Archive for the ‘Stocks’ Category

Up 100% – Arena Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ:ARNA) $ARNA

Thursday, May 10th, 2012



This evening, Arena and its investors should definitely be breaking out the champagne. Congrats to all loyal followers of @Ace52weekhigh. He nailed it again by advising all club members via email and sharing this report released Monday, May 7th. He had provided you multiple scenarios on ways to invest and score big! A panel of experts chosen by the Food and Drug Administration voted 18 to 4, with one abstention, that the agency should approve lorcaserin, a new weight loss drug developed by Arena Pharmaceuticals and Eisai, potentially providing a new obesity drug to patients for the first time in a decade. Shares of Arena, which were halted during the meeting, are up more than 90% in after-hours trading as of 6:45 PM EST. Please bear in mind this is solely FDA Advisory panel that goes before the FDA Governing body for approval. Historically, if FDA Advisory Committee approves, FDA body follows. Again read between the lines-Most of the times. The options mind you are reading a +400 implied volatility. According to my calculations, we should see a +200% gain on the $5 calls as I had recommended. I’ve been receiving a tremendous pouring of emails as I refresh my inbox. Followers have been expressing their excitement on this huge score!! One touted he made $1,600 yesterday alone on a small option position. This excitement shared from my followers is my sole motivation to keep finding these winners and relay my trading strategies. Combing through studies and financial statements with relentless market analysis is what keeps me up at night, but I know in the end, its all worth it for scores like these!! Keep pouring in those emails, Tweets, and posts. I bask in glory for winners like us! Keep tuning in for the next trading strategy. Remember there’s nothing wrong in taking profits. Bulls make money, Bears make money, but Pigs get slaughtered. “Gordon Gekko” happy basking in glory and swimming in those boat loads! Buy your wife, kids or yourself a little something and contribute to our economy.

Here’s the latest development through PR Newswire

Arena Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (ARNA) and Eisai Inc. announced today the expansion of the lorcaserin marketing and supply agreement between Arena Pharmaceuticals, Inc.’s wholly owned subsidiary, Arena Pharmaceuticals GmbH, and Eisai Inc. Lorcaserin is an investigational drug candidate intended for weight management. In addition to the United States, the territories in the expanded agreement now include most of North and South America, including Canada, Mexico and Brazil. This expansion builds on the agreement executed by Eisai and Arena in July 2010 for Eisai’s exclusive rights to market and distribute lorcaserin in the United States, subject to lorcaserin’s approval by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

“Obesity is a condition that transcends geographic boundaries,” said Lonnel Coats, President and Chief Executive Officer, Eisai Inc. “Through this expanded agreement, we believe Eisai has an opportunity to help address the significant and growing need for medical obesity treatments by bringing a potential new option to physicians and patients throughout the Americas.”

As in the original agreement, Arena will manufacture lorcaserin at its facility in Switzerland and sell finished product to Eisai for marketing and distribution, subject to applicable regulatory approvals in the territories. Under the expanded agreement, Arena is eligible to receive increased payments based upon Eisai’s net sales of lorcaserin in the United States and expanded North and South American territories. Additionally, Arena will receive an upfront payment and is eligible to receive regulatory and development milestone payments.

“We believe in Eisai’s human health care mission to help satisfy unmet medical needs and increase benefits to patients and their families,” said Jack Lief, Arena’s President and Chief Executive Officer. “The expanded commercialization agreement further supports our belief in the medical potential of lorcaserin in the United States and beyond.”

Conference Call & Webcast

Arena will host a conference call and webcast tomorrow, May 11, 2012, at 8:00 a.m. Eastern Time (5:00 a.m. Pacific Time) to provide a business update. The conference call may be accessed by dialing 877.643.7155 for domestic callers and 914.495.8552 for international callers. Please specify to the operator that you would like to join the “Lorcaserin” conference call. The conference call will be webcast live under the investor relations section of Arena’s website at www.arenapharm.com, and will be archived there for 30 days following the call. Please connect to Arena’s website several minutes prior to the start of the broadcast to ensure adequate time for any software download that may be necessary.

