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Weekend EditionThe Best of The S&A DigestSaturday, May 31, 2008 Two weeks ago, Jeff told his S&A Short Report readers he was turning bearish as the S&P hit a four-month high of 1,440. The next morning, he recommended buying PowerShares QQQ puts. The S&P fell below 1,400, and his readers sold half their positions for a 47% gain in less than one day. They closed the other half for a 67% gain two days later.
Jeff's trades are up an average of 28% this year, over an average two-week holding period. Click here to learn how to access Jeff's next trade, which will hit readers' inboxes Monday morning.
I got excited about Vietnam after hearing hedge-fund manager Carlo Cannell's speech at last year's Value Investing Congress. Cannell titled his speech "Investing in the Dark," or something close to that, because no Vietnamese companies kept good financial records. Cannell said he met with CEOs and CFOs who had no idea what free cash flow and depreciation were. So, instead of running financial analyses, he based his decisions on management's character. And he made huge gains – several stocks returned thousands of percent.
Our favorite idea for Vietnam: Buy the brewer. Cannell reported the Vietnamese are the world's biggest beer drinkers. Whenever he went to a restaurant, the first thing the waiter did – without direction – was place a case of beer on the table.
Three of Stansberry's flagship advisories, PSIA, True Wealth, and Extreme Value started recommending great blue-chip stocks in 2006. It continues to this day with Dr. Steve Sjuggerud's most recent pick, the greatest brand name on Earth, selling cheaper than ever before.
Things are difficult and uncertain out there, and how wonderful that is for the value-oriented seeker of wonderful businesses.
Food and labor costs are unbelievably cheap. A good cook costs $20 per week. You can afford to have a driver, a gardener, a cook... all for only a few dollars per day. In Nicaragua, it's still possible to lead a life of luxury on the budget of the average middle-class American. Property is cheap, too. Here in Rancho Santana, many ocean-view lots are still available for less than $200,000 – lots that would cost at least 10 times as much in the U.S. And here, there's a very good chance that property will continue to appreciate. I know it's easy to scoff at the idea of living in Nicaragua – until you see it for yourself.
Norway should consider keeping more of its money in Matt Badiali's recommendation of its state-owned oil company, StatoilHydro (STO). The recommendation is up 40% in four months. If you know someone high up in Norway's government, encourage them to get a subscription to the S&A Oil Report. Click here to learn how else S&A Oil Report readers are boosting their retirement savings with record crude prices.
Regards,
S&A Research
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Date Range:5/26/2008 to 5/31/2008
Date Range:5/26/2008 to 5/31/2008
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