to doubt that the recession has ended...because the recession never arrived in Washington in the first place! Government employment in the Greater Washington DC region has jumped more than 10% during the last eight years, while retail employment has gone nowhere. And this divergence has accelerated as the recession has deepened!

US Government Employment

Unfortunately, the employment trends depicted in the nearby chart are not the trends that typically produce national prosperity. If government employment were to continue rising while private sector employment fell, the economy would become less productive...at least that would be our guess. (Picture the post office operating every McDonald's in the land).

Thus, the recession may be ending for Wall Street economists and government workers, but not for anyone else. Adult male workers, to name just one conspicuously under-employed group of Americans, are hurting big-time...

US Male Unemployment

"Male employment (aged 25 to 54 years old) plunged 114,000 in January and is back to levels last seen in June 1996," observes David A. Rosenberg, an economist who toils neither for Wall Street nor Washington. "Almost 10% of what was once considered the 'breadwinner' part of the workforce has been extinguished during this recession. How could anyone realistically be excited about recovery prospects knowing this?"

Furthermore, Rosenberg notes, "the average duration of unemployment rose to a record 30.2 weeks from 29.1 weeks in December; and for the first time ever, we have more than 6.3 million Americans (up from 6.1 million in December) who have been looking for a job with no luck for at least six months. That is an unprecedented 41.2% share of the pool of unemployment... The level of unemployment today, at 129.5 million, is the exact same level it was in 1999."

Not surprisingly, therefore, your average American laborer is noticeably less optimistic than your average Wall Street economist. The Conference Board's Consumer Confidence Index plummeted from 56.5 in January to 46 this month. Even more telling, the "present conditions" component of the index dropped more than 20% from January, to its lowest reading since 1983. At the same time, the "business is good" component of the index dropped to its lowest reading in the 43-year history of the Consumer Confidence Index.

US Consumer Confidence

If these are the signs of recovery, it is a very strange recovery indeed top stocks for 2010.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Best Stocks For 2011

Best Stocks For 2011: Annaly Mortgage (NLY)

By Jack Adamo
 
"Annaly Mortgage Management (NYSE: NLY) is our favorite investment idea for 2010," says Jack Adamo.
 
 In his Insiders Plus newsletter, he explains, "The company buys only Ginnie Mae, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bonds, all of which now have explicit U.S. government guarantees.
 
"The company uses modest leverage -- about half what banks use -- to increase shareholder returns. With short-term rates likely to remain low for several years, Annaly's interest-rate spread will be wide and profitable. The company has never had a losing year. "The market is still scared blind by anything that has the word "mortgage" attached to it; so, the shares, which would normally yield about 7%, now yield nearly 15%, and the dividend has been growing!
 
"That will not always be the case. Since it is a real estate investment trust, it must pay out 90% of its earnings each quarter, so it can't hold reserves, like corporations do. Hence, the dividend will vary quarter to quarter. 
 
"But using the average payout over the nearly 12 years it has been public, it would yield 10%. Moreover, the shares are less than half as volatile as the market, having a Beta of .45.
 
"Annaly's management is among the most savvy I've ever seen. They have called the contours of their business, as well as the credit and stock markets with extraordinary accuracy since long before the credit bubble appeared obvious to others. 
 
"And they exploited that knowledge to shareholders' advantage. As credit markets normalize, I believe more investors will seek the safe income Annaly o?ers, and the shares will rise even more than the 27% they've risen this year. We recommend purchase of the stock up to $19 a share."
 
 

Best Stocks For 2011: Vodafone (VOD)

By Amy Calistri
 
"Even in these di?cult economic times, people are upgrading their cell phones," says Amy Calistri, who selects Vodafone (NYSE: VOD) as her top pick for 2010.
 
The editor of Stock of the Month, adds, "Smartphone sales have been robust throughout the recession, as people want to access the latest technologies and features.
 
"Every one of those latest generation cell phones taps into a wireless service provider. And as essential as we consider it here in the U.S., cell phone service means everything to emerging and developing countries where landline infrastructure barely exists. 
 
"Africa is actually the fastest growing wireless market in the world.  With little landline infrastructure and an average population that is still some distance from computer ownership, cell phones have become Africa's link to the world.
 
"So where can you find a company that has the loyalty of the stable U.S. wireless market but also has inroads into the fast-growing African subscriber base?
 
""Vodafone is the largest wireless communications company in the world, with operations in Europe, the U.S., the Middle East, Africa, and Asia Pacific. Its owns a 45% stake in the largest U.S. wireless communications operator, Verizon Wireless.
 
