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Quantum Leap is a highly specialised investment newsletter that is totally focused on stock picking and picks only one kind of share – GROWTH SHARES. By being so intensely focused I have delivered extraordinary results for my subscribers over the years and I believe that, if anything, I am getting better at what I do. If practice makes perfect then I should be good.
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In 1984 I launched my own investment publishing business with the first edition of Quantum Leap going out to a handful of subscribers in October 1984. The only stock profiled in that maiden issue was Body Shop International, the famous organic skin and beauty products business founded by Anita and Gordon Roddick.
The shares rose 50-fold after I tipped them, which I have always regarded as a good omen for my subsequent career as a stock picker. It seemed the gods wanted to give me a sign that I had chosen wisely in what I wanted to do.
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I believe investors managing their own investment portfolios want to make a lot of money, while taking a sensible level of risk. That is exactly what I am trying to do.
As at 1st September 2011, the average gain on all my recommendations from 2010 is +74.6%. In comparison, the FTSE All-Share is up just 0.9% on its average 2010 level. Even though we are experiencing difficult market conditions at the moment, I still believe I can help investors like you make significant returns. Why? Because I've done it before.
To see just how well my strategy has worked over 27 years of running Quantum Leap, click here.
It is not crucial to the case for subscribing to Quantum Leap but I am very bullish now. In 1982, the global economy was in the early, stuttering stages of recovery from a deep recession. Just as now economists spoke of a 'jobless recovery' with unemployment remaining stubbornly high.
There is another extraordinary parallel. In 1982, the US Dow Jones index was trading at around 950. This was the same level first reached 17 years earlier in 1965. This extended period of sideways trading was the spring board for the long-running bull market that followed. A similar thing happened in the 1930s, when shares traded sideways until 1950 before embarking on the famous 'cult of the equity' bull market between 1950 and 1965, when share prices quintupled. This was achieved against a background of low inflation so in real (inflation-adjusted) terms it was an impressive performance laying the ground work for the vast fortunes accumulated by investors like Warren Buffet.
Now, consider the present position. Key indices like the Dow Jones and the UK's FTSE All Share index are trading close to levels first achieved around 13 years ago. This is extraordinary if you consider what has happened over that period. The growth in emerging markets has proceeded to the point where China alone has become a key driver of trends in the global economy. At the same time technology and globalisation have opened world markets, even to relatively tiny companies. Whereas, 25 years ago, the market for an ambitious UK growth company was largely confined to some 50m people living in the UK, now the world is their oyster. A reasonable guesstimate is that there are at least three billion increasingly prosperous consumers in capitalist nations around the globe available as targets for your goods and services.
I believe that we could be, indeed probably are, on the brink of a new long-running bull market in global stock markets, including those of the UK and USA. You may not feel very bullish. The newspapers are full of doom and gloom with pundits anxious about high levels of indebtedness for countries and individuals and worried about a renewed economic slowdown, the feared second dip of a double-dip recession. Paradoxically this nervousness is bullish. History strongly suggests that bull markets begin not when everybody is bursting with optimism but when investors are fearful and cautious, just like now. Last but not least of the factors making me so optimistic on the medium and longer-term outlook is the quality and potential I am seeing right now in so many individual companies. I am spoiled for choice in the number of exciting shares that I am finding to recommend in Quantum Leap. The position is reminiscent of the early 1990s, another great time for buying shares.
To find out more about why I believe a major bull market is just around the corner, click here.
In summary, my long term record as a stock picker is good, I am doing well right now (despite difficult market conditions) and I think we could be on the brink of an exciting new bull market.
What should you be doing? Very simply, you should be building a portfolio of first class shares to deliver potentially dramatic capital gains over the coming years. I think Quantum Leap is the ideal publication to help you do this. I am biased, of course but I really think you should subscribe, and that’s why I’m happy to offer you a free trial for 90 days.
Don't delay. Go for it and sign up free now while these comments are fresh in your mind. Investing with good advice can be a lot of fun, especially if I am right and a huge new bull market is just around the corner.
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