Winning Trade On (NYSE:FRO) Frontline Ltd. (USA)

Tuesday, May 1st, 2012

Welcome Followers. @Ace52weekhigh on Twitter, StockTwits, & YouTube. For the first time I will show the online community on how I picked Frontline Ltd. (USA) (NYSE:FRO) as a stock winner. I’ve done it on a trading account with Scottrade where the everyday trader seems to park their trading account money. ETrade is also another common trading platform that the common investor uses. I personally have another account that I cannot share to the online community at this time. That account is for swing trading with significant capital. I wanted to show that ordinary traders, the 99%, can prosper with minimal cash. In this particular trade I invested a small position that I believe a 50k – 75k wage earner would invest.  This is one of many trades that I have done with a small account with 5k. That 5k has now amounted to 15k in just 6 months. Wouldn’t you want to make money while working at a boring office job and know you can make this kind of money? Follow the ACE

See this screen shot below FRO 1st Trade

YouTube Video here

Post of Profit.ly here

(NYSE:RENN) Update: Up 24% Since Call

Thursday, April 12th, 2012

Update to my April 3rd purchase of (NYSE:RENN). Purchase order was made at $5.5o. Today closed at 6.86, providing us a 24% gain. See the initial alert here. If you had played the $6 call options, you would be sitting on a pretty 280%. See the call options page RENN Option Play. Follow Ace52weekhigh on Twitter, StockTwits, or on YouTube for his next winner!

FaceBook IPO Rumored For May

Thursday, March 29th, 2012

Facebook is preparing its long-awaited initial public offering for sometime in May. The giant social network has halted trading of its shares on the secondary market this week in an effort to firm its shareholder count. The company filed its first IPO papers with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Feb. 1, but has not yet set a price range or share count to be offered as part of the deal. It remains unclear when in May the deal may commence.

Private market trading in Facebook – the company that created the need for secondary brokerages in the first place – will be suspended after this week as the company takes final steps toward its initial public offering slated for May. The decision to halt trades is to allow the social networking giant time to prepare its first-quarter audits and internal shareholder counts without the shareholder base in flux. More importantly, time is running out to trade: Each transaction – which requires the company’s approval – takes 30 days to clear. Facebook has indicated that trades made before April 1 will settle, according to one of the people. To make the deadline, SharesPost moved to Friday a transaction that had been regularly scheduled for Monday. The transaction plans to offer 150,000 at a price of $38.00. SecondMarket, the largest private-shares brokerage, traditionally holds auctions on Wednesday. Last week, the firm cleared a quarter of a million shares at a price of $40, implying a $100.4 billion valuation for the social network. Additionally, last week SecondMarket announced a one-time “Facebook fund,” allowing potential buyers of smaller batches of shares to access part of a bulk supply — a move that would signal a desire to to match as many of the remaining shares as possible.

Cloud Computing Demandware Inc (NYSE:DWRE) To IPO

Tuesday, March 13th, 2012

If you enjoyed Jive Software Inc (NASDAQ:JIVE) tremendous run in the e-commerce cloud computing genre then prepare yourself for the next possible winner. Demandware Inc., a provider of customized e-commerce solutions, plans to launch its IPO this week. The company has projected an IPO price range of $12.50 to $14.50 per share. With 5.5 million shares in the offering, the IPO could raise $79.1 million to $91.7 million for the company under that range. The offering would value the company at up to $326.7 million. Founded in 2004, the company creates tailored shopping experiences for consumers across all digital channels, including web, mobile and call center. The company plans to begin trading on Thursday under the NYSE ticker, DWRE

For the year ending Dec. 31, 2011, Demandware reported a net loss of $6.7 million, on revenue of $56.6 million, compared with a loss of $4.8 million, on revenue of $36.7 million in 2010, according to an SEC filing. IPO Boutique said in a note that “both the retail and institutional books are seeing heavy demand.” Demandware makes cloud-based software that helps companies design and maintain their own e-commerce websites. E-commerce was a $316 billion business in 2010, Cramer said. It could swell to a $653 billion business worldwide, though, by 2015. The total market for cloud enabled e-commerce platform services is expanding with a remarkable 21.3 percent compound annual growth rate. It is estimated to grow from a $4.3 billion business in 2010 to $11.3 billion by 2015.