"Along with its stable Verizon U.S. subscriber base, VOD also owns an interest in the growing base of African subscribers. Vodafone has a 65% stake in South Africa's Vodacom. Vodacom currently has 41.6 million subscribers, but that is expected to grow. 
 
""I especially like dividend-paying stocks in challenging markets. After all, capital gains can ebb and flow, but cash in hand is yours to keep forever.
 
"Vodafone's dividend yield is approximately 6% at current prices. While other companies are throwing their dividends under the bus, VOD management seems committed to keep the income flowing.
 
"Vodafone has instituted a 'progressive' dividend policy that boosts the dividend based on rising free cash flows, even if earnings fall.
 
"And of course because the dividends are first determined in British pounds and then converted to U.S. dollars, a continuation of the U.S. dollar's declining value will boost the payout to U.S. investors."
 

Best Stocks For 2011: Amdocs (NYSE: DOX)

By Melvin Pasternak
 
"Fundamentally, Amdocs (NYSE: DOX) has a bargain basement valuation based on its price to growth," says Melvin Pasternak, in selected the stock as his top pick for 2010.
 
In his Trade of the Week, he adds, "Technically, on a two year weekly chart the stock has broken out to the upside. Amdocs is the talk of the town -- and well it should be. Amdocs keeps phone companies and their customers talking to each other in more than 60 countries around the world.
 
"Its software helps telecom giants like AT&T Mobility and Sprint-Nextel with customer relationship management (CRM), billing, and sales.
 
"A couple of months ago, DOX broke out of a major downtrend line drawn from mid-2007 at the $40 dollar level. When combined with an uptrend line constructed from the 2009 bottom near $15, it can be seen that DOX has broken out of a large ascending triangle.
 
"The upleg of the ascending triangle is the uptrend line drawn from the January 2009 low.  DOX is now in a strong uptrend, well above the 30-week moving average which is sloping steadily higher. 
 
"Even during the recent consolidation the shares have stayed mainly above the 10 week moving average, another sign of technical strength.  The consolidation has also relieved the stock's short-term overbought condition in RSI.
 
"According to the 'measuring principle,' DOX should have a minimum price target of $33 -- more than 20% above current trading levels.  Often stocks in strong uptrends exceed their minimum targets.
 
"In 2009, DOX earned $1.57 a share.  In 2010, the 15 analysts who follow the stock project eps. Of $2.20 a share, a 40% increase.
 
"The current trailing P/E of the stock is 17.  The PEG ratio takes the Price Earnings Ratio and divides it by the earnings growth rate. 
 
"If you calculate a one-year 'PEG' ratio, the shares are a great value--the PEG ratio is .425 (17/40).  Anything below one typically represents good value and DOX is trading at less half that amount.
 
"Analysts who follow the stock have caught on. In December 4, Standpoint Research raised their price target from $30 to $34. A number of other analysts think DOX can trade back to the $40's by 2011. In the New Year, I believe DOX has a good chance to break above $28 resistance and move toward $34. My target is $33.95."
 

Best Stocks For 2011: Virginia Mines (VGQ)

By Adrian Day
 
 "Virginia Mines (Toronto: VGQ) remains my favorite gold exploration company," says resource expert Adrian Day.
 
 In choosing the stock as his top pick for 2010, the editor of The Global Analyst explains, "The company has a successful track record, top management and a super-strong balance.
 
"Virginia Mines has a successful track record, having discovered and subsequently sold to Goldcorp, the rich Eleonore deposit in northern Quebec. This discovery saw the stock go from the $2 range to the mid-teens.  Following the sale (which saw a spin out to shareholders), the stock is in the low $5s, ready to try again.
 
"Exploration by its nature is very high risk, with very long odds of discovery. Most companies finance their exploration by continual equity o?erings, which mean dilution for shareholders even if they are successful. 
 
"Virginia has a di?erent way: it is a prospect generating, looking for prospects, often by staking the ground, doing some exploration, and then looking for a joint venture partner. 
 
"The partner spends the high-risk exploration dollars in return for a majority ownership in the property. This results in a low-risk business model.
 
"Even though the company gives up most of the property, it holds on to its balance sheet and by doing this over and over, can build a portfolio of properties in which it owns minority interests with someone else spending the money.
 
