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PriceWatch Alerts! - Investments even
your mother could love.

So
what are these PriceWatch Alerts about anyway?
Once
a day you might get our PriceWatch alerts by email. Or you
might have seen one of our PriceWatch Alerts when you check the
news on your favorite stock. If you're an InvestorsObserver
Subscriber, you get them almost every day. What are PriceWatch Alerts
all about? What do they mean? How can you use them? And...
What does my mother have to do with this?
Read
on for the answers to these question and more...
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Every
trading day we send out several PriceWatch Alerts.
They are distributed through a major news services so you
might find them on any of over four thousand news, brokerage, and
finance web sites. Our Subscribers get the alerts up to an hour before they go
out over the newswire.
What
are the PriceWatchAlerts?
Our sophisticated stock tracking technology
and analysts spend the whole day watching the markets. You may be
watching soap operas and or hanging out by the pool, but we don’t
take a break. We hunt for the highest return, lowest risk, best
of the best, safest investments out there. Why mess with low return,
high risk, worst of the bad, unsafe investments when there might
be a better way?
What the PriceWatch Alerts are not...
PriceWatch
Alerts are most certainly not recommendations.
DANGER! DANGER! DANGER!
There is no way you should ever read a PriceWatch Alert and
run right out to do the trade.
Our intent with PriceWatch alerts is to show you examples
and call your attention to a particular trade that might be worth
further investigation. DON’T
TRADE BASED ON THE INFORMATION YOU SEE IN A PRICEWATCH ALERT.
What
criterion is used for PriceWatch Alerts?
We
use a basic criterion when creating PriceWatch Alerts.
It may not seem to scientific but it works.
We ask ourselves this question... "Is this a trade I
would give to my mother?"
When
I was a kid, my mom never sat around the kitchen table playing poker
and I'm pretty sure she never went to Las Vegas.
She never bought a lottery ticket either.
She’s not a gambler, so PriceWatch Alerts mostly stick to
relatively conservative investments.
Okay, you might see a few that are on the wild side, but
when our systems and analysts finds them they go into the alert.
Mom would understand. She's
also going to look closer at the company to be sure it's solid.
She's like that. You should be, too.
PriceWatch
Alerts mostly include stocks that meet the following
five
points:
1.
Larger Companies that typically trade over 3.5 million shares of
stock a day.
2.
Companies with stock prices that are on the rise.
3.
Companies with higher rating by analysts and brokers.
4.
Companies with technicals (charts, price, volume, momentum, institutional
buying, etc...) that look positive.
5.
The sixty day return on the investment is at least 5% and we shoot
for around 10% (annualized that’s 30% to 60%).
You might see a lower return if the stock pays dividends.
See...
Didn’t I tell you mom would like these?
What
do the PriceWatch alert numbers mean?...
First
let’s break down a sample PriceWatch Alert.
This is what they look like for a fictitious stock:
--
XYZ International Inc. (Nasdaq: XYZ)
Last Price 29.10 +0.08
NOV 27.50
CALL OPTION@ $3.60 -> 7.84 % Return assigned
1.
The first line is the company name and stock symbol.
2.
The second line is the Last Price and the change for the day.
XYZ’s
current price is $29.10 and it is up 8 cents for the day.
3.
The third line has the information you won’t see on CNBC.
It’s the Hedging position. This is the trade you can do to
lower the initial cost of the XYZ stock, increase your return if
the stock goes up, and reduce the effects from a drop in the stock's
price.
There’s
no way I would get my mom into a stock with out a hedge.
(Hedge
in this case means
downside protection) She
would never drive around in her spotlessly perfect 1985 sky blue
Buick without auto insurance and there’s no way she would ever invest
in a stock without a hedge.
Let’s
look at the math...
In
the example above, a November 27.50 Call option is sold at the same
time the XYZ stock is bought, so you receive $3.60.
Instead of paying 29.10 for the stock you only pay 25.50
(29.10 - 3.60). Even
if the stock drops 13% you will not lose money.
But if the stock stays above $27.50, on expiration day the
stock will be gone and you will receive 27.50 a share so you made
$2 on the investment (27.50 - 25.50)
To
figure the return rate on the investment, get your calculator out
because it will take some division... You divide the return by the
amount you invested. For
this example, you would divide 2 (your profit) by 25.50 (what you
invested) to get a 7.84% return rate (2 / 25.50).
How
can you use PriceWatch Alerts?
There
are three ways you can use PriceWatch alerts:
1.
If you are following a stock with an interest in buying some shares
and a PriceWatch Alerts pops up, it may be a signal that there is
a way for you to get into the stock at a lower base price.
2.
If you already own the stock, there may be a way to squeeze some
cash out of it while you wait around for it to go up in price.
3.
The alert may bring a stock to your attention that you may not have
considered before. This
is the case where you really need to investigate the stock more
to be sure it fits your investment needs.
Maybe
your mom lives in front of multiple computer displays all day watching
market data stream by in red and green Christmas colors.
Well mine doesn't.
That's why we started issuing PriceWatch Alerts.
Now
if I could only get my mom to stop spoiling my kids, life
would
be great.
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