One of the biggest challenges in investing in the stock market is picking the best stocks. In my book, “The Confident Investor” I teach my readers how to pick Good Companies. This page is designed to show the raw performance of these companies. It is not designed to show my personal portfolio, which may or may not exceed the performance stated here. Since I use the trading system described in my book, you can assume that I beat the performance recorded here.

I have created three tables below. The first table is the general market – NASDAQ and S&P500. Every investor should try to beat the average of these two indexes. In this report, my larger Watch List beats this metric easily.

I must caution you, I do not actually propose that you “buy and hold” any given stock, but rather you should “buy to hold” the stock. My investing technique teaches you to efficiently move your money to the stocks that are currently increasing in value the most. I use my Watch List for this work, these are Good Companies that I wait for great buying opportunities. This strategy is well described in my book, “The Confident Investor” and tends to be a very safe strategy in bear markets while typically still providing above market returns in a bull or flat market.

My Short Term Watch List are 15 companies that are hot right now. I select this list every quarter. I evenly divide a portion of my portfolio among these 15 companies. The next quarter, I add or delete companies as necessary and then re-balance the portfolio. This tends to be a more risky strategy because I don’t bail out on bad stock movement (at least until the end of the quarter). In a bull market or a flat market, these very well-run and high-performing companies tend to beat the general market by a significant margin.

BL-TCI-cover

You can purchase my book wherever books are sold such as Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and Books A Million. It is available in paperback as well as e-book formats for Nook, Kindle, and iPad.

Stock Indexes Performance

1 week ago 1 month ago 1 quarter ago 1 year ago
Index Close Profit % Close Profit % Close Profit % Close Profit
^GSPC $2,383.12 -0.44% $2,316.10 2.44% $2,256.96 5.12% $2,022.19 17.33%
^IXIC $5,870.75 -0.15% $5,734.13 2.23% $5,412.54 8.30% $4,748.47 23.44%

Week average for Indexes: -0.30%
Month average for Indexes: 2.33%
Quarter average for Indexes: 6.71%
Year average for Indexes: 20.39%

