Stocks & Equities

4 Stocks That Meet the Strategy of the Week

perspectives header weekly

perspectives commentary

In This Week’s Issue:

 

In This Week’s Issue:

– Stockscores Active Trader Webinar – Tuesday Feb 17 6pm PT, 9pm ET
– Stockscores’ Market Minutes Video – Take the Money and Run
– Stockscores Trader Training – The Getting Started Area of Stockscores
– Stock Features of the Week – 

Stockscores Active Trader Webinar
Tuesday Feb 17 6pm PT, 9pm ET
Click here to register

Stockscores Market Minutes Video – Take the Money and Run
How you trade a trending market is different than a choppy trendless market. Do you be patient with the winners or take the money and run? That and this week’s market analysis.
Click here to watch

Trader Training – The Getting Started Area of Stockscores
Within the Stockscores Education Center resides the Getting Started videos. These are free video lessons that highlight basic investing and trading concepts as well as provide an overview of how to use some of the tools on Stockscores.com. There are 11 titles on a variety of topics that you can watch right now by going to Stockscores.com, clicking on the Education tab and opening the Getting Started area. Here are a few samples of what you will find there, as well as direct links to each video:

The Stockscores Tour
Stockscores.com has the tools and services to make you a better stock trader. This video provides an overview, highlighting powerful tools like the Market Scan and Chart Viewers and how they work together. Plus, a look at the services that can help you become a more profitable trader.

Introduction to the Stock Market
Are you new to stock market investing? Get started with this video which explains how stocks are priced and the importance of information when predicting future price change.

Charting Basics
Every investor can benefit from a basic understanding of stock charts and the message they contain. This video provides an introduction to charting, establishing a base for more advanced charting concepts taught in other Stockscores videos.

Charting on Stockscores
Stockscores.com provides powerful, attractive and easy to use stock charts for investors and traders. This video shows how to get the most out of the Stockscores charts and will teach you how to set your default view, change settings and utilize the fast time frame links on each Stockscores chart.

Stockscores Market Scanner
The Stockscores Market Scan tool allows you to filter thousands of stocks using dozens of filters. A massive time saver, the Market Scan will give you an edge by finding strong stocks before the rest of the market catches them.

The Stockscores Watchlist and Portfolio Creators
The Stockscores Watchlist Creator allows you to create a list of stocks to view as charts, in a price table or to scan against using the Stockscores Market Scanner. You get the same functionality with the Stockscores Portfolio Creator plus the added ability to track the performance of your investments based on your purchase price and transaction costs.

 

perspectives strategy

For the investor who want to make decisions once a week, the Stockscores Simple Weekly is the ideal strategy. Utilize the Stockscores Market Scan and Charting tools to identify stocks that have the potential to outperform in the months ahead with only 15 – 30 minutes of work required each week. First, set your default chart to 3 year, weekly and then run the Stockscores Simple Weekly Market Scan. Inspect the charts in search of stocks breaking from predictive chart patterns. Here are some names I found this week.

perspectives stocksthatmeet

1. ELNK
ELNK has broken its long term downward trend line and is now breaking up from a rising bottom, a good turnaround chart pattern. Support at $4.10.

Screen Shot 2015-02-09 at 4.36.46 PM

2. ISBC
ISBC has been stuck under resistance at $11.20 for over a year but last week broke through that threshold, setting up for the start of a new upward trend. Volume was not great on the break. Support at $10.70.

Screen Shot 2015-02-09 at 4.38.01 PM

3. FLEX
FLEX broke to new highs last week after stalling under $11.50 since the Spring of 2014. Volume was not great on the break. Support at $10.50.

Screen Shot 2015-02-09 at 4.38.26 PM

4. MHLD
MHLD breaks out through $13 resistance and pays a dividend of 3.47%. I would like to see more volume in support of the break. Support at $12.45.

