Feed: How To Find A Home Run Stock - AggScore: 79.6
New research report on GoIP Global, Inc. (GOIG.PF) released today, November 11, 2009.
To receive a copy, email me at lux.investor@gmail.com
Dunedin, Florida Aug 19, 2009 — Stocks To Watch at investing-performance.com: Stock market blogger John Lux, is an author of “How to Find a Home Run Stock,” today announced that he will initiate coverage of these six issuers namely MONA, GLCC, HTDS, LDSR, GLGT, GOIG.
You can sign up to receive his comments on these stocks emailing us at lux.investor@gmail.com — Please include the issuer’s symbol in the subject li
These are very speculative stocks traded at www.pinksheets.com.
Stock market blogger John Lux, author of “How to Find a Home Run Stock” today announced that he will initiate coverage of Hard to Treat Diseases, Inc., (HTDS on the Pink Sheets).
The company operates two medical subsidiaries, an East European medical company in Serbia, Slavica Bio Chem Co., (www.slavicabiochem.com) and in China, Mellow Hope Inc. (www.mellowhope.com).
Slavica’s focus is the enhancement and modification of existing approved drugs such as “Virazole” for the purpose of chemical repair of damage to the CNS (central nervous system), MS (Multiple Sclerosis), SARS, Hepatitis C and HIV.
Mellow Hope is the biggest exporter of Biological Vaccines in China.
You can sign up to receive our comments on this stock by emailing us at lux.investor@gmail.com Include “HTDS “ in the subject line.
Stock market blogger John Lux, author of “How to Find a Home Run Stock” today announced that he will initiate coverage of Good Life China Corp. (GLCC on the Pink Sheets).
Good Life China is a diversified international company active in China. GLCC has a large and rapidly growing chain of convenience stores serving rural markets with close to 3,000 currently operating licensees.
You can sign up to receive our comments on this stock by emailing us at lux.investor@gmail.com Include “GLCC “ in the subject line.
Stock market blogger John Lux, author of “How to Find a Home Run Stock” today announced that he will initiate coverage of LandStar, Inc. (LDSR on the Pink Sheets).
LDSR is an exploration-stage company and its main operating subsidiary, Hubai Chuguan Industry Co. Ltd., is a Chinese-based company providing overall solutions on settlement and reconstruction for recycling oil and gas.
You can sign up to receive our comments on this stock by emailing us at lux.investor@gmail.com Include “LDSR “ in the subject line.
Stock market blogger John Lux, author of “How to Find a Home Run Stock,” today announced that he will initiate coverage of Mona Corp. (MONA on the Pink Sheets).
Mona is a Bio-Tech company specializing in the manufacturing of products eliminating airborne VOC’s. This is a very speculative stock traded at www.pinksheets.com.
You can sign up to receive our comments on this stock by emailing us at lux.investor@gmail.com Include the word “MONA” in the subject line.
Stock Market for Beginners
The stock market is actually very simple when you know the basics. When you don’t you know that you don’t because you are losing money.
I know one banker who refused to invest in stocks again after taking a big bath.
When I showed him about value and stock prices and how stock prices move, all the mystery was gone. He knew why he had lost and how to make money.
P.S. This guy used to advise trust funds on their investments. Still, he didn’t have much of a clue.
Real knowledge is hard to find.
Stock Market for Dummies
In my opinion, you are a stock market dummy if you keep losing year after year and don’t know why.
When you are a dummy, find out or get out.
Stock Market Basics
So how to do you find out about stock market basics? The answer, like everything else is to go to someone who has been very successful and model what he does.
Learn tennis from a professional star. Learn basketball from Michael Jordan. Learn golf from Tiger Woods.
And learn investing in stocks from the guy with the best numbers. Risk-adjusted numbers of course. Not the options guru who got lucky, but the guy who has few losses and whopping gains. Read my book.
Understanding the Stock Market
When you do that you will find that there are two parts to stocks. One, the value of a company. That will tell you when a stock is cheap and when it is over-priced. Buy when it is cheap. Sell when it is over-priced.
I tell you and demonstrate for you in my book the basics of reading financial statements. You can get away with knowing only the basics because you are not looking for a stock that is selling at 90% of its true value, you are looking for one that is selling at 20% of its true value. If you make a mistake and it is actually selling at 25% or 30% of its real value, you can still make a hell of a lot of money.
The second part is to know how stocks trade – understanding the market. Information moves the market, and information moves in ever-expanding circles. The insiders have it first. Then it goes outward in ever expanding circles. When there is no one left to tell it to, it stops. So the insiders know the news before the securities analysts who know it before the newspapers. Information is valuable when it is secret and scarce, so you want to be as close as possible to the inside.
Note: If you read good news in the newspaper, it is time to sell, not buy. When it is in the paper, everyone who would buy on this news knows it already and has acted.
This means there is no one left to buy. So don’t buy — SELL.