That would be a big day for Demandware founder and chairman Stephan Schambach. Previously the founder of e-commerce software provider Intershop Communications, which went public in 2000, Schambach currently owns 19.6 percent of Demandware. He would own 15.7 percent after an IPO – a relatively high figure for a company founder. By way of comparison, in the recent IPO of Brightcove Inc., (NASDAQ:BCOV) founder Jeremy Allaire owned 7.1 percent post-IPO. Schambach’s 4.4 million shares of Demandware would be worth $55.1 million to $63.9 million if the IPO meets expectations.

Demandware, which has raised at least $53 million in venture capital, first filed to go public last July and the company initially sought to raise $100 million. Investors in the firm include two Massachusetts venture capital firms: Cambridge-based General Catalyst Partners and Waltham-based North Bridge Venture Partners , which each own a little less than a third of the company, pre-IPO. After the public offering, each will own 25.7 percent of Demandware. The lead managers on the IPO are Goldman, Sachs & Co. and Deutsche Bank Securities. Underwriters have the potential to buy an additional 825,000 shares in the IPO.

Guidewire Software Inc, (NYSE: GWRE) a San Mateo, California-based cloud computing company geared toward the property and casualty insurance industry, saw its January IPO price at $13, above its expected range of $10 to $12 a share. Shares of Guidewire closed Thursday at $22.08, up 70 percent from the company’s offer price.

Austin, Texas-based Bazaarvoice Inc, (NASDAQ:BV) which makes software for businesses to communicate with customers, also priced above its expected range in February. Shares of Bazaarvoice closed Thursday at $15.43, up 29 percent from the company’s IPO price.

Shares of video platform provider Brightcove Inc (NASDAQ:BCOV) are trading up 42 percent from the company’s February IPO.

Jive Software Inc, (NASDAQ:JIVE) which makes social networking software for businesses, has seen shares gain 96 percent after its December IPO.

Cloud-based software IPOs have performed unusually strongly in a weak market in which 45 percent of all deals last month priced below range.

Here’s Demandware’s website

It all started with a series of observations.

eCommerce merchandising and marketing innovation is what generates the revenue, yet most operations are spending 80% of their budgets simply maintaining current infrastructure.

The pace of ecommerce accelerates daily, yet most operations are scrambling to stand still.

Merchandisers and marketers are supremely frustrated, spending more time chasing outsourced providers and internal IT organizations, than actually merchandising and marketing their own businesses.

Founded in 2004 by Stephan Schambach, former CEO of Intershop, Demandware was formed with a clear vision that still remains today: bring to market an enterprise-class ecommerce solution that would put more power and innovation in the hands of merchandisers and at the same time would remove the technical costs, risks and complexities of running an ecommerce operation.

We brought together a team of ecommerce experts, combining years of collective knowledge of great ecommerce merchandising with the then-emerging advancements in Software-as-a-Service architectures and dynamic grid computing. And in late 2005, Demandware delivered the market’s first on-demand enterprise ecommerce platform.

A leader in on-demand ecommerce.

Demandware is now ranked as a leading on-demand ecommerce platform by industry analysts. Demandware is the ecommerce foundation of more than 200 ecommerce websites. Our clients include some of the world’s best-known retailers and brands.

Today, there are limitless opportunities for retailers to interact with consumers and Demandware is committed to paving every step of the way for our clients. Our company was founded on the premise of ecommerce innovation and that’s what we continue to focus on. Our product releases provide a constant stream of new ecommerce features that empower clients to deliver truly exceptional customized shopping experiences. Our Demandware LINK program makes it easy for clients to integrate innovative third party technologies. Through Demandware XChange, our clients have access to an exchange of information and expertise across a vast network of clients, partners and employees.