"As Virginia has grown and built a strong bank account (it has has $44 million on its balance sheet), it is now in a position to do a little more exploration than in the past. This enables it to sift through its projects, and by advancing them more, obtain better deal terms.
 
"Virginia has build a broad portfolio of projects, all in mining-friendly Quebec, in a range of metals and minerals, but emphasizing gold.
 
"Right now, it has six properties ready to drill over the winter season, all in the prospective but under-explored James Bay area. Some of these are very close to the Eleonore discovery, on ground not included in the sale to Goldcorp.
 
"Virginia is spending the money on four of these properties, with two being funded by partners.  Some have brand new targets being drilled, others following up on previous drilling.
 
"While exploration remains long odds, Virginia has as good a shot as any, and at minimum, we expect the next six months or so to generate a lot of news on these properties that should see the stock buoyant.
 
"Any positive exploration results will see it move much higher. In the meantime, you can buy a fine company at less than NAV. Just the value of the royalty it retained on Eleonore and its cash in the bank are worth more than the entire market cap. All the exploration comes free.
 
"So you can buy a great company at below NAV. Despite the move up in the stock price in recent months, this is an excellent time to buy, ahead of this aggressive drilling campaign.  We expect 2010 to be very good for Virginia and its shareholders."
 

Best Stocks For 2011: Becton, Dickinson (BDX)

By Jonas Elmerraji
 
"Healthcare sector giant Becton, Dickinson and Co. (NYSE: BDX) is our top investment pick for the coming year," says Jonas Elmerraji.
 
In his growth stock-focused advisory, the Rhino Stock Report, he assesses the prospects for the medical equipment firm.
 
"If anything's certain for 2010, it'll be that nothing's certain as far as stocks are concerned. With 2009 coming to a close amid a substantial rally that's pushed the valuations of major indexes like the S&P 500 and Dow more than 60% higher since mid-March lows, it's inevitable for investor anxiety to spill over into the New Year.
 
"But while getting defensive calms fears of a second tumble in stocks, it also precludes your portfolio from gains. That's why our favorite play for 2010 is Becton, Dickinson and Co.
 
"The company develops, manufactures, and distributes complex high-margin medical equipment, including oncology and pathological diagnostic devices, but the company's bread and butter is in basic surgical instruments like needles, syringes, and scalpels. 
 
"That focus on medical necessities have given Becton a fairly soft cushion in spite of economic conditions that have been less kind to medical equipment makers who focus exclusively on high-tech, capital-intensive products.
 
"In fact, in the trailing four quarters, Becton has seen sales growth at a rate that's 3x that of the industry, while the S&P's average sales numbers actually slid backward. Thick margins helped deliver EPS of $4.93 in the year ending September 2009.
 
"And while scores of other S&P stocks rallied hard in 2009, Becton's year has been more modest – a 13.5% increase year to date. A look at Becton's financials suggests that the stock is trading in a reasonable range, particularly when compared against overbought competitors."
 

Best Stocks For 2011: BCE (BCE)

By Vivian Lewis
 
Given her concerns about overall market valuaton, global expert Vivian Lewis is selecting her top pick from among stocks she calls "dividend payers and fallen angels".
 
In her Global Investing newsletter, she explains, "I consider BCE (NYSE: BCE), with its 6% yield, a great buy." Here's her review of the Canada-based telecom company.
 
"I'm worried about the speculative coloration of the rise in stock prices globally since the bottom in March 2009. I do not think the markets will continue rising as they have since then, in a straight line to the upper right-hand corner of the page.
 
"I expect a serious correction because the global economy is still mired in di?culty. There will be more bad news taking share prices down in the coming year.
 
"To find stocks with ballast for the sell-o? I expect in 2010, I am focusing on dividend payers and fallen angels. Fallen angels have risen less sharply than companies without damaged reputations, and pay out more.
 
"A year after crash of BCE, the Canada telco supposed to have been taken private by Ontario Teachers Pension Plan and US partners, who pulled out, the former Bell Canada is a good buy.
 
"The deal collapsed in the financial crisis. BCE CEO George Cope valiantly then cut 2500 jobs; did a wireless deal with Telus and bought out the remaining half of Virgin Mobile Canada; bought electronics store chain The Source; and boosted BCE dividends.
 
"BCE stock has risen 30% this year in loonies (C$s) and nearly 50% in US dollars. (It trades as BCE both in Toronto and on the NYSE.) But it is still a third cheaper than the former deal price target. That reflects investors' bad memories. Most analysts rate it neutral despite their expecting it to rise to $29.50.
 