Watch List Performance

1 week ago 1 month ago 1 quarter ago 1 year ago
Stock Close Profit % Close Profit % Close Profit % Close Profit
AAPL $139.78 -0.46% $132.12 5.31% $112.81 23.34% $100.14 38.94%
ABMD $120.73 0.40% $108.64 11.57% $119.06 1.81% $87.66 38.27%
ALGN $104.04 1.23% $96.97 8.61% $98.53 6.89% $72.30 45.67%
ALXN $134.99 -5.69% $126.51 0.63% $115.08 10.63% $139.27 -8.59%
AMAT $36.87 3.39% $35.22 8.24% $31.91 19.46% $19.76 92.87%
AMZN $849.88 0.30% $827.46 3.02% $760.12 12.15% $569.61 49.66%
AYI $209.57 0.96% $212.16 -0.27% $248.16 -14.74% $215.18 -1.67%
AZPN $59.30 -1.38% $55.97 4.48% $54.30 7.70% $34.86 67.76%
BABA $103.31 0.08% $102.36 1.01% $92.47 11.81% $74.01 39.70%
BWLD $154.25 -1.10% $159.55 -4.39% $174.25 -12.45% $160.88 -5.18%
CBPO $100.32 -2.44% $114.06 -14.19% $113.55 -13.81% $108.25 -9.59%
COF $93.94 -1.86% $88.40 4.29% $89.01 3.57% $69.50 32.65%
CRUS $53.65 2.07% $54.19 1.05% $57.66 -5.03% $34.93 56.77%
CVCO $119.05 -2.44% $111.20 4.45% $101.40 14.55% $90.29 28.64%
DPZ $189.04 -1.22% $186.37 0.19% $161.49 15.63% $130.68 42.89%
EW $92.44 0.32% $90.34 2.66% $88.93 4.28% $87.63 5.83%
EXR $79.08 -5.49% $75.00 -0.35% $73.95 1.07% $84.55 -11.60%
FB $137.17 1.18% $134.19 3.43% $117.77 17.85% $109.41 26.85%
GOOGL $849.08 1.45% $834.85 3.18% $807.90 6.62% $744.87 15.65%
GTN $14.45 -2.42% $12.60 11.90% $10.20 38.24% $12.74 10.68%
GWR $73.92 -5.05% $74.19 -5.39% $79.26 -11.44% $60.50 16.02%
HDSN $7.13 -0.84% $7.65 -7.58% $7.65 -7.58% $3.60 96.39%
HOG $58.82 2.09% $56.98 5.40% $60.02 0.05% $47.64 26.06%
HSKA $88.48 9.69% $83.97 15.58% $68.80 41.06% $32.94 194.63%
HZO $22.55 -0.89% $21.55 3.71% $21.00 6.43% $18.05 23.82%
LNCE $39.81 0.33% $39.03 2.33% $38.43 3.92% $30.63 30.41%
LULU $65.70 -0.94% $67.62 -3.76% $69.71 -6.64% $64.42 1.02%
MCK $152.53 -3.19% $139.31 6.00% $146.22 0.99% $165.26 -10.65%
MEI $44.50 -3.71% $41.80 2.51% $42.36 1.17% $28.00 53.02%
MET $54.83 -1.48% $52.91 2.10% $56.19 -3.87% $42.75 26.35%
MIDD $140.20 -1.78% $137.13 0.42% $137.89 -0.13% $102.94 33.78%
MNST $48.04 -2.54% $44.01 6.38% $44.27 5.76% $44.62 4.93%
MRK $66.58 -1.47% $64.15 2.26% $61.25 7.10% $51.99 26.19%
NFLX $139.14 1.26% $144.82 -2.71% $122.83 14.70% $97.66 44.27%
NVDA $98.43 0.70% $113.48 -12.65% $89.48 10.78% $31.99 209.86%
PCLN $1,735.10 1.10% $1,646.51 6.54% $1,536.78 14.15% $1,326.87 32.21%
REGN $378.66 2.53% $359.87 7.88% $387.10 0.29% $377.12 2.95%
SAM $161.35 -9.14% $162.50 -9.78% $172.15 -14.84% $184.02 -20.33%
SBUX $57.10 -4.50% $56.22 -3.01% $58.51 -6.80% $56.67 -3.78%
STZ $158.76 -0.76% $155.45 1.36% $153.00 2.98% $140.63 12.04%
SUI $81.88 -3.33% $80.27 -1.40% $73.76 7.30% $66.62 18.82%
SWKS $94.92 3.43% $92.21 6.47% $76.03 29.13% $71.68 36.96%
THRM $36.15 -0.55% $35.50 1.27% $33.45 7.47% $39.69 -9.42%
TMO $160.16 -0.52% $154.89 2.87% $145.03 9.86% $139.79 13.98%
TRN $26.85 -3.35% $28.10 -7.65% $28.05 -7.49% $18.63 39.29%
UA $18.64 -4.77% $19.04 -6.78% $27.61 -35.71% $0.00 0.00%
ULTA $278.15 2.97% $269.84 6.14% $251.61 13.83% $191.62 49.47%

Week average for Watch List stocks: -0.80% compared to indexes for same period at: -0.30%
Month average for Watch List stocks: 1.56% compared to indexes for same period at: 2.33%
Quarter average for Watch List stocks: 4.94% compared to indexes for same period at: 6.71%
Year average for Watch List stocks: 32.01% compared to indexes for same period at: 20.39%

Short Term Watch List

1 week ago 1 month ago 1 quarter ago 1 year ago
Stock Close Profit % Close Profit % Close Profit % Close Profit
ABMD $120.73 0.40% $108.64 11.57% $119.06 1.81% $87.66 38.27%
ALGN $104.04 1.23% $96.97 8.61% $98.53 6.89% $72.30 45.67%
AMAT $36.87 3.39% $35.22 8.24% $31.91 19.46% $19.76 92.87%
AMZN $849.88 0.30% $827.46 3.02% $760.12 12.15% $569.61 49.66%
AYI $209.57 0.96% $212.16 -0.27% $248.16 -14.74% $215.18 -1.67%
CBPO $100.32 -2.44% $114.06 -14.19% $113.55 -13.81% $108.25 -9.59%
CRUS $53.65 2.07% $54.19 1.05% $57.66 -5.03% $34.93 56.77%
DPZ $189.04 -1.22% $186.37 0.19% $161.49 15.63% $130.68 42.89%
EW $92.44 0.32% $90.34 2.66% $88.93 4.28% $87.63 5.83%
HDSN $7.13 -0.84% $7.65 -7.58% $7.65 -7.58% $3.60 96.39%
HSKA $88.48 9.69% $83.97 15.58% $68.80 41.06% $32.94 194.63%
NVDA $98.43 0.70% $113.48 -12.65% $89.48 10.78% $31.99 209.86%
STZ $158.76 -0.76% $155.45 1.36% $153.00 2.98% $140.63 12.04%
SUI $81.88 -3.33% $80.27 -1.40% $73.76 7.30% $66.62 18.82%
ULTA $278.15 2.97% $269.84 6.14% $251.61 13.83% $191.62 49.47%

