|
Winning Investsments.com provides three Aggressive
Strategies for stocks. These strategies are designed for aggressive,
experienced investors. While the
historical returns on these strategies have been high, these approaches to the
stock market are relatively high in risk.
These strategies are designed for investors who are highly risk
tolerant.
Following are the three Aggressive stock strategies that we offer.
If you are looking for an investment with high growth potential,
and you are willing to accept a higher
risk level, one of these approaches should meet your objectives.
|
|
|
This strategy provides you with one stock in each of the top
ten industry groups rated highest for timeliness by Value Line Investment
Survey. Timeliness refers to stocks
that are presented at a favorable time to invest in that particular company or
industry. Industry group rankings are generated
by using the average of the timeliness rankings of all stocks in each industry,
and then comparing the industry groups.
By diversifying your portfolio and spreading it over ten industries
allows you to reduce your risk if one industry should fall out of favor. This
strategy is exclusive to Winning Investments.com.
|
 |
This approach selects stocks that are most likely to be the
best performers over the next six to twelve months. All shares selected in this
group are ranked #1 for timeliness by Value Line Investment Survey, and have
the highest Earnings Per Share ranking by Investor’s Business Daily.
From January 1987 to December 1996 this
approach has demonstrated over a 41.8% annual return using a portfolio of five
stocks, and a 31.63% annual return using a portfolio of ten stocks.
This strategy is derived from the book
The
Unemotional Investor : Simple Systems for Beating the Market by Robert
Sheard.
|
|
|
|
Stocks selected for this strategy have demonstrated 13% or
more growth over the past ten years, and are expected to continue such growth
the next few years. The stocks in this group are highly rated for timeliness by
Value Line Investment Survey. For this
strategy, we list the stocks by timeliness, even if several stocks from the
same industry qualify. The result is a less diversified, and therefore, more
risky strategy. Regardless of the
fluctuations in the market, between January 1980 and December 1996, this
strategy generated in excess of 25% growth. This strategy is derived from the
book
The Unemotional Investor : Simple Systems for Beating the
Market by Robert Sheard.
|
 |
|
|