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StorkBite  
#1 Posted : Saturday, July 2, 2005 7:49:09 PM(UTC)
StorkBite

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Is anone watching the IBD 100? http://www.investors.com
SteveB  
#2 Posted : Sunday, July 3, 2005 1:06:22 PM(UTC)
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G, <edited> I'm sure it's available from the IBD site but I have heard that an initial subscription to that site doesn't get you a whole lot...basically use of the forum and the IBD paper...and that there is a separate subscription charge for literally everything else which piles up rather quickly in order to get what you really need. I think they charge $1100.00/year just for their Daily Graphs Online? Thanks again Steve
wabbit  
#3 Posted : Sunday, July 3, 2005 1:19:29 PM(UTC)
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G.... Caution. I dont really care, but they might??
Quote:
No other use is permitted. You may not, for example, republish IBD 100 on any Internet, Intranet or Extranet site or incorporate it in any database, compilation, archive or cache.
wabbit :D
StorkBite  
#4 Posted : Sunday, July 3, 2005 6:09:59 PM(UTC)
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Wabbit- You're right. It's a no-brainer. #-o SteveB, post an email address in your profile. :D You're right, it's expensive, but worth it. O'neils system of fundamental analysis is excellent; and, well published. You don't have to get the info in an electronic format, it is available in the IBD Weekly edition. Of course you'd have to enter the symbols manually into your MS database. The benefit to the electronic subscription is that you can import the data into MS via the Downloader. It's easy and profitable.
StorkBite  
#5 Posted : Tuesday, July 5, 2005 3:11:05 AM(UTC)
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IBD Rules for Success (condensed) 1. Consider buying stocks with each of the last three years' earnings up 25%+, return on equity of 17%+ and recent earnings and sales accelerating. 2. Recent quarterly earnings and sales should be up 25% or more. 3. Avoid cheap stocks. Buy stocks selling at $15 a share and higher. 4. Learn how to use charts to spot sound bases and exact buy points. Confine buys to these points as stocks break out on big volume increases. 5. Cut every loss when it's 8% below your cost. Make no exceptions so you can always avoid huge, damaging losses. Never average down in price. 6. Have selling rules on when to sell and take profit on the way up. 7. Buy when market indexes are in an uptrend. Reduce investments and raise cash when general market indexes show five or more days of volume distribution. 8. Buy stocks with a Relative Price Strength Rating of 85 or higher. 9. Pick companies with management ownership of stock. 10. Select stocks with increasing institutional sponsorship in recent quarters. 11. Current quarterly after-tax profit margins should be improving and near their peak. 12. Don't buy because of dividends or P-E ratios. Buy the No. 1 company in an industry in earnings and sales growth, R.O.E., profit margins and product quality. 13. Pick companies with a new product or service. 14. Invest mainly in entrepreneurial New America companies. Pay close attention to those with an IPO in the past eight years. 15. Check into companies buying back 5% to 10% of their stock and those with new management (what is management's background?) 16. Don't try to bottom guess or buy on the way down. Never argue with the market. Forget your pride and ego. 17. Find out if the market currently favors big-cap or small-cap stocks. 18. Do a post-analysis of all your buys and sells. Post on charts where you bought and sold. Evaluate and develop rules to correct your major mistakes.
vaughn  
#6 Posted : Tuesday, July 5, 2005 9:25:27 PM(UTC)
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Does the IBD 100 have anything to do with CanSlim. I have heard of both separately with o’neils name mentioned. I see the CanSlim site has some sort of free trial going on. Anyone have anything to say good or bad about it. They are supposed to have picks, resources, yada yada the usual pitch…
StorkBite  
#7 Posted : Tuesday, July 5, 2005 11:56:15 PM(UTC)
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Quote:
Does the IBD 100 have anything to do with CanSlim?
Hey Vaugn- Can you post an email address in your profile? :D The IBD100 is a proprietary, computer-generated list of the 100 top-ranked companies published in the Investor's Business Daily. It is also known as the IBD100 Index. The list is updated weekly. CANSLIM is O'neil's system of picking winning stocks. There is a separate CANSLIM list published, but adherance to the criteria is what is important and can be duplicated to make your own CANSLIM-type list of stocks. The CANSLIM list is based on tighter (and different) criteria that the IBD 100 list. e.g., the CANSLIM list is not the IBD 100 narrowed down. Both are based in fundamental analysis. I subscribe to both, but personally, I use the IBD100 list because it is usually more volatile than the CANSLIM list. It suits my style of trading better.
StorkBite  
#8 Posted : Tuesday, July 5, 2005 11:58:28 PM(UTC)
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What is CAN SLIM™? CAN SLIM is IBD's checklist for seven common characteristics all great performing stocks have before they make their biggest gains. C= Current earnings per share should be up 25% or more and in many cases accelerating in recent quarters. Quarterly sales should also be up 25% or more or accelerating over prior quarters. A= Annual earnings should be up 25% or more in each of the last three years. Annual return on equity should be 17% or more. N= A company should have a new product or service that's fueling earnings growth. The stock should be emerging from a proper chart pattern and about to make a new high in price. S= Supply and demand. Shares outstanding can be large or small, but trading volume should be big as the stock price increases. L= Leader or laggard? Buy the leading stock in a leading industry. A stock's Relative Price Strength Rating should be 80 or higher. I= Institutional sponsorship should be increasing. Invest in stocks showing increasing ownership by mutual funds in recent quarters. IBD's Accumulation/Distribution Rating gauges mutual fund activity in a stock. M= The market indexes, the Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq, should be in a confirmed up trend since three out of four stocks follow the market's overall trend.
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