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Strategies & Market Trends : 50% Gains Investing -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dale Baker who wrote (29886)4/20/2002 2:20:05 PM
From: Dale BakerRead Replies (2) | Respond to of 118717
 
50% GAINS PORTFOLIO – APRIL 20

KEY RATIOS:

TECH - 19%
NON-TECH - 81%

CASH - (-9.5)%

OPTIONS – 2%

BONDS – 5.5%

IN: HHLF (12.92), RAZF (.55), MCD-short (28.5), LLTC-short (43.47)

OUT: ILA, WTM, WM calls, HC calls, BPUR puts, CRYP calls, ILA calls, GSPT puts

TOP TEN: MAXF, ACGL, FF, NFI, BFCFB, RKT, OCAS, RNE, PMACA, WG. **Percentage of total portfolio: 56.5%. Top five holdings: 38%. Total portfolio: 47 companies (stocks, options and shorts).

CURRENT SHORTS AND PUTS: ARIA-short (5.68), LLTC-short (43.47), MCD-short (28.5)

SECTORS: Finance 49%, Retail 11.5%, Energy 8%, Real Estate 6.5%, Bonds 5.5%, Business Services 5%, Biotech 4.5%, Transportation 3.5%, Europe 3.5%, Communications Infrastructure 3%, Defense 2.5%, Software 2.5%, Asia 2.5%, Internet 2%, Gold 1%, Communications Services .05%, Cash (-9.5)%.

**Quicken 2002 calculates sector %’s as a total of all investments, including margin. Total Sectors plus/minus Cash will equal 100%.

HOLDINGS:

CATEGORY - STOCK (COST BASIS updated periodically to reflect averaging into positions)

FINANCE - ACGL (18.31), BFCFB (7.55), FF (13.25), GGAL (1.27), IMH (7.76), MAXF (3.48), NFI (9.95), OCAS (17.1), PMACA (20.44), QBEIF (3.35)

RETAIL - MCD-short (28.5), MHM (13.7), OI (14.96), PERY (12.05), RKT (19.01)

ENERGY - GW (3.9), HHLF (12.92), PGO Aug 7.5 calls (1), PGO Nov 5 calls (2.2), WG (14.91)

REAL ESTATE - AHR (11.50), FB (26.77)

BONDS - LVLT 2008 11% Bonds (58), NXTL Sep 2007 bonds (76.50)

BUSINESS SERVICES - EFDS (17.86), RAZF (.55), VWKS (5.93)

BIOTECH/HEALTHCARE - ARIA-short (5.68), AVD (18.5), SPEX (7.6), USON June 10 calls (.55)

TRANSPORTATION - AN (12.75), SPAR (8.21)

EUROPE - RNE (18.7)

COMMUNICATIONS INFRASTRUCTURE - ELMG (19.69), VSAT (12.50)

DEFENSE - ORBT (3.15), PVAT (3.6)

SOFTWARE - ELTE (11.7), HQNT (.74), PVSW (3.2)

ASIA - EWM (5.92)

INTERNET - SFTBF (19.1)

GOLD - DROOY (2.34), GG July 17.5 calls (1.8)

COMMUNICATIONS SERVICES - ALGX Jun 5 calls (.70), NXTL Aug 10 calls (1.70)

HARDWARE - LLTC-short (43.47)

**Monthly update on YTD performance: March 29, 2002: +2.5% YTD.

Dow +4% YTD, SP500 Unch. YTD, NASDAQ –5.5% YTD.

COMMENT – The markets didn’t move much after the early March pop, but the reduced volatility and broad strength in non-tech stocks made March the best month for the portfolio since the October rebound, picking up almost 7%. Most important, the portfolio recorded steady gains even after the Naz peaked and rolled over March 11-12.
This is our first ride on the gold bug bandwagon. After years of unfulfilled promises, gold is finally making what may be a sustained move over $300. Just to be careful, I already took profits in GG shares for three points; my DROOY lot has a 10% trailing stop. So the downside is limited with another 50-100% potential upside if gold spikes to $350+.
Otherwise financials still look like the best horse to ride as long as quality, undervalued small caps and mid-caps stay cheap. Drillers, oil service and utilities have more upside as the economy begins to rebound. They are certainly a better bet than moribund tech stocks with sky-high PE’s and questionable demand as sector after sector continues to wallow. The best tech bets now are companies with decent cash flow, low price-sales ratios and a steady market for their products. But I doubt that tech will exceed more than 25% of the portfolio for a while.



To: Dale Baker who wrote (29886)4/23/2002 1:32:48 PM
From: ahhahaRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 118717
 
Your post only shows that you have finally learned what's finally wrong. That makes you a candidate for Fleckenstein's Wall Street rubber stock squad. Hasn't anyone told you that you must have the vision where the view can't be popularly seen? Do you really think that you will be rewarded for blindness? Do you really think things should be obvious at the bottom? Please tell me what you have learned except that you have been well-trained by Wall Street failurism to follow the crowd.