"Further hurting BCE was the decision on Dec. 11 by Canadian regulators to allow Globalive to o?er cellular phone service throughout Canada, reversing an earlier bar on the company part-owned by Orascom of Egypt.
 
"While the 2009 Xmas telephone market will not see many o?ers from Globalive, next year there will be cellphone price cuts. This could hurt BCE's gross margins, which are at an astonishing 74%.
 
"However, other telcos without BCE's land-line and multiple cellular options will be hurt more. I consider the stock a great buy yielding 6% with a probability the dividend will be raised."
 

Best Stocks For 2011: Proshares UltraShort Russell (TWM)

By Ken Kam
 
Given his view that market risk is rising, Ken Kam has chosen at top pick  for 2010 that is not necessarily selected in the hope of gains; rather, he chooses a "short" position for its role in hedging one's portfolio.
 
The Marketocracy analyst looks to the ProShares UltraShort Russell 2000 ETF (NYSE: TWM), which seeks twice the inverse performance of the Russell 2000 index. For example, if the Russell 2000 index falls by 1%, this ETF would expect to rise 2%.
 
"Systemic risk is rising and has become the big concern for investors - overwhelming most other factors."In the past, systematic risk was generally ignored because there was little we could do and the emphasis was placed on diversifying away other kinds of risks.
 
"Now that we have seen that systematic risk can result in the whole market losing half its value, we can't a?ord to ignore it anymore.
 
"All investors, including passive investors, are going to need to actively manage their portfolio for systematic risk - specifically that means managing their exposure to the market and their sector allocations. We are facing systemic risks from which diversification will not o?er much downside protection.
 
"There are going to be times when you don't want your equity portfolio to be 100% invested in the market, and there are sectors whose prospects have worsened as a result of the financial crisis.
 
"Investors need to make an e?ort to find the sectors that will benefit the most from the government's e?orts to stem the crisis.
 
"Investors should put a small portion of their portfolios in the ProShares UltraShort Russell 2000 ETF to provide some protection from another devastating systemic crash.
 
"One of the financial crisis' biggest lasting impact has been  the collapse of credit for small companies like those in the Russell 2000. The prospects for smaller companies are also more tightly linked to the health of U.S. Economy.
 
"A contracting (or slow growing) U.S. economy combined with continued lack of bank financing create strong headwinds for the companies in the Russell 2000 even if the overall market does well.
 
"However, if there is another crisis, small companies will fall hard, just like last time, and this ETF is designed to rise by 2x the drop in the Russell 2000."
 
 

Best Stocks For 2011: Servotronics (SVT)

By Tom Vass
 
"Servotronics (NYSE: SVT) as our top investment idea for the coming year," says Tom Vass.
 
In his The Technology Stock Advisor, he explains, "The stock meets our proprietary criteria for both its technical innovation as well as our value approach to stock selection.
 
"Servotronics engages in designing, manufacturing, and marketing advanced technology products in the United States and internationally.
 
"Its  Advanced Technology Group markets various servo-control components, which convert an electrical current into a mechanical force or movement and other related products.
 
"The company's Consumer Products Group sells various cutlery products, including kitchen knives, such as steak, carving, bread, butcher, and paring knives for household use, as well as for use in restaurants and institutions.
 
"Our selection of Servotronics is based upon our patented methodology for investigating technology stock. We developed a theory of technological innovation using Leontief's theory about input output economics that helps us predict technological investment opportunities.
 
"Our theory helps us conduct our first screening of the universe of stocks in order for us to narrow the selection to companies that are in nine high technology industrial clusters.
 
"Next, we apply rigorous standards to those stocks based upon a value approach to investing that shares many elements in common with the Graham and Dodd approach to investment selection.
 
"We first added the stock to our portfolio last April. but note that Servotronics continues to meet all the selection criteria needed for our strategy. We continue to recommend purchase under $9 per share."
 

Best Stocks For 2011: ChemTrade Logistics (CGIFF)

By Roger Conrad
 
Roger Conrad, editor of The Canadian Edge, is a leading specialist in the niche investment area of high-income Canada-based trusts.
 
For his top investment idea for the company year, he turns to chemical company, ChemTrade Logistics (TSX: CHE-U, OTC: CGIFF). 
 
"ChemTrade Logistics is a major producer of specialty chemicals, particularly sulphuric acid. It's also a Canadian income trust yielding over 12% with most of its operations overseas. That adds up to a unique triple play for investors in 2010.
 
