Positioning Statements and Principles
We don’t believe in investing in the stock market. Instead, we believe in investing in great businesses. Therefore, we tend to focus more on how the business is performing on an operating basis than we do on stock price volatility. In other words, we are most interested in whether or not the company is generating growth in earnings and cash flows and thereby increasing their intrinsic value. True Worth™ valuation is what we monitor and measure ...{{{membership|membership}}}
Why is this preview so short? --If you are tired of "seeking alpha" and listening to "fools," then don't be a YAHOO! If you're tired of buying the tops and selling the bottoms, you've come to the right place. We offer news, fundamental, and technical analysis not available anywhere else. Membership includes a "members only" discussion forum and live real-time chat room. Join SatwavesPro.com today to see the full version of this article, and much more!.
Membership Plans ON SALE RIGHT NOW! Click Subscribe
Tags: afl, BBY, cvx, Earnings, esi, gme, investing for income, lll, long ideas, RIMM, teva
This entry was posted on 09/02/2011 at 10:30 am and is filed under Market Watch, Sector Watch. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
Great article. That is the way I like to invest. And getting in when there is room to grow is exciting. A lot of reasons one of the eight might falter, but I dought more than one, if that. But any serius investor has to do due diligence and evaluate periodically.
I’m not one to usually question financial experts, but I do know the videogame industry. Game Stop will become as irrelevant and bankrupt as Blockbuster & Hollywood Video did within a few years. The distribution system is changing. Sony, Microsoft and Nintendo (and other independent game distributors/developers) will eventually make all new software content direct downloadable digital, leaving Gamestop out of the market. And if you think their “used” game market sales will remain strong, it won’t. The game developer/distributors are trying to recoup some of the money they feel Gamestop has stolen with their stores buying back games, for pennies on the dollar, and then re-selling their products used for a few dollars less than new retail version. With upcoming games releases the distributors are going to force used game buyers to pay $10 or more to unlock the used game they before they can even play it online. Since Gamestop only charges on the average about $10 less for used games over new ones, game players will simply stop buying used product and eventually do direct digital downloads of new product which will be cheaper than what Gamestop will be selling new product for in their stores.
I don’t know a lot about other business, but trust me on this.