We are not just a platform provider. We are a trusted ecommerce partner. We are committed to the success of our clients as they navigate the constantly evolving digital world.As of December 31, 2011, 101 customers were operating 361 sites, which include websites, mobile apps and other digital storefronts.

A sampling of the brands they serve:

Anne Klein ASDA Bare Escentuals Barneys New York
BootBarn Brooks Burton Snowboards Callaway Golf
Columbia Sportswear Comma Crocs Deckers Outdoor Corporation
DVF Easy Spirit Elie Tahari FILA
Fredericks of Hollywood Gardeners Supply Company Gortz Hamleys
House of Fraser Jewelry             Television Jochen Schweizer Jones New York
Kate Spade New York Kiehls Lands' End L'Oreal USA
Living Direct lucy Marks & Spencer Michaels
Mirapodo Mountain Hardwear Mikasa Neckermann
Nine West OtterBox P&G Panasonic Europe
Pfaltzgraff Playmobil PUMA Rachel Roy
Reitmans Rockport Roots s.Oliver
Sally Beauty Supply Sanrio Solstice Sunglasses Sorel
Tele Danmark Theory TM Lewin
Tory Burch Urban Decay Cosmetics Wyevale Zabars

Solar & Coal Stocks Primed To Shine (NYSE:TAN) (NYSE:JRCC)

Monday, February 6th, 2012

Solar & Coal Stocks Primed To Shine (NYSE:TAN) (NYSE:JRCC) – Video of the current setups for an upswing in JRCC and TAN (solar ETF) Learn how to profit.

JRCC Bullish Wedge or here

TAN Bullish Wedge or here

Can This Save Housing: Investor Bulk Buying

Monday, January 9th, 2012

The Obama administration, in conjunction with federal regulators and led by the overseer of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, is very close to announcing a pilot program to sell government-owned foreclosures in bulk to investors as rentals. There’s currently are about a quarter of a million foreclosed properties on the books of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), and millions more are coming. Currently, there are 1.81 million loans 90+ days delinquent and an additional 2.21 million loans in the foreclosure process.

REO to Rental Program: This rental program for Fannie and Freddie REO is being pushed by several agencies, and was discussed last week in the Fed white paper “The U.S. Housing Market: Current Conditions and Policy Considerations” and by NY Fed President William Dudley: Housing and the Economic Recovery. This program could include bulk REO sales to investors, but might also include Fannie and Freddie renting out more REOs. (Fannie and Freddie already have a program to keep tenants in place if they foreclose on a rented property).

There will be a similar effort for non-GSE properties. From the Fed white paper:

In light of the current unusually difficult circumstances in many housing markets across the nation, the Federal Reserve is contemplating issuing guidance to banking organizations and examiners to clarify supervisory expectations regarding rental of residential REO properties by such organizations while such circumstances continue (and within relevant federal and statutory and regulatory limits). If finalized and adopted, such guidance would explain how rental of a residential REO property within applicable holding-period time limits could meet the supervisory expectation for ongoing good faith efforts to sell that property. Relatedly, if a successful model is developed for the GSEs to transition REO properties to the rental market, banks may wish to participate in such a program or adopt some of its features.

A pilot sales program will be starting in the very near future, according to administration officials. They are working on what the market potential is, what pricing would be, how government can partner with private investors, and who has the operational experience to manage so many properties. A number of institutional investors have shown appetite and interest in bulk REO deals, according to officials, but the plan has to incorporate ways to help facilitate financing. That has been one of the biggest roadblocks to deals already in the works between hedge funds and the major banks. Sources close to these private bank negotiations say there is plenty of cash to buy properties, but building out a management structure for the rentals is pricey, and some investors are finding the math doesn’t add up to make it worth their while.