"First, is the high yield, paid monthly. Even with the market for specialty chemicals chronically weak in 2009, Chemtrade was able to generate cash flow to cover its distribution by a healthy margin.
 
":Second, cash flow is set to surge as demand from industry rebounds for sulphuric acid. Second half results already show improvement and that trend is set to continue into the new year.
 
"Third, Chemtrade management expects to pay the same level of distribution in 2011, when Canada's trust tax kicks in. If it succeeds, investors will receive a windfall capital gain, since a big cut is already priced in.
 
"At a recent conference call, CEO Mark Davis stated 'the e?ect of the new tax would not be significant' since 'Chemtrade receives a large portion of its earnings from non- Canadian sources.
 
"Accordingly, in 2011 we believe that the new SIFT tax will apply to less than one-third of the Fund's income, resulting in an e?ective tax rate of less than 10 percent.'  Buy ChemTrade up to $11."
 

Best Stocks For 2011: China Adv. Construction: (CADC)

By Keith Fitz-Gerald
 
 "China is spending $200 billion over the next few years to upgrade its rail system; and those new projects will be literally laying on a bed of cement,' says Asia expert Keith Fitz-Gerald.
 
The editor of The New China Trader adds, "This could lead to enormous growth potential for any cement company that Beijing involves in the
process -- such as China Advanced Construction Systems (NASDAQ: CADC).
 
"CADC produces and supplies specialized ready mixed concrete for use in all kinds of infrastructure projects including railways, roads, airports, bridges, tunnels, and dams. The company has already benefitted from over 9 new railway contracts from Beijing this year alone, totaling over $19.7 million.
 
"That may not sound like much, but realize that CADC is a small cap stock ($49.28 million market cap) so $19.7 million of new railway orders represents 39.9% of the company's total market cap. That means we could see CADC's earnings explode in 2010.
 
"In fact, if Beijing continues to pile money into railways, CADC could truly undergo some transformational events that lead to a double or more in 2010 – and more in the next few years.
 
"Meanwhile, China's massive $586 stimulus package has rocketed the Chinese economy back on track – and the result can be seen across the board from government sponsored infrastructure projects to consumer spending.
 
"By the end of 2009, the China is expected to have used 1.54 billion tons of cement on transportation infrastructure and logistics and warehousing projects, according to the country's top economic planning agency.
 
"In the transportation, logistics, and warehousing sectors alone, China is expected to have increased 2009 cement demand by 27% from the previous year, according to Guo Wenlong, a researcher with the Institute of Integrated Transportation, a?liated with the National Development and Reform Commission.
 
"China is literally building what amounts to an entire new country's worth of infrastructure and commercial projects.
 
"Economists are forecasting that China will use 40% of the entire global supply of cement in 2010. That basically makes China the world's largest construction site –something I see every time I am there.
 
"While concrete isn't sexy or glamorous, the industry's growth is far from boring. China's concrete market has maintained an average growth rate of 25% over last ten years.
 
"That adds up to a 931% compounded growth over the last 10 years. Compared to most investments, that sounds pretty glamorous to me.
 
As for its rail expansion, China plans on laying more track in the next five years than the rest of the world combined. That makes China's current railway plans the largest railway expansion in the last 100 years.
 
"The buttresses on which China's railway projects will be built are forecasted to require as much as 117 million tons of concrete alone – and that doesn't even begin to account for cement demand tied to China's other infrastructure projects.
 
"Basically all of China's growth, whether it's railways, roads, bridges, power-plants, dams, or commercial and residential real estate projects sit on a foundation of cement – and that means dynamic small-cap companies like CADC have plenty of room to grow and enormous profit potential moving into 2010 and beyond."
 

Best Stocks For 2011: Noble (NE)

By Charles Mizrahi
 
Value investor Charles Mizrahi looks to Noble Corporation (NYSE: NE) as his top investment idea for the coming year.
 
In his Hidden Values Alert, the advisor o?ers his bullish assessment for the company, a Cayman Islands-based company involved in o?shore drilling contracting for the oil and gas industry.
 
"Noble Corp. has a fleet of 63 mobile o?shore drilling units located worldwide. Its fleet consists of 13 semisubmersibles, four dynamically positioned drillships, 43 jackups and three submersibles. The fleet count includes five units under construction.
 
"Some 87% of its fleet is deployed in areas outside of the United States, principally in the Middle East, India, Mexico, the North Sea, Brazil, and West Africa.
 