Screen Shot 2015-02-09 at 4.38.58 PM

References

 

 

Disclaimer
This is not an investment advisory, and should not be used to make investment decisions. Information in Stockscores Perspectives is often opinionated and should be considered for information purposes only. No stock exchange anywhere has approved or disapproved of the information contained herein. There is no express or implied solicitation to buy or sell securities. The writers and editors of Perspectives may have positions in the stocks discussed above and may trade in the stocks mentioned. Don’t consider buying or selling any stock without conducting your own due diligenc

Consolidation Continues

This week precious metals continued to consolidate January’s gains in volatile financial markets, with both gold and silver range-bound. Platinum and palladium are up on the week, noticeably stronger than gold and silver. Physical and paper markets appear to have been behaving differently, with prices tending to be firm in London (where physical deliveries take place) and weaker in New York (which is overwhelmingly derivative trading), though at the close of trading in New York prices appeared more often than not to steady ahead of the Asian markets opening.

The US dollar has also been consolidating its recent strength, roughly in phase with the gold price. The logical conclusion from this action is that for the moment, sellers of the other paper currencies are hedging into both gold and the US dollar, which from the point of view of a non-US person faced with a weakening currency makes sense. So long as this relationship persists, it should also give us a clue on the timing of gold’s next move, which will be when the overbought position in the dollar is unwound enough to support its next rise. We may already be there after yesterday’s pronounced dollar weakness, which was technical in nature with the euro strengthening sharply despite a deteriorating Greek situation.

On Comex precious metal traders and bullion banks have been fighting a paper battle, and traders’ positions have now normalised, as shown in the chart below, which is of the short positions of the Managed Money category in gold:

36630 a

The dotted line is the long-term average short position, which after the extreme volatility of the last two years is where we are today. This return to normality has resulted in the largest four traders (basically the bullion banks) increasing their net short position, which is shown in the next chart.

36630 b

This is still well above the average since 2006, but with physical liquidity low, the bullion banks are unlikely to be able to tolerate escalating shorts to the extent they have in the past, so they might be forced to capitulate if buying increases much more. Until that moment we should expect them to make every attempt to shake out long positions by triggering stop-loss positions.

It will be important to watch big macro events, such as the possible fragmentation of the Eurozone, a run on Greek banks, particularly if it threatens to destabilise the euro or other Eurozone banks, as well as the developing crisis in Ukraine.

Tensions over Ukraine have rapidly escalated this week, and might become a factor for gold and silver prices next week if America sends military equipment, Russian tanks start rolling, or both. We must hope the Merkel/Hollande peace initiative defuses the situation.

Next week

Monday. Japan: Consumer Confidence, Economy Watcher’s Survey. Eurozone: Sentix Indicator
Tuesday. Japan: M2 Money Supply, METI Tertiary Activity Index. UK: Industrial Production, Manufacturing Production, NIESR GDP Est., US: Wholesale Inventories.
Wednesday. US: Budget Deficit. Japan: Key Machinery Orders.
Thursday. Eurozone: Industrial Production. UK: BoE Quarterly Inflation Report. US: Initial Claims, Retail Sales, Business Inventories.
Friday. UK: Construction Output. Eurozone: GDP, Trade Balance. US: Import Price Index

 

Allocations, Oil, Earnings & Deflation

Screen Shot 2015-02-06 at 9.03.05 PMAs you are aware, last weekend I presenting at the 2015 World Economic Conference, click here to download the presentation slide deck, so I did not have a chance to analyze the short-term market dynamics as thoroughly as usual. This week is going to be a bit different from usual because I need to move quickly through a broad array of issues that need some attention.

>> Read more here

Time To Increase Allocations?

After a very bumpy December and January, I wrote this past Monday that the markets had reached enough of an oversold condition to bounce. That call was almost perfect as the markets had one of their biggest rally weeks in the past three years.

To wit: “However, during any correction, or more importantly during a mean-reversion process, the financial markets do not move in a singular direction but rather like a “ball bouncing down a hill.” For investors, it is these short-term bounces that should be used to rebalance exposure to “portfolio risk.”