Larger investors want to be able to get real scale in any government program, in the range of 50, 100, 500 properties per deal, or $1 billion-plus in assets, say officials close to the plan. That’s why the government is looking to test a combination of different approaches. Fannie Mae did a $50 million sale last June, but that was on the small side. Officials are evaluating at what larger asset sales beyond that would look like.

The goal here is to reduce supply by converting foreclosed homes into rental units. Less supply lowers fear about a flood of foreclosed homes hitting the market which in turn could stabilize housing prices and market.

Look at the housing sector stocks management stocks here and here and with homebuilder stocks here

How To Determine If A Stock Is Overvalued

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

In the 1987 shareholder letter to GEICO stockholders, Lou Simpson, one of the most successful investors of all time, described what he looked for in a potential investment. They included “Think independently”, “Invest in high-return businesses run for shareholders,” “Pay only a reasonable price, even for an excellent business,” “Invest for the long-term,” and “Do not diversify excessively.” He also mentioned a concept that we have only briefly touched upon and that is the long-term treasury yield and how it has important implications in the valuation you should use to determine the relative attractive of a company.

Let’s first understand what Overvalued means:

A stock with a current price that is not justified by its earnings outlook or price/earnings (P/E) ratio and, therefore, is expected to drop in price. Overvaluation may result from an emotional buying spurt, which inflates the stock’s market price, or from a deterioration in a company’s financial strength. Potential investors do not want to overpay for a stock. A few factors they may look at is the price to earnings (P/E) ratio in comparison to the company’s peers, and the price to earnings growth (PEG) ratio to determine if a stock is overvalued. There are other factors as well that investors look at.

The P/E ratio (price-to-earnings ratio) of a stock (also called its “P/E”, or simply “multiple”) is a measure of the price paid for a share relative to the annual net income or profit earned by the firm per share. The P/E ratio can therefore alternatively be calculated by dividing the company’s market capitalization by its total annual earnings. Unlike the EV/EBITDA multiple which is capital structure-neutral, the price-to-earnings ratio reflects the capital structure of the company in question. The price-to-earnings ratio is a financial ratio used for valuation: a higher P/E ratio means that investors are paying more for each unit of net income, so the stock is more expensive compared to one with a lower P/E ratio. The P/E ratio can be seen as being expressed in years, in the sense that it shows the number of years of earnings which would be required to pay back purchase price, ignoring inflation and time value of money. The P/E ratio also shows current investor demand for a company share. The reciprocal of the P/E ratio is known as the earnings yield. The earnings yield is an estimate of the expected return from holding the stock if we accept certain restrictive assumptions.

The P/E ratio is defined as:

\mbox{P/E ratio}=\frac{\mbox{Market Price per Share}}{\mbox{Annual Earnings per Share}}

The price per share in the numerator is the market price of a single share of the stock. The earnings per share in the denominator depends on the type of P/E:

  • “Trailing P/E” or “P/E ttm”: Here earnings per share is the net income of the company for the most recent 12 month period, divided by the number of shares issued. This is the most common meaning of “P/E” if no other qualifier is specified. Monthly earning data for individual companies are not available, so the previous four quarterly earnings reports are used and earnings per share are updated quarterly. Note, each company chooses its own financial year so the timing of updates will vary from one to another.
  • “Trailing P/E from continued operations”: Instead of net income, this uses operating earnings, which exclude earnings from discontinued operations, extraordinary items (e.g. one-off windfalls and write-downs), or accounting changes. Note, longer-term P/E data, such as Shiller’s, use net earnings.
  • “Forward P/E”, “P/Ef”, or “estimated P/E”: Instead of net income, this uses estimated net earnings over next 12 months. Estimates are typically derived as the mean of a select group of analysts (note, selection criteria is rarely cited). In times of rapid economic dislocation, such estimates become less relevant as the situation changes (e.g. new economic data is published, and/or the basis of forecasts becomes obsolete) more quickly than analysts adjust their forecasts.