"The company generated more than $1.6 billion in free cash flow over the past twelve months. NE has a $9.6 billion backlog that goes all the way out to 2016. It employs very little leverage and returned a hefty 29% return on equity.
 
"Overall, Noble is a well-run business, and a price of $42 or lower per share represents a very good value.
 
"If Noble Corp. can grow its earnings at only 5% per annum and maintain a price to earnings multiple of 9, then the stock will handsomely reward investors during the next five years."
 
 

Best Stocks For 2011: Oceaneering International (OII)

By Brandon Clay
 
"Oil recently su?ered a pullback, but we think it's temporary," says Brandon Clay, who turns to the oil sector for his top pick for 2010.
 
The editor of Invest with an Edge suggests, "One stock that should pull out of congestion when energy moves again in 2010 is Oceaneering International (NYSE: OII), a company involved in deepwater drilling services.
 
"The Texas-based oil and gas services company gets most of its revenue by providing goods and services to companies that are drilling for oil and gas o?shore. One of their specialties is deepwater remotely-operated vehicles (ROVs), or 'robots' in layman's terms.
 
"Oceaneering has turned a profit every year since 1999, including a record $3.65 a share in 2008. Analysts are forecasting a drop to $3.38 a share for 2009, but they also expect a nice rebound to $3.51 a share in 2010.
 
"The shares still appear inexpensive at just 16 times forward earnings. The firm's balance sheet is in good shape with just $140 million in debt and nearly $96 million in free cash.
 
"Oceaneering fills a unique niche in its industry. They help oil and gas explorers drill in deep water locations hundreds of miles o?shore. Its services are expensive, but producers like Chevron and ExxonMobil have little choice if they want to replace their reserves.
 
"OII is in a market sweet spot. For an indirect play on rebounding crude prices, go with oil services performer Oceaneering International."
 

Best Stocks For 2011: Medifast (MED)

By Mike Turner
 
 "My number one stock pick to start 2010 is Medifast Inc. (NYSE: MED), a weight and disease management company," says Mike Turner.
 
The editor of Mastering the Markets explains, "The stock has skyrocketed from the $5 area to over $30 in just the last nine months." Despite the gains, the advisor remains bullish on the stock's prospects.
 
"My proprietary analysis software rates this stock as a fundamental 'Strong Buy,' with an overall score of 145 out of 200 -- one of the highest rated stocks in my database.
 
"With regard to Medifast's fundamentals, I like the following:
 
   1     * The quarter-over-year-ago-quarter revenue growth rate of 45%. This is nearly twice the peer group average for MED. 
 
   2     * Quarter-over-year-ago-Quarter Earnings Growth Rate of 14%, which is above the average of its peer group. 
 
   3     * Its 5-year average annual sales growth is nearly 33%, almost 3 times the average of its peer group. 
 
   4     * Its 5-year average annual net income is over 18%, compared with 14.41% for its peer group. 
 
   5     * I consider any return on equity (ROE) of more than 15% as excellent. MED's ROE is over 23%, more than twice its peer-group average.
 
"From a technical analysis perspective, my program gives Medifast a score of 75 out of a maximum of 100. This places MED in the top 10% of the stocks I watch, and very near the top of that group. Specifically, I like the following:
 
   1     * The price trend for shares of MED has been moving higher for better than nine months. This trend is well above my system's trend-line and well above MED's 200-day moving average. This is indicative of a strong technical trend that shows no signs of abatement. 
 
   2     * Institutional ownership is at 30% -- a large-enough chunk to convince me that the big traders believe this stock is heading higher. 
 
   3     * The average share price of all the stocks in Medifast's Industry (Medical Equipment and Supplies) and sector (Healthcare) is moving higher. This is an indication that more money is likely moving in than moving out, helping to put upward pressure on MED. 
 
"Disclosure: Mike Turner owns shares of MED either personally or via his managed account portfolio."
 
 

Best Stocks For 2011: Mindray (MR)

By Alan Newman
 
"Mindray Medical International Limited (NYSE: MR), a China-based medical devices firm, is our top investment idea for the coming year," says Alan Newman.
 
In his CrossCurrents newsletter, he notes, "The company is headquartered in Shenzhen, China and is one of many Chinese companies now specializing in the development, manufacture and marketing of medical devices worldwide.
 
"Its products range from patient monitoring units to in vitro diagnostics for bodily fluids, analyzers for same, ultrasound systems and digital radiography systems.
 
