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Jun/09

25

Australian Stock Report – an outstanding investment resource

When formulating their investment objectives, investors have to decide whether they require regular income from their investments, income plus some growth in portfolio value, primarily growth in value, or if they want best return from higher though managed risks.

Investment involves risk and return.  Every security has some degree of uncertainty associated with it. The past two years provides ample evidence that nothing is guaranteed – dividends or the values of securities.  Even securities with guaranteed returns such as fixed interest government bonds can lose value when market interest rates (yield) exceed the original issue or discount rate.

Having decided upon the level of financial loss you are prepared to carry, the next step is to construct an investment portfolio that attempts to mirror those comfort levels of risk.  This is the hard part of investing.  What to buy?  How much to spend on each investment in your portfolio?  The timing of the purchases?  When to buy more, reduce or sell out of your existing investments?  Do you try to manage risk within the portfolio though the securities you hold and their weightings.  Alternatively, should you use options that allow you to micro manage risks on individual stocks?  The risk and return on each investment is constantly changing – some faster and more significantly than others.

Longer-term investors are typically passive investors.  They build their share portfolios around a handful of key stocks that do not require constant monitoring.  They also include comparatively smaller individual exposures to other investments that may generate greater financial returns than (say) the ASX Share Price Index.

The next question to resolve is how much time can you afford to spend on the research process?  What skills and experience do you possess in gathering macro and micro information about individual stocks and shares?  How good is your access to the best sources of information?

Investors with the time, skill and necessary resources to permit a hands-on management of their investment portfolio require different and more-timely information.  The use of options such as Contracts for Difference can help manage risks – but they are not for the uninitiated.

Investors may obtain reports and recommendations concerning individual stocks from stockbrokers and research houses, from newspapers, online reports, business associates, friends and even the local hairdresser!  At best, information gathering is typically unsystematic, time-consuming and inadequate.  You regularly engage people and business to provide services for you that you cannot do or do not have the time to do, yourself.  The same principle should also apply to financial market information.

Supposing you had access to someone who could aggregate much of the market information including recommendations of major broking houses which may not be available to private investors.  Supposing too that they had an expert team that carried out their own independent research on individual stocks and were prepared to show what returns you would have achieved had you acted on their recommendations when provided?   Well there is one such group you can turn to.  It’s called Australian Stock Report.

Australian Stock Report is an independent Australian financial securities research organization that provides subscription members with general advice to assist them work their way in local and international financial markets.

For the novice investor members, they educate and provide easy to follow guides to help members trade more successfully.  They run regular free education seminars on investing and trading to enhance members’ technical knowledge and address issues of current topical interest.  Two-day live data trading workshops demonstrate high impact trading strategies using live data and help teach you how to master the markets regardless which way they are headed.

The main activities of Australian Stock Reports relate to research and regular reporting on shares and securities which offer above average prospects of returns to investors.  They run four model share portfolios each one being attuned to different risk profiles and based on recommendations they have made to members, when they were made.  These share portfolios are published each week so there can be no fudging.

They explain the reasons for including new stocks in their various investment portfolios as well as changes made since the last report and the timing and their expected strategies into the future for their portfolios.  Each week, there are fresh reports on companies with recommendations about their place in the relevant investment portfolio

Members are free to accept or reject their recommendations when making their investment decisions.  Australian Stock Report is not a funds manager; it does not derive commissions from the investment recommendations they make.  Their business relies upon the provision of sound and timely recommendations that consistently outperform the market in each risk category.  They must consistently deliver good results to retain existing members and, by using their model portfolio returns, demonstrate the worth of their reports to prospective new subscribers.

Australian Stock Report gives full access to the members’ reports free of charge for seven days, to provide an insight into the quality of their research reports, investment strategies, guide prices and suggested timing for buying and selling recommended investments.  You can access the free trial through their website at http://www.australianstockreport.com.au.

Their free trial goes far beyond showcasing the current content of their reports to investors, traders, foreign exchange players and Contracts for Difference.  Prospective subscribers can also access over 800 lessons from their educational archives. This makes their seven day free trial an incredible offer to investors of all levels of sophistication. That’s a definitive statement of confidence in their organization and their commitment to delivering outstanding benefits and returns to its members.

Investors can sign up for the types of reports that best suit their needs and investment strategies.  The Investor Report for example is primarily designed for more passive investors.  It costs $690 a year for 50 weekly reports (which works out at just $13.80 per week).  Special reports for advanced investors cost more and are issued more often.

When you need to better manage the time you spend researching possible investments, investment strategies and your prospective buying and selling decisions, Australian Stock Report is an excellent resource to have by your side.

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