For example, if stock A is trading at $24 and the earnings per share for the most recent 12 month period is $3, then stock A has a P/E ratio of 24/3 or 8. Put another way, the purchaser of the stock is paying $8 for every dollar of earnings. Companies with losses (negative earnings) or no profit have an undefined P/E ratio (usually shown as Not applicable or “N/A”); sometimes, however, a negative P/E ratio may be shown.

By comparing price and earnings per share for a company, one can analyze the market’s stock valuation of a company and its shares relative to the income the company is actually generating. Stocks with higher (and/or more certain) forecast earnings growth will usually have a higher P/E, and those expected to have lower (and/or riskier) earnings growth will usually have a lower P/E. Investors can use the P/E ratio to compare the value of stocks: if one stock has a P/E twice that of another stock, all things being equal (especially the earnings growth rate), it is a less attractive investment. Companies are rarely equal, however, and comparisons between industries, companies, and time periods may be misleading.P/E ratio in general is useful for comparing valuation of peer companies in similar sector or group.

Since 1900, the average P/E ratio for the S&P 500 index has ranged from 4.78 in Dec 1920 to 44.20 in Dec 1999, with an average around 15.The average P/E of the market varies in relation with, among other factors, expected growth of earnings, expected stability of earnings, expected inflation, and yields of competing investments. For example, when US treasury bonds yield high returns, investors pay less for a given earnings per share and P/E’s fall.

Share prices in a publicly traded company are determined by market supply and demand, and thus depend upon the expectations of buyers and sellers. Among these are:

  • The company’s future and recent performance, including potential growth;
  • Perceived risk, including risk due to high leverage;
  • Prospects for companies of this type, the market sector.

By dividing the price of one share in a company by the profits earned by the company per share, you arrive at the P/E ratio. If earnings per share move proportionally with share prices the ratio stays the same. But if stock prices gain in value and earnings remain the same or go down, the P/E rises.

The earnings figure used is the most recently available, although this figure may be out of date and may not necessarily reflect the current position of the company. This is often referred to as a ‘trailing P/E’, because it involves taking earnings from the last four quarters.

AN EXAMPLE OF AN OVERVALUED COMPANY (NFLX) COURTESY OF F.A.S.T. GRAPHS

Graph Number One: Netflix’s Exceptional Earnings Growth

With our first graph, we plot Netflix’s earnings per share growth (orange line) since calendar year 2007.  At the bottom of the graph you will see that earnings grew from $.94 in 2007, to $1.43 in 2008, to $2.05 in 2009, to $3.06 in 2010, and earnings are estimated, based on management’s most recent guidance, to be approximately $4.03 by year-end 2011. To the right of the graph we learn that Netflix’s average earnings growth rate since 2007 was an exceptional 39.2% (see red circle).

Graph Number Two: Netflix with Price Correlated to Earnings

With graph number two we add two very important lines.  First, we add the normal price earnings ratio that the market had historically applied to Netflix.  The normal PE ratio for Netflix calculated out to be 29.6, which is almost twice the normal PE ratio of 15 which is applied to the average company. On the other hand, Netflix’s exceptional earnings growth justified this level of premium valuation.  Nevertheless, starting in March of 2010 the black price line began to move above the blue normal price earnings ratio line before peaking in late July.

We argued that this profitable enterprise had become dangerously overvalued. At the time of that writing Netflix was trading at $223.20 and it continued rising to over $304 by late July, effectively becoming more and more overvalued with each passing day. However, by the end of July the rubber began meeting the road and Netflix’s stock price was quickly reverting to the mean which it clearly reached on September 30, 2011.

However, recent earnings guidance of a few quarters worth of losses has dramatically altered expectations of future earnings. Consequently, the market is attempting to establish a new and lower mean.  Time will tell where this ends up, however, most likely Netflix will go much lower.

