I sell these intermediate bond portfolios for people that can't go to stocks.
From Louis Navellier
Now quantitatively we rank things on something called alpha over standard deviation, which is the return independent of the market divided by volatility. Usually, to get a high ranking, you need some buying pressure.
I expect my return to be 18 to 25 percent in 1988, while the Standard & Poor's 500 should rise 8 to 12 percent and OTC stocks gain 15 percent as liquidity emerges.
I simply can't buy as much of some stocks such as Detection Systems or United Education & Software as I'd like because there just aren't all that many shares available.
My advice to the average investor in 1988 is to be patient and think long-term. It will take 18 months for confidence to get better and, in the meantime, this is absolutely no place for short-term money.
There's a lot of companies that profit from a weak dollar.
If you are a short-term trader, you have the right to come and go from our funds.
I grade my stocks. I'm what they call a quant, one of the geeks of the stock market.
I want attractive stocks that will benefit from persistent institutional buying pressure.
All I'm trying to do is manage money and take care of my shareholders.
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