>> Read more here

Market Buzz – Buffett Wishes He Could Buy These Stocks

Do you know why Warren Buffett recently added to his 60 million share position in Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT:NYSE)? It’s not because the world’s largest retailer is an untold secret, or growing earnings at 35% annually (it’s not), or because Buffett got a sweetheart deal (he didn’t). It’s simple: Buffett bought more shares in Wal-Mart because the company is really, really big.

Yes, Wall-Mart is a solid company. But the law of large numbers tells us it is far more difficult to double profits from $17 billion than from a base of $1, $5, or even $17 million.

For Buffett, bigger is better

Toward the beginning of Buffett’s investing career, it wasn’t uncommon for the Oracle of Omaha to post 30% or 40% annual returns in Berkshire Hathaway’s (BRK-B NYSE:) equity portfolio. But as the size of the capital base at Buffett’s disposal grew larger, those stock returns began to shrink. “We do need to deploy cash, but we can’t put many billions to work every year in spectacular businesses,” Buffett said. “To move the needle at Berkshire, they have to be big transactions.”

In the aftermath of the 2009 and in recent years, Buffett’s biggest investments were in blue-chip behemoths like Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ)Wal-Mart (WMT:NYSE), and Wells Fargo (WFC:NYSE).

Those were all solid investments in great companies, to be sure, but it is unlikely they will propel Buffett’s portfolio to those 40% annual returns he generated in the past. And they certainly won’t help Buffett realize the 50% annual returns he famously stated he could achieve if he had less money to invest – and could invest in great small-cap stocks.

“Anyone who says that size does not hurt investment performance is selling. The highest rates of return I’ve ever achieved were in the 1950s. I killed the Dow. You ought to see the numbers. But I was investing peanuts then. It’s a huge structural advantage not to have a lot of money. I think I could make you 50% a year on $1 million. No, I know I could. I guarantee that.” – Warren Buffet

Unfortunately, Buffett understands his predicament all too well. “Size is always a problem,” Buffett told The Wall Street Journal’s Jason Zweig. “With tiny sums [to invest], it’s extraordinary what you can find. Most of the time, big sums are one hell of an anchor.”

Anchors aweigh!

So what would Buffett buy if he weren’t relegated to the realm of blue chips? We think he’d be scooping up shares of great small-cap stocks. After all, they have historically outperformed large-cap stocks — a gap that has widened over the past 35 years:

Screen Shot 2015-02-06 at 8.58.51 PM

Undoubtedly, Buffett could get these higher returns – and better. Unfortunately, it’s impossible for him to buy small-cap stocks. But before we get to why Buffett can’t buy small caps, let’s look at why small-caps outperform in the first place.

Massive potential returns

By definition, smaller companies have much more room to grow. With annual revenue of about US$480 billion, Wal-Mart probably won’t be tripling that number anytime soon. The relatively tiny independent auto repair shop operator, Boyd Group Income Fund (BYD-UN:TSX) on the other hand, one of the longest standing stocks on KeyStone’s Focus BUY List, has more than quadrupled its revenue over the past 6.5 years, increased earnings by more than 5 times, and its stock price skyrocketed as a result.

For comparison purposes, below we see that Wal-Mart was a decent buy in 2008 as the financial crisis hit and its shares traded in the $55 range. Over the past 6.5 years, the stock has returned around 75% including dividends.

Screen Shot 2015-02-06 at 8.59.03 PM

But the Small-Cap’s gains are astonishing over the same period. The Boyd Group and its simple car repair business, which was recommended to KeyStone’s Premium Small-Cap Research clients in November of 2008 at $2.30, has seen it shares rocket to recently close at $46.70. In fact over that period, the company has created such strong cash flow it has distributed over $2.20 per share in distributions (dividends) to shareholders on top of the tremendous share price gains. Again it has paid us $2.20 in cash and we bought the shares for $2.30!

On top of their room to grow, small caps don’t attract much attention from Wall & Bay Street analysts. In fact in 2008, KeyStone was the only research firm covering the Boyd Group. This means savvy investors are more likely to find mispriced stocks when fishing in small-cap waters. It appears that Bay Street is finally beginning to catch on to the Boyd Group story, but there are still dozens of compelling small-cap companies monitored by just one or two analysts or zero — and many more that receive no analyst coverage at all!