Avoiding the Obvious Mistake

Based on the undeniable relationship between earnings and market price, investing in Netflix when it was so massively overvalued, even when expectations about future earnings growth were still very high, represented an obvious mistake that could have, and should have been avoided. Mathematically, it should have been clear that Netflix’s earnings and cash flow did not support their lofty valuation.

Although it’s true that speculators and/or momentum investors could have bought Netflix in early 2011 and made a very high rate of return by summer, assuming of course that they then sold, that action cannot be properly described as investing. Later in this article we will discuss the difference between investing versus speculating more fully.

Here’s a ANOTHER great website to use for graph ratio’s named YCharts.com

5 Stocks That Returned 9 Figures

Wednesday, July 20th, 2011

I came across an interesting article from last weeks USAToday written by Matt Krantz. Kudos to Matt on a motivating article for investors. It comes to show with a little bit of luck and knowledge, a $5,000-$10,000 investment can go a long way. I was astonished on the return each stock produced a year. Yet again NFLX returned a whopping 836% from 2008, AAPL in 7 years returned an incredible 3760%, and SIRI in 3 years returned 2,080%. Just imagine the possibilities that came in plentiful. It’s a poor man’s dream come true. Do you have what it takes? I know no one is a perfect stock picker, and if you are, you should be sitting very pretty right now. My personal best has been by far SIRI. I’m not going to lie, but I was extremely wretched by the 80% drop the day rumor on verge of declaring bankruptcy. By sheer stupidity and luck, I managed to reinvest a small portion of my previous winners in this strickened stock. What was my rational – Howard Stern. He’s fully vested with hundreds of millions of shares so why not. I wasn’t hurting more than he was. I know, dumb rational and before you know it, a white knight saved them from the brink of destruction. Share your stories /ideas with ACE@wallstreetgrand.com!!!

Here’s the link to the article here.

ACE’s long term picks from 2010 here.

Q: What’s the biggest financial haul I could have scored from stocks if I was the best stock picker over the last five years?

A: Wouldn’t it be great, especially as an investor, if you could know what was going to happen in the future? If you had the luck, foresight or skill to pick the best stock each year, you could score some massive gains. How massive? How rich could you be if you hit the best stock of every year the past five years? It’s a gain most likely beyond your wildest dreams. To find out just how profitable having uncanny stock-picking abilities could be, let’s put some numbers behind it. Investors can take a look at the Standard & Poor’s 1500 index, which includes stocks of all sizes, and locate what the best stock in the index was each year.

Had you had the amazing luck to pick the best stock each year, your total price appreciation and winning stock each year would have been (according to Standard & Poor’s Capital IQ and USA TODAY research):

• Best of 2006: CorVel (CRVL), 275.8% gain

• Best of 2007: First Solar (FSLR), 795.2% gain

• Best of 2008: Emergent BioSolutions (EBS), 416% gain

• Best of 2009: Select Comfort (SCSS), 2,508% gain

• Best of 2010: Entropic Communications (ENTR), 293.5% gain

Imagine investing $10,000 at the start of 2006 in that year’s best stock, CorVel, and then moving your money each year to the following year’s best stock. The value of the portfolio would have grown at the end of each year to:

• 2006: $37,580

• 2007: $336,529

• 2008: $1,736,490

• 2009: $45,287,659

• 2010: $178,206,938

Yes, you read that right. If you picked the best stock of each year, your $10,000 investment would be worth $178.2 million in just five years. That’s an average annual return of 608%. Not bad. Of course, it’s easy to do this kind of analysis looking backwards. We’re all stock-picking geniuses in hindsight. Yet, at the beginning of the year, it’s all but impossible to predict what the best stock will be. Even investors who stumble on a great stock make subsequent mistakes by selling at the wrong time. Nonetheless, considering how powerful the wealth generation of stocks can be, it’s easy to understand why so many investors want to try their luck.

Matt Krantz is a financial markets reporter at USA TODAY and author of Investing Online for Dummies and Fundamental Analysis for Dummies. He answers a different reader question every weekday in his Ask Matt column at money.usatoday.com.