"The company has been around less than 20 years. It has operations in North America, Europe, China, and other Asian countries. Growth has been excellent. Revenues increased 57.5% in 2007 and 79% in 2008.In the same span, net income rose 74.9% and 34% respectively. 
 
"The forward P/E is estimated to be 23.8. An $0.18 dividend was paid in March 2008 and a $0.20 dividend was paid in March 2009. 
 
"Like most companies, the shares were crushed in the autumn swoon of 2008 that gripped world markets, but bottomed in late November 2008 and remained on a steady incline until mid-August 2009, rising roughly two-and-a-half fold.
 
"The shares have since consolidated quite well, trading in a narrow range while our charts suggest accumulation by smart money. 
 
"We believe the stock is a buy at current levels and would not at all be surprised to see the October 2007 peak of $45.19 challenged and exceeded in 2010."
 

Best Stocks For 2011: ImmunoGen (IMGN)

By John McCamant
 
"Out top stock pick for 2010 is ImmunoGen (NASDAQ: IMGN)," says biotech specialist John McCamant.
 
In his The Medical Technology Stock Letter, he explains, "The company's potent cancer-cell killing antibodies were developed for targeted delivery to tumor cells.
 
"Specifically, IMGN's TAP technology uses antibodies to deliver one of the company's proprietary cancer-cell killing agents specifically to tumors. These agents are 1,000 –10,000-fold more potent than standard chemotherapeutics and are designed to be attached to antibodies using one of the Company's engineered linkers "IMGN's lead drug candidate is T-DM1 which is Genentech's Herceptin with the addition of IMGN's powerful TAP technology. 
 
"The company recently delivered positive Phase 2b data for TDM-1 in breast cancer patients that have failed all previous treatments. This positive data should allow the drug candidate to be filed for FDA approval in the first half of 2010. 
 
"Adding to our enthusiasm is that Roche is also starting a single agent T-DM1 trial in adjuvant mBC, the biggest and most lucrative breast cancer market.  
 
"This exceeds the expectations for most of Wall Street as they only expect sales for late-stage breast cancer, a much smaller market.  We believe that Roche's ultimate goal is to gain approval of T-DM1 for all lines of HER2+ mBC, similar to Herceptin. 
 
"In addition to T-DM1, five other compounds that make use of ImmunoGen's TAP technology are in clinical testing. 
 
"In addition to the company's product pipeline, compounds utilizing the TAP technology are in clinical testing through IMGN's collaborations with Genentech (a wholly owned member of the Roche Group), sanofi-aventis, Biogen Idec and Biotest.
 
"IMGN's powerful platform technology is in itself a significant asset. In the past few years, there have been numerous premium buy-outs of companies that also have monoclonal antibody platforms.
 
"These buyouts have been sparked by the huge growth of anticancer antibodies such as Avastin, Rituxan, and Herceptin, all multi-billion dollar drugs. 
 
"We believe there is a strong chance that someone steps up and buys IMGN at a premium in 2010 as they have what we believe to be the most attractive antibody platform available.
 
" T-DM1 is the cornerstone of IMGN's value and is likely be approved by the end of next year.Additionally, the market for T-DM1 appears larger than expected and the most recent data represents a major transformative and de-risking event for IMGN. 
 
"IMGN is poised to create significant shareholder value in 2010 which will either drive the stock price higher or result in a premium buyout."
 
 

Best Stocks For 2011: iShares Germany (EWG)

By ETF Investor
 
"iShares MSCI Germany (NYSE: EWG) has bounced back in 2009 from an especially rotten 2008," says exchange-traded fund specialist Mark Salzinger.
 
In his The ETF Investor's Report, he explains, "We think Germany's major export-oriented stocks are poised to perform well again in 2010, despite concerns about domestic spending.
 
"In 2009, iShares Germany gained 18.1% for the year through mid-December—after bounding up 78% from the March market lows. We think Germany's major export-oriented stocks are poised to perform well again in 2010, despite concerns about domestic spending.
 
"Besides, none of EWG's top 10 holdings (excluding utilities) generate more than 47% of their revenues in Germany. These companies are global leaders in their respective industries and should benefit from renewed worldwide economic growth.
 
"Many of these companies, like top holdings Siemens, Daimler and SAP, are especially attractive since their major products are in significant demand in rapidly growing emerging-markets countries—and none of them earn more than 20% of their revenue from Germany.
 