As they say on Wall Street, buy on the rumor, sell on the news.
Knowing the Stock Market Basics
So when you understand the first part, the company, and the second part, the market, you can play the game.
Without these reference points, you are lost.
But it goes without saying, to be superior results, you have to devote more time and effort. That is what separates the amateur from the professional.
I am reminded of the story about the golfer who was trying to perfect his drive and hired a professional to teach him. After much failure to improve, the professional said to the golfer, “Here, watch me do it.” The pro hit a beautiful drive to the green, straight and true.
“I would give my life to be able to hit a golf ball like that,” said the golfer.
“I did,” said the professional.
And the point is that you have to put in the time and effort or let the pros do it.
Learn stock market investing
If you really want to learn how to invest in the stock market, you could spend tons of time reading tons of books, or you could find all of the best rules presented clearly in “How to Find a Home Run Stock.”
The material in the book was developed first for my own benefit as a stock trader, a market maker, and then so I could teach people who wanted to work on the trading desk or become stock pickers. I needed to teach them simply, rapidly, and in a way they could understand. So the material in the book is presented simply. The material in the book is concise. There is not a lot of extra material you have to wade through. You can read and understand clearly what you have to do.
I spent all the time buying and readings tons of books, magazine articles, and newsletters. I paid tons of money for expensive stock market courses that really didn’t deliver. I tested them in real time with real money. If they lost, I threw them away fast. If they worked, I kept using it.
So save your time, save your money, and avoid losing money on other systems. Buy and read my book!
Its that simple.
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Hot Stock Picks
Our purpose here is not to make stock recommendations; we want to teach you how to find your own stocks fast.
So we are not going to now make stock recommendations or give you hot stock picks.
We can analyze some hot stocks and show you why you would have been interested in them, so you can see the method at work and better understand how to find your own sizzling hot stocks.
Take, for example, MNTG.

In the last five months, the stock is up from just under $1 to over $3.48. Not a bad annualized gain – 350% per year plus.
This certainly fits our definition of a Home Run Stock which is double or triple in six months to a year.
Why would this stock have been of interest?
Simple, with a book value of $3.50 and cash per share of $1.43, the stock was clearly undervalued near $1.00. While the P/E ratio is higher than we like, the market value of the company is only 14% of sales, even at a price of $3.48.
Tracking the trend and waiting for a breakout, we would have been buying at prices near $1.00 when it broke its down trend.
This stock also shows us how news travels.
Now that it has been announced that that Ohio will permit slot machines at racetracks, the stock jumped more than 50%.
But it was rising for the last several months. Would not have some people known that this was under consideration? Perhaps they would have nibbled away at this stock and caused the rise to about $2 before the announcement? Would not the insiders or those close to the company been in earlier than general public?
Here is another, similar find, Dana Holding Corp. Dan recently rose 48% in one day, reaching $1.73.
The company is losing money, but the book value is $10.42 and the cash per share is $5.48. So at a low of $0.19, we would consider it dirt cheap when it started its uptrend from its low.
Here’s your chart:

Even had you paid as much as $0.50 for this one, you would have seen it jump 500% in a little over two months.
Boys and girls, can you say “New Ferrari?” If you had only had read the book, this stock would have helped you to pronounce these words faster than you had probably imagined before today.
So using our methods, you have had two of the top gainers in one day. Buying them over the last few months would have given you two home runs. The nice thing is that you would be in them at bargain prices and you could be confident that they would not be going lower.
Had you actually had the gumption to buy “How to Find a Home Run Stock.”
You lose money in the stock market because (1) what you think you know about the market is wrong, and (2) there are things you do not know about the market.
First, much of the conventional wisdom about the market is dead wrong. At one time I was interviewing a young lad graduating from the MBA program from one of the top business schools in the country. His resume was impeccable; he had even interned at Goldman Sachs. He wanted to be an OTC trader and as Vice President of Trading I had to decide his fate. I told him that I was always interested to know the latest wisdom from the top schools and asked him to provide the best of these pearls of wisdom.
He told me that the most important thing he had learned was that stock prices were totally random and that no one could predict them. Naturally I asked him if that were the case, how he would earn a living as a trader.
End of interview.
The fact is that stock prices are not random. While there may be a random element of in trading, prices are largely predictable.
I believe this drivel was dreamed up, or at least used by, incompetent brokers who had to explain losses to their clients.
As my next example, I give you the idea that you have to take more risks to get larger returns.
More drivel. The largest profits are from stocks that start out wildly undervalued, right?
To make a huge gain, a stock has to go from very underpriced to very overpriced, yes? Now I ask you, isn’t there very little risk in buying greatly undervalued stocks? Yet they are the ones that give you the most gain, right?
So the rule actually is that the greatest gains have the least risk!
If you want to find out more about what know that is wrong and what you should know, you have to read my book, “How to Find a Home Run Stock” and do the course.

