Ahead of the Curve: Nine Simple Ways to Create Wealth by Spotting Stock Trends
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Product Description
The most important edge you can develop in becoming a smart investor is knowing how to spot an emerging trend before the pundits are advertising it and everyone jumps on board. As global investment specialist and popular AOL Finance Editor and Money Coach Hilary Kramer knows, picking the stocks that are hot today doesn't give you that edge -- it just makes you part of the pack. Instead you need to learn how to get ahead of the curve, discovering the trends that will lead you to the best up-and-coming companies well before others are on to them. You don't need elaborate calculations or a degree in finance to discover great investment opportunities. As Kramer reveals in this fascinating and indispensable book, the clues are all around you, hiding in plain sight -- you just have to learn the secrets of spotting them as you go about your everyday life.
Offering a wealth of specific examples from her own wildly successful investing career, Kramer divulges the remarkably effective techniques she uses to spot trends: nine powerful yet simple methods for discovering trend indicators all around you. Who would have thought that, in the days of the Atkins diet anti-carb craze, a company called Panera Bread -- now a booming chain -- would be a great investment? Hilary Kramer knew it would be. How did she know, way ahead of the crowd, that Embraer, an aircraft manufacturer located in Brazil, of all places, was becoming a market leader and had great growth potential? She knew how to spot the trend. As she shows, if you follow her simple methods, you, too, will be able to:
• Identify reliable market trends early• Spot other, secondary, trends that will be sparked by more obvious trends
• Discover the clues in everyday life that will lead you to great growth companies
• Evaluate which companies among the competition are the best investments
• Recognize when a trend is peaking and it's time to sell
Armed with her time-tested techniques, your own eyes and ears become your most reliable and powerful resources for market-beating wealth creation, not only today but for the rest of your life.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #326177 in Books
- Published on: 2007-09-18
- Original language: English
- Binding: Hardcover
- 208 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"Hilary Kramer makes picking stocks as easy as 1-2-3. After reading Ahead of the Curve you will no longer be a 'follower' when it comes to investing. This is one of the few financial books you won't want to put down. Get it!"
-- Jennifer Openshaw, author of The Millionaire Zone and founder of themillionairezone.com
"Hilary Kramer's insightful perspectives on the markets and what may be the 'next big thing' have never been more timely and important to a broad base of Americans."
-- Ken and Daria Dolan, cohosts of The Dolans nationally syndicated radio show
"I've followed Hilary Kramer's investment methodology for years. She combines close attention to detail, objectivity in judging whether a strategy is working, and an empathy for others. All this gives her a critical edge in spotting investment opportunities in social trends. In this book, she communicates her strategies in a clear and rigorous manner."
-- John dizard, columnist, Financial Times
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Play the Six Degrees of Making Bacon
The Ripple Effect of Trends
Most people are familiar with the party game Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon: "I'm friends with Sally who has a cousin who designs sets for a director who works with Kevin Bacon." The point of the game is to link any person to Kevin Bacon through six steps or less, and it illustrates the larger "Six Degrees of Separation" theory that every person in the world is only six contacts away from knowing every other person in the world.
I have made millions by making a different set of connections and connecting the dots to an overlooked pot of gold. One of my most valuable techniques for picking stocks is to look for the "unlikely suspects." These are the companies that thrive as a supplier or the ancillary beneficiary of a trend, societal change, or economic or political driver.
While social scientists have studied how we as people are interconnected, little research has been dedicated to the significance of the relationship chain in financial trends. Economists have drawn up complicated equations for many economic models, but how an obvious trend causes other trends is relatively uncharted territory for even the professional investor. As a result, mapping out causal connections in trends might be one of the best kept secrets to identifying and profiting from these trends. The party game's goal is getting to Kevin Bacon in six steps. In financial trend spotting, finding a service or product that's separated -- whether by two, three, or six steps -- from a clear trend can lead to a great investment. For that matter, identifying a company even farther separated, whether 10, 15, or 20 degrees, can sometimes be profitable.
The best part is that it isn't rocket science.
Take the case of corn ethanol. With the rapidly growing interest in ethanol as a more environmentally friendly substitute for gasoline in the last few years, corn prices have skyrocketed. Many investors have jumped to make money off this trend. By now, the prices of corn have already jumped, leaving less potential to profit off the trend. Rather than trying to get in on something that has already become highly valued, you can make better money by applying the Six Degrees of Making Bacon principle, and investing in more affordable options that will benefit from the newfound popularity of corn. While everyone and their brother will be investing in the trend itself, you'll be surprised how many people don't think to invest beyond the trend.
If demand for corn has risen dramatically, farmers are going to be trying to meet that demand. What products or services do they need in order to increase production of corn? For one, they're going to be buying new tractors and other farming equipment, as well as more pesticides and fertilizer. So you might want to look at companies like AGCO Corporation or John Deere, which make tractors, combines, sprayers, and other equipment. Or check out companies like Monsanto, which produces Roundup, a pesticide often used on corn and soybeans (another source of biofuels). Syngenta is another example: among other things, they develop high-performing seeds, including corn seed, and are creating a hybrid corn specifically for improved biofuel. Then there are middlemen like Archer Daniels Midland, which stores, transports, and processes agricultural products, as well as train manufacturers like American Railcar, which makes and services trains used to carry agricultural products. The list could go on and on.