Week average for Short Term Watch List stocks: 0.90% compared to indexes for same period at: -0.30%
Month average for Short Term Watch List stocks: 1.49% compared to indexes for same period at: 2.33%
Quarter average for Short Term Watch List stocks: 6.33% compared to indexes for same period at: 6.71%
Year average for Short Term Watch List stocks: 60.13% compared to indexes for same period at: 20.39%

Total Execution Time: 51.891932964325 Sec

This information was calculated on Mar 12, 2017 and is based on the closing value of the most recent trading day which may not be today.
This information is based on the Yahoo Historical Pricing and is only as good or as current as that data.
My Short Term Watch List (including $ULTA) grew by 60.13% over the last year

My Watch List (including $GTN) grew by 32.01% over the last year

My Short Term Watch List (including $ALGN) grew by 60.13% over the last year

People in the U.S. ages 65 to 74 hold more than five times the borrowing obligations Americans their age held two decades ago, according to an analysis of federal data by the Employee Benefit Research Institute, a nonpartisan, nonprofit policy researcher.

Paying it off won’t be easy. Median savings for U.S. households nearest retirement age has dropped 32% in the past decade to $14,500, according to an analysis of federal data by the Economic Policy Institute, a left-leaning think tank.

The financial crisis weakened many households through lost jobs, pay cuts, home-price declines or a combination of all three. Credit-card debt and medical bills have climbed for many nearing retirement. Some people had children late in life, pushing college tuition costs toward the tail-end of their careers.

“This is the first time where we have seen such a high degree of debt held by people at such a late stage of life,” said Torsten Slok, chief international economist at Deutsche Bank AG.

As a result, many senior citizens will either have to work longer, move to less expensive places or pare back their spending—choices that economists say are likely to put a drag on the U.S. economy.

Debt levels have traditionally peaked for people in their 40s, said Meta Brown, a former senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. That is changing. Debt held by borrowers between the ages of 50 and 80 increased roughly 60% between 2003 and 2015, while debt among younger borrowers declined, according to Federal Reserve data.

“We’re in new territory,” said Ms. Brown, who researched debt trends of senior citizens while at the Fed.

Older Americans now have more credit-card debt than younger people for the first time, a reversal from the past, according to an analysis of federal data by the AARP Public Policy Institute. And the amount of student loans held by people 65 and older is accelerating faster than the general population, the Government Accountability Office found.

There are conflicting theories about the impact of growing senior debt. Some economists say they aren’t worried because older Americans traditionally have a lower default rate than the general population. In addition, if seniors work past typical retirement ages, they will earn more wages to tax, have more disposable income and gain a few more years to bolster nest eggs.

Yet it won’t be easy for older Americans to keep working. Some 60% of retirees say they left the workforce earlier than they had planned, according to the Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies. Only one of seven of the oldest boomers—many turning 71 this year—have full-time jobs, according to a 2016 Gallup poll.

“The narrative that Boomers would continue to work forever hasn’t turned out to be true,” said Frank Newport, Gallup’s editor in chief.

Some economists say the growing number of penny-pinching older Americans—and a shrinking U.S. workforce—will depress personal incomes and purchases of everything from shoes to houses, hobbling the economy.

“It’s really hard to get out of this slow-growth trap when your labor force is barely growing,” said John Lonski, a chief capital-markets economist at Moody’s Analytics.

Debt obligations also leave seniors increasingly vulnerable to a recession or another drop in home values, economists said.

“Will they take this debt to the grave? It’s a question begging to be answered,” said Catherine Collinson, president of the Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies.

Source: With $15 Left in the Bank, a Baby Boomer Makes Peace With Less – WSJ

[s2If !current_user_can(access_s2member_level1)]This information is exclusively for the registered owners of my book, “The Confident Investor” and will not be visible to other visitors to this site (you must be logged in to this site as a book owner in order to see the following analysis).

If you have registered and cannot see the technical indicators on each stock of my Watch List below, make sure you are logged in and refresh your browser.

As an example of the success that my book teaches, in a 7 year time frame from January 3, 2006 to December 31, 2012, Decker Corporation increased 304.7% if you would have implemented a pure buy-and-hold strategy. If you would implemented the strategy that I explain in my book, The Confident Investor, you would have seen a 371.2% return on your investment. This is a 21.8% increase on the profit percentage.

