Fool’s Gold


Methods
for Avoiding “Money Trap” Stocks

 

By
Anthony Rhodes

 

 

There
are fewer items more enticing for an investor than the prospect of
purchasing an underperforming stock just prior to it
dramatically
moving towards the upside. Discovery of these “hidden gems” are
the stuff of legend, and can instantly catapult an average or dreary
portfolio to
astronomical
heights,
while
placing

a vainglorious
feather
in the cap of the investor that discovered it, in
the
process
.

The
search for these
incognito
treasures
can encompass the full spectrum of the market,
ranging
from
small cap to large, growth stocks to income, and all sectors in
between.
Truthfully,
it is th
is
elusiveness
that makes their discovery s
uch
a

difficult
goal
to
attain,
and
contributes
overwhelmingly
to
their
eventual
finding
being
such
a point of
boisterous
jubilation.

However,
during
this pursuit, we can
sometimes
be
deceived into believing that certain stocks, which look and
act
like these gems, are identical
to
them,
when
in fact,
they
are
nothing
more
than
their
exact
opposites.

These
“money t
rap
stocks will be our topic for this week,
as
I explain how to differentiate
the
genuine
from the
counterfeit,
and protect your portfolio from
the
consequences
created by
their
deceptive
appearances.
At
our finale, you will hopefully learn the same valuable lesson which
dumbfounded
the
nugget prospectors of the Old West,
and
eventually
reduced
their
livelihood
to
financially
ruinous
outcomes,
and
sometimes,
even
suicidal
ends
.
I
am, of course, speaking of
the
age old lesson
that
all
that
glitters
is not gold.

The Alluring Shimmer of the Blue Chip

Of
all the stocks likely to temp
t
an investor into taking a gamble on a future upswing, none are more
compelling than blue chips. These large, household names
have
a long history of reliable growth, and can prove simply irresistible
to
some,
as they view their underperformance as a temporary ordeal, and
undoubtedly
certain

to take a positive turn for the better.
It
is this logic which makes
their
situation paradoxical; how can such a large company trade at such a
competitive discount to the overall market? The answer lies in
this
simple
idiom:
while the stock market
exists
in the present, its prices are
generally
reflective
of the future. When blue chip stocks trade at a discount, analysts
have deemed that the company’s future earnings are
likely
to

be
sub-par,
and that
its
current price is
more
indicative

of the earnings which it is likely to produce.
The
overriding lesson being presented here

is
simply to

always beware of the underperforming blue chip that entices you with
future promises of gold
en
returns
.

The Little Nugget That Could

The opposite of this spectrum includes taking a bet on the small, under covered penny stock, whose focus is a relatively obscure section of a certain field. We’ve all heard grandiose stories about the once unknown company which catapulted to prominence, and these tales stoke the flames that we, too, can produce similar results, if we simply find the ideal candidate, at the correct time. Oddly missing in these stories, of course, are the untold number of investors who lost millions of dollars chasing the other penny stocks, over the same period of time, which fizzled into oblivion, and left them licking their proverbial wounds in the aftermath. There’s a good reason why penny stocks are categorized as such, and finding that one winner amongst a sea of failures is tantamount to winning the lottery. I understand that the risk/reward ratio lies in favor of the investor, but those monies could be much better spent on other candidates with cleaner balance sheets, and much clearer paths to success.

Both within the stock market and beyond it, whenever we go in pursuit of life’s treasures, we also run the risk of finding ourselves deceived by imitations of the authentic. Our desire to seek the rewards which provide our lives with joy and meaning, exposes us to falsities which can thwart our powers of observation, and trick us into believing that they are, indeed, the prize which we have sought all along.

These hollow illusions will succeed in their task, only if we refuse to look beneath the veneer of the spurious images on which they project. For when we do, their fragile disguises are finally exposed to the light of day, and we can then confidently marshal on in pursuit of the genuine article.    

(Anthony Rhodes is the President and owner of wealth management firm The Planning Perspective www.theplanningperspective.com )

 

Tags:

We will be happy to hear your thoughts

Leave a reply

Som2ny Network
Logo
Compare items
  • Total (0)
Compare
0