Showing posts with label investing trends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label investing trends. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

The How To Find Big Stocks Newsletter Launches



In the book How To Find Big Stocks, we show how to spot trends and the companies that will be big in them.

We received plenty of emails asking what stocks we liked so the obvious thing to do was share what waves we are following and highlight companies in them with a newsletter. How To Find Big Stocks Newsletter

The newsletter ($14.99/month) identifies breakthrough technologies, investing trends and the companies with a competitive advantage in them. (this is the same info we share with some of the top hedge funds)

Last month we highlighted 3 companies, 1 is still up 200% and another is up 50%. Not bad for the first month. These are companies completely hidden from Wall St. (we are not compensated by ANY companies we highlight)

This month we highlight 2 companies:

1. Is probably the most disruptive company we have seen in a long time. Disrupts SEVERAL industries with 2 types of technology

2. Is what I call a Powerball Play. One of those plays that is so big and so risky you have to throw a couple dollars at it.

If you liked the book, you will love the newsletter.



The tool that turned $10,000 into $2,800,000 in 2 years. HowToFindBigStocks.com

Monday, February 13, 2012

The "Oil" Of the Digital Age



Privacy is one of the investing trends I have said to watch.

In my book (How To Find Big Stocks), I devote an entire chapter to why privacy (and companies that protect it) will offer some exciting investing opportunities.

Every email, text, picture, Facebook (post/comment/picture) that is transmitted when "send" is hit..is stored on a server.

 The average user has 736 pieces of this personal data collected every day, and different service providers retain this information for anywhere between 12 and 60 months.


While that might not make a difference today, it might in the future.


"personal data is the oil of the digital age". 

From NY Times 
Start-Ups Seek to Help Users Put a Price on Their Personal Data

 People have been willing to give away their data while the companies make money. But there is some momentum for the idea that personal data could function as a kind of online currency, to be cashed in directly or exchanged for other items of value.



The tool that turned $10,000 into $2,800,000 in 2 years. HowToFindBigStocks.com Follow Me on Pinterest