Size Matters

So why doesn’t Buffett buy underfollowed small-cap stocks that could very well triple? It’s simple: He can’t.

Let’s revisit Buffett’s quote from earlier in the article: “We can’t put many billions to work every year in spectacular businesses,” Buffett said. “To move the needle at Berkshire, they have to be big transactions.”

Even after the Boyd Group had seen its’ share price rocket over 20 fold over the past six and a half years, its market cap is just $764 million. Only about $1.5 million worth of stock trades hands each day. Buffett couldn’t buy a stake in the company without driving the share price up significantly. And even if he were to buy the company outright, that $764 million purchase would barely register in Berkshire’ US$360 billion investment portfolio.

In other words, researching a small-cap company like the Boyd Group, no matter how promising its prospects, simply isn’t worth Buffett’s time.

But it’s definitely worth our time

Individuals who invest dollar amounts in the thousands should be scouring the markets every day for the next Boyd Group. It’s the only way to even approach those 30% or 40% annual returns.

But be forewarned: Just because a company is small and underfollowed does not guarantee Boyd Group -like returns. Consider the case of Canadian frac water tanks provider Poseidon Concepts Corp., a former high-flying small cap that traded to $15 but crashed to zero when the market discovered its business was more than flawed with limited barriers to entry. Thankfully, the company never met our criteria, which has grown stronger overtime.

That’s why in addition to great growth prospects and limited (or no!) analyst coverage, our team of experts at KeyStone’s Small-Cap Research seeks out small caps that have:

• A strong balance sheet
• Positive cash flow
• Attractive Valuations
• Potential for a dividend (or dividend increase)
• A management team with a significant share ownership.
• A business we can understand.
• Operations in relatively safe jurisdictions.
• A positive industry outlook or niche outlook.
• Potential for hidden assets
• Market-beating potential over the next three to five years.

One of our top picks (3 in total) from our January 2015 Cash Rich Small-Cap Report, a high growth small-cap software developer, has already seen its share price jump over 80% on news of a major contract win. We continue to see the potential for further price gains from this small-cap tech leader.

2/4/2015
EXTRUSION & AUTOMOTIVE MANUFACTURER REPORTS STRONG START TO 2015, DIVIDEND INCREASES 20%, ACCRETIVE ACQUISITION/EXISTING BUSINESS EXPANSION POWER GROWTH, OUTLOOK POSITIVE FOR 2015

1/16/2015
CASH RICH COMMUNICATIONS SOFTWARE & HARDWARE PROVIDER POSTS STRONG 2015, NEAR-TERM OUTLOOK IMPACTED BY LONG-TERM INVESTMENT SPEND – MAINTAIN RATING (NEW CLIENTS ESTABLISH HALF POSITIONS)

1/14/2015
CASH RICH ON-DEMAND TV SOFTWARE AND SOLUTIONS SMALL-CAP REPORTS SIGNING MAJOR CONTRACT WITH EUROPEAN TIER 1 CABLE OPERATOR, SHARES SURGE 30% – MAINTAIN SPEC BUY RATING (FOCUS BUY)

12/24/2014
CASH RICH MICRO-CAP, STRONG CASH PRODUCING UNIQUE TECHNOLOGY DRIVEN COMPANY, ZERO DEBT, LONG-TERM FOCUS– INITIATE COVERAGE

12/24/2014
CASH RICH SOFTWARE MICRO-CAP BREAKS INTO PROFITABILITY WITH STRONG BALANCE SHEET, CASH GENERATION AND POTENTIAL CONTRACT CATALYSTS IN 2015 – INITIATE COVERAGE

 

Huge Numbers

Its a marvel just how big the Oil Sands numbers are. Here are a couple that stand out:

Screen Shot 2015-02-06 at 11.18.33 AM

and…..

Screen Shot 2015-02-06 at 11.18.08 AM

 

…read on

 

how-big-are-canadas-oil-sands-infographic-final

test-php-789