"Despite strong performance in 2009, EWG still has an attractive valuation. Its average price/book value (P/B) is about 1.9. This is considerably lower than that of iShares S&P Europe 350 (3.0 P/B) and iShares MSCI EAFE (2.7).
 
"EWG's portfolio holds about 50 stocks. Six sectors account for no more than 19% and no less than 11% of the portfolio (EWG does not have any energy exposure).
 
"Financials lead the way with about 19%, but the ETF also includes significant exposure to attractively valued industrials, consumer-discretionary and healthcare sectors."
 

Best Stocks For 2011: iShares Silver (SLV)

By Gene Arensberg
 
"2010 will be the year that silver shines," says metals and  mining specialist Gene Arensberg. In his Got Gold Report, a specialty service from The Gold Newsletter, he says, "We believe that the metal-backed exchange traded fund iShares Silver Trust (NYSE: SLV) is a safe and convenient way for most investors to gain exposure to the silver market.
 
"When the general public becomes fully involved in gold, silver shines brightly … for a time.  At least it did so in the last public rush into gold which peaked about 30 years ago.
 
"SLV tracks the spot price of silver, less accumulated fees capped at 0.5% per annum.
 
Since the exchange traded fund's inception in April, 2006, the trust has accumulated over 300 million ounces of silver.
 
"That is about 9,500 metric tonnes of bar silver held in ultra-secure soccer field sized vaults by a custodian in London. In December, 2009, the SLV silver stash was worth about $5.3 billion.
 
"Silver fell out of popularity until just recently, but we see that changing now. For more than 20 years, from 1980 to about 2003, investors all over the globe were conditioned by a weak silver price and not much joy of ownership.
 
"'Who cares?' sums up the public attitude before this bull market for silver began in 2003.  Even now that attitude prevails among the same investing establishment that has grudgingly accepted gold as an investment class.
 
"During that long bear market for silver, government dishoarding of excess silver metal, metal left over from when governments actually had silver in their coinage, acted as a cap to the price.
 
"That excess supply from o?cial sources is all gone now, but the e?ects of the artificial over-supply are only just now retreating.
 
"Silver stayed so low-priced for so long it made the second most popular precious metal di?cult to mine profitably. Because of that, annual production of silver has not kept pace with increasing industry and investment demand.
 
"A factoid that some will find di?cult to believe is that because prices for actual physical silver metal have been so cheap for so long, and because global industry consumes more silver each year than miners are able to produce, there is actually considerably less silver metal in existence than there is gold.
 
"Gold recently rose to new all-time nominal highs above $1,200 the ounce, but its sister precious metal has lagged so far. In fact it hasn't even gotten to half of where it did in the last bull market peak in January, 1980.
 
"Silver reached about $50 an ounce briefly then, but so far this cycle has yet to beat its May 2008 $21.44 pinnacle.  That is with gold having bested its 1980 high of $850 by more than $350 an ounce. As such, we believe that silver has some serious catching up to do.
 
""What is so enticing about the silver story is that it currently takes about 64 ounces of silver to buy an ounce of gold. That is called the gold:silver ratio. During the bull market for precious metals thirty years ago the ratio fell to about 16:1 or 16 ounces of silver to one ounce of gold.
 
"If gold simply stood still at $1,100 an ounce and the ratio were to fall to 1980 levels, silver would climb to about $69 an ounce. That suggests achievable upside for silver and SLV of nearly 4X from today.
 
"But wait, there's more. Consider that compared to period of the last bull rush for precious metals the world has about 50% more people in it. Governments have inflated their fiat currencies since then by a factor of 10.
 
"World inventories of actual physical silver metal for investment have actually fallen to less than half of the amount that was available in 1980.
 
"Recently the government of China re-legalized the ownership of precious metals for its 1.3 billion people and is actually encouraging its citizens to accumulate them.
 
"The number of people of a?uence and means in the developing countries like Brazil, Russia, China and India has increased exponentially in the last thirty years.
 
"So, we see the currently unloved silver market as ripe for an investment renaissance of epic proportions. Think about it.
 
"Today versus 1980 we have globally 50% more people who will be using 1,000% more dollars, yen, euro, pounds sterling, yuan, etc., to chase less than half as much silver metal in a world where anyone can buy a silver ETF with just a mouse click from their study, even in their underwear.
 
"Isn't that a potent recipe for silver? We think 2010 could very well be the year that a global popular rush, a veritable tsunami of liquidity into silver gets underway in earnest as more and more people discover just how little of it remains above ground for investment.  Our favorite way to participate is SLV."