Can your investment system beat the market by that much?

BL-TCI-cover

You can purchase my book wherever books are sold such as AmazonBarnes and Noble, and Books A Million. It is available in paperback as well as e-book formats for NookKindle, and iPad

[/s2If]

[s2If current_user_can(access_s2member_level1)]Thank you for being a registered book owner. Please remember that the below indicators should NOT be considered signals for you to invest in or sell any of these stocks. Rather, you should double check all analysis and understand that the decision to invest in or sell one of these stocks is purely your own. This information is purely provided for educational purposes.

Read More →

Symbol Stock Price change today
ULTA Ulta Beauty Inc. 4.62%
HOG Harley-Davidson Inc. Common St 2.21%
AMAT Applied Materials Inc. 1.98%
AYI Acuity Brands Inc (Holding Comp 1.61%
MIDD The Middleby Corporation 1.47%
THRM Gentherm Inc 1.27%
CVCO Cavco Industries Inc. 1.26%
STZ Constellation Brands Inc. Comm 1.14%
HZO MarineMax Inc. (FL) Common St 1.13%
DPZ Domino’s Pizza Inc Common Stock 1.10%
SWKS Skyworks Solutions Inc. 1.07%
TMO Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc Co 0.98%
CRUS Cirrus Logic Inc. 0.87%
ABMD ABIOMED Inc. 0.87%
LNCE Snyder’s-Lance Inc. 0.76%
MET MetLife Inc. Common Stock 0.75%
ALXN Alexion Pharmaceuticals Inc. 0.60%
NVDA NVIDIA Corporation 0.59%
TRN Trinity Industries Inc. Common 0.50%
GWR Genesee & Wyoming Inc. Class A 0.49%
GOOGL Alphabet Inc. 0.416%
FB Facebook Inc. 0.40%
UA Under Armour Inc. Class C Comm 0.34%
AAPL Apple Inc. 0.33%
PCLN The Priceline Group Inc. 0.28%
NFLX Netflix Inc. 0.26%
BABA Alibaba Group Holding Limited A 0.15%
LULU lululemon athletica inc. 0.12%
MEI Methode Electronics Inc. Commo 0.12%
COF Capital One Financial Corporati 0.09%
BWLD Buffalo Wild Wings Inc. -0.03%
ALGN Align Technology Inc. -0.04%
AMZN Amazon.com Inc. -0.06%
HDSN Hudson Technologies Inc. -0.28%
EW Edwards Lifesciences Corporatio -0.34%
MNST Monster Beverage Corporation -0.40%
MRK Merck & Company Inc. Common St -0.44%
REGN Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. -0.49%
AZPN Aspen Technology Inc. -0.56%
SUI Sun Communities Inc. Common St -0.59%
CBPO China Biologic Products Inc. -0.85%
MCK McKesson Corporation Common Sto -1.20%
SBUX Starbucks Corporation -1.20%
EXR Extra Space Storage Inc Common -1.95%
HSKA Heska Corporation -2.30%
GTN Gray Communications Systems In -2.42%
SAM Boston Beer Company Inc. (The) -3.43%

[s2If !current_user_can(access_s2member_level1)]This information is exclusively for the registered owners of my book, “The Confident Investor” and will not be visible to other visitors to this site (you must be logged in to this site as a book owner in order to see the following analysis).

If you have registered and cannot see the technical indicators on each stock of my Watch List below, make sure you are logged in and refresh your browser.

As an example of the success that my book teaches, in a 7 year time frame from January 3, 2006 to December 31, 2012, Decker Corporation increased 304.7% if you would have implemented a pure buy-and-hold strategy. If you would implemented the strategy that I explain in my book, The Confident Investor, you would have seen a 371.2% return on your investment. This is a 21.8% increase on the profit percentage.

Can your investment system beat the market by that much?

BL-TCI-cover

You can purchase my book wherever books are sold such as AmazonBarnes and Noble, and Books A Million. It is available in paperback as well as e-book formats for NookKindle, and iPad

[/s2If]

[s2If current_user_can(access_s2member_level1)]Thank you for being a registered book owner. Please remember that the below indicators should NOT be considered signals for you to invest in or sell any of these stocks. Rather, you should double check all analysis and understand that the decision to invest in or sell one of these stocks is purely your own. This information is purely provided for educational purposes.

Read More →