I find the easiest way to play the Six Degrees game is to draw diagrams. It's fun to uncover how an obvious trend has a ripple effect. You can usually find products, services, and companies worldwide in every direction that are positively affected by a trend.
Don't just think in a linear way. The ripple effects of just one trend can take you numerous steps in many different directions. In order to play the Six Degrees of Making Bacon, all you need is a bit of creativity.
Let's look at an example. Beginning in January 2001, interest rates started to drop. When the Federal Reserve Board lowers the federal funds rate, the prime rate follows the trend downward, as do mortgage rates. The trend of falling interest rates invariably lights a fire under the housing market. When mortgage interest rates are low, people can afford to buy houses that they couldn't buy when the interest rates were higher.
If you bet on housing to be a big market as we headed into the twenty-first century, you were right. The value of residential real estate in the United States rose by about ten trillion dollars from 2000 to 2005, with the average home costing over 60 percent more than it had at the end of 1999. So just one degree away from the trend of falling interest rates, you would have found a great way to profit. But now take it several steps farther. Cheap mortgages mean more people will take a mortgage, which means there will be a spurt in the new-home market. Home builders are ready to rock when those rates fall.
Now take it farther still. When home building is on the rise, what other products and services are positively affected? Building materials, construction crews, home design companies, for starters. When mortgage companies do well, who else does well? Sub-prime lenders, secondary mortgage buyers, and banks, among others.
Once you start the game it's hard to stop. In our country of hungry consumerism, low interest rates also tempt people to stop saving altogether. In fact, they start to borrow at low interest rates and to "cash-out refinance" so they can buy goods they've always wanted (but really can't afford) -- a new SUV, a cruise, a Jacuzzi on the back deck, expensive shoes. How do they do most of their borrowing? In the form of credit cards. This is good news for the credit companies as well as the companies servicing the credit companies -- including not just credit card equipment makers but credit counselors and the debt collection companies.
It is no coincidence that the stock of American Express grew steadily in these five years, almost doubling in price, and I recommended its stock consistently on Fox News from 2001 to 2003. It's also no coincidence that Mastercard had a highly successful IPO in 2006, with a nearly 300 percent gain in its stock price.
So now you have drawn yourself a map showing how one trend can spawn so many others. But how can this map be used to make bacon? How does this information help the savvy trend spotter actually make money? Identify publicly traded companies who specialize in the fields that are some degrees separated from an obvious trend source, and consider investing in these companies.
For example, on my AOL blog, I recommended West Corporation in November 2005, back when it was trading just below $40.89. This company collects receivables for other corporations. Knowing that America's debt was getting out of hand, after being spurred on by the rise in home-equity loans, I believed West Corp.'s collection services would be in increasing demand. Sure enough, in late 2006, West Corp. was bought by Quadrangle, and each investor received $48.75 per share. Someone who had bought $2,700 in West Corp. stock back in November 2005 would have sold at $3,219 -- for a gain of $519, or nearly 20 percent. Not a bad return for a year!
Take another example. During the housing boom, I invested in New Century Financial, which offers sub-prime residential loans. Sub-prime mortgages are high-risk. They are higher-rate mortgages offered to people with bad credit, and the majority of them come with an adjustable rate (they are often referred to as "ARMs"). As interest rates started to rise, I sold New Century, knowing that the increase would be worst for sub-prime borrowers, who tend to be poorer and who often are unable to shoulder the rise in their ARM. Sure enough, at the time of this writing, many of these people are defaulting on their sub-prime mortgages, and New Century has filed for bankruptcy. I'm glad I got out when I did.
In response to the housing boom, I also bought shares of the high-end retailer Restoration Hardware, which sports attractive -- and overpriced -- home furnishings and accessories. I also made money in Black & Decker, which was selling all those drills and saws to entrepreneurial contractors and do-it-yourselfers.
One of the great things about buying stocks that rise and fall with the housing market is that it's a way to "play" the real estate market, without having to spend the money (and take on the mortgage) for actual property. In the end, I made more money in the housing-boom market than most "house flippers" ever imagined -- all without ever buying a piece of real estate!
Once you start thinking this way, you'll easily spin your own webs of trends. For example, think about demographics. The aging of Baby Boomers means more future health care needs, such as hospitalization, pharmaceuticals, artificial joints, and even ambulance transport. I own stock in Rural/Metro, a small ambulance company based in Arizona -- a place full of senior citizens. In time, I am sure that stock will double. I also recommended Sunrise Senior Living in early 2006, right after a delayed earnings announcement caused its stock price to dip. I predicted it would drop from $35 to $25 but then climb back up to $45. Since then, it dropped to nearly $26, but has already come back above $40. Why? Because it is a smart company offering specialized assisted-living services to seniors. With the aging of the U.S. population, I believe Sunrise is destined for decades of strong growth.
Similarly, Cantel Medical produces sterilization and sanitization systems as well as other medical supplies for hospitals, dentists, and doctors. With these products likely to be in greater demand owing to an aging population, it's no surprise that Cantel's price rose nearly 25 percent in the six months after I picked it. Then there's Bio-Reference Lab, which offers clinical laboratory testing ...
