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Before we send any products, we must receive the "Promise & Affirmation" from you. An opportunity to do this will be provided when you place an order. For an explanation, click on this NOTICE link.
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All prices are in U.S. Dollars
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Strongest Utilities List
We create a list of the Strongest Utilities arranged for you in rank order and updated daily. The master list that we use in our rankings includes electric utilities, telecommunication service companies, gas utilities, and water utilities. The utilities we post in our ranking list will be the "strongest" 30 at the time of posting (ranked in order of strength). The image to the right was taken after the market (Dow) closed down over 120 points. The utility pictured also had a dividend yield of about 2.7%. It had been over 3% but price gains reduced that a little. Our "Strongest Utilities" algorithm measures a utility’s strength in such a way that greater weighting is given to those that show consistency of “strength.” To do this, our strength model measures strength from several perspectives. The model is proprietary but it requires 6 algorithms for the first sort and then 3 more algorithms are applied to the results of the first sort to derive the final scores. The results of the latter are then ranked. Our company traders prefer to purchase what we call a "Runner" only after a pullback to support (when the stock has pulled back to its rising trendline or to a significant moving average) and only after the stock has begun to rebound from that support. A few more examples of what “strong” looks like to our algorithm can be found by clicking on the "Strongest Stocks" tab of the navigation menu. If you have not read the material pertaining to the lists generated for this subscription, please click on the "Strongest Utilities" tab of the navigation menu at the left of your screen. Lists based on the RSI are much more likely to have "setup" problems. That is, they may have ranked high because of a recent surge in price but there may be overhead resistance nearby, or the recent rally may be only a “dying spasm” for a stock whose pattern is sick and headed for more decline rather than healthy and on the way to higher prices. Utilities tend to pay larger dividends than most stocks. When Utilities do well financially, they tend to increase the size of their dividend. A person who focuses his investment portfolio on utility investments that are strong will probably do quite well on an annualized basis. A person who keeps his portfolio invested in the strongest utilities, adjusting it as needed throughout the year to replace the weak with the strong, should do even better. We expect that over a year, an investor in such a portfolio will not only reap nice capital gains, but will also accumulate some dividend bonuses along the way. |
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