Thursday, September 10, 2009

Top Stocks To Buy: The Only Tool You Need to Predict

The S&P 500 is already starting to stage the next leg of its downward slide. But don't let that scare you…

With the small-cap research tool I'm about to show you, you're well on your way to seeing how the market moves ahead of the herd.

Here's everything you need to know…

A while back, I wrote to you about our Small-Cap Recovery Index. The index is composed of fundamental data from 100 small-cap best stocks for 2010, as well as economic factors like unemployment and personal savings rate.

It's designed to give us a glimpse at signs of recovery for the stock market.

While the market has rebounded in a big way since it bottomed in March, many investors are concerned that stock prices are already getting out of whack. But we've designed the Small-Cap Recovery Index to go beyond share prices.

Unlike major indexes ― like the S&P 500 or small-cap Russell 2000 ― ours isn't a typical stock index. While hundreds of best stocks to buy are included in the index, stock prices actually have a relatively small effect on its daily movement. The majority of the index is based on the latest available fundamental performance.

But while gauging how "healthy" the market is can be very valuable, the Small-Cap Recovery Index provides us with considerably more data. In fact, as we continue to watch the index, we hope to use the information it provides to not only peg where the broad market is headed, but which industries hold the keys to growth.

We can accomplish this thanks to the predictive power of small-cap top stocks for 2010. You see, historically, penny stocks lead the stock market out of recession. "From 1943�2007, according to one analyst, small companies outperformed large companies by more than 50 percentage points in the three years following a recession, including the one following 2001," explained Ken Kurson in an article published on Esquire.com a few months back.

By monitoring how small-caps perform fundamentally and technically, we can essentially predict where more major indexes ― the S&P 500, for instance ― are headed.

Now, 12 weeks into collecting and analyzing our data, we've already caught some indications that the index is doing its job. More on that in a bit…

A Look at the Small-Cap Market


The chart above shows the Small-Cap Recovery Index for the last 12 weeks. The index, which is calculated daily after the market close, is based on a 100 scale ― its current value of 107.4 means that the Small-Cap Recovery Index has gained 7.4% since we began tracking it.

While a high number for the S&P 500, which just measures share prices, could suggest that stocks are overvalued, when it comes to the Small-Cap Recovery Index, bigger is definitely better. That's because a higher number means that the small-caps that make up our index are performing well for investors and ― more importantly in this environment ― performing well from a financial and economic perspective.

In the past couple of months, the index has seen its value increase materially, which is a very good thing. But while the SCRI's value gives us a good idea of how small-caps are performing, it doesn't do a very good job of actually predicting where the markets will move next. That's where the oscillator comes in…

The Small-Cap Recovery Index Oscillator

The Small-Cap Recovery Index Oscillator, which is based on the index itself, measures the divergence between the performance of the Small-Cap Recovery Index and the S&P 500.

While that sounds pretty complicated, it's actually a very simple concept. The rationale is that the S&P 500, which is a pretty good indicator of the market itself, shouldn't move significantly more or less than our Small-Cap Recovery Index. And because fundamental data that move ahead of the market ― like sales and unemployment ― are factored into our index, our index should set the direction of market movements first.

When things are stable, the oscillator should sit around 0 ― meaning that there isn't a major difference between our index and the S&P. But when it moves very high or low, it sends a signal that the S&P, which doesn't have fundamental economic data to keep it grounded, should move back in a direction to push the oscillator back down.
 
We've actually come up with a math-based methodology to place bets on the market using the data that the oscillator spits out.


And while the specifics are too rigorous to detail here, we've determined that if you had used those rules to invest in the ProShares Ultra S&P 500 ETF (NYSEArca: SSO) or the ProShares UltraShort S&P500 ETF (NYSEArca: SDS), depending on the buy or sell signal, you would have made 36.03% in just six weeks.

That's an annualized gain of 312.26%!

And right now, with the oscillator (the blue line in the graph below) high, it suggests that the market's buying frenzy is coming to an end. That's not to say that the oscillator can't be wrong ― we're still in the early stages of collecting data and testing its accuracy.


So what's the SCRI Oscillator telling us right now?

While it's good that the SCRI has increased in the last 12 weeks, a quick look at the oscillator shows us that the S&P 500 has increased much more quickly ― that's actually a bad thing for the market because it means that investors have overvalued the S&P against the fundamentals of the market.

And already, we're seeing the S&P 500 start to decline to fall back in line with the Small-Cap Recovery Index. Unless big top stocks to buy improve their fundamentals enough to match the small-caps, it's time to expect a tumble in the S&P back to SCRI levels. We still have considerable data to collect before we begin to use SCRI data in our stock picking methodology, but right now, it's clear that the index could soon become a very powerful tool in our investment arsenal.

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