Publisher
InvestorPlace
Description
Navellier’s active-trading newsletter using his “proprietary stock-rating system” and a combination of “strong momentum and fundamentals with a more frequent trading schedule”. Listed as an “aggressive” portfolio.
Overall Rating
Rating: 2.6/5. From 7 votes.
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3.2
Rating from 27 votes
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Investment Performance
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Rating: 3.9/5. From 7 votes.
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Quality Of Writing/Analysis
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Rating: 3.8/5. From 6 votes.
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Value For Price
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Rating: 2.6/5. From 7 votes.
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Customer Service
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Rating: 2.6/5. From 7 votes.
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Has anyone got this? I`m thinking of trying to get in at some time?
Growth Investor is a better deal — similar results for a whole lot less money
Is accelerated profits not smaller caps?
I agree 100%. My advice is buy the cheap service (and perhaps 2 years of it if that’s an option) and DON’T BE FOOLED BY THE BRUTALLY RELENTLESS HYPE for the expensive service. Ignore it. W/ the cheap service, decide how much you want to invest, total, then figure there will be about 40-50 stocks (or get the number when you get signed up), so divide your investment capital by 40-50 and buy only as many shares of each stock as can be bought for about that amount. It may be only 1 share! DO NOT buy all the stocks on the lists, as many will be well above the “buy under” amount. And be patient; new stocks will be added from time to time and some stocks will drop back below the “buy under” price so you can buy them. I made the mistake of deciding to pick and choose; bad idea, as here is no way to reliably know which will do well and Louis has his share of losing stocks! He does apologize when a pick loses 30-50%. I think the best approach is to gradually own all of them. This is why two years of the cheap service is better than one; you’ll have time to acquire all, or nearly all, the stocks on the lists. And do follow Louis’ directions. Sell when he says sell, buy when he says buy. Chances are his judgement is better than yours. And don’t expect you’ll become rich. Louis’ ridiculous exaggerations of possible wealth from his services are just that. He likes to say things like “For every $10,000 invested in blah-blah stock, you could have made $126,553 over 16 months!” You’re probably not going to invest anywhere near that much in each individual stock, so even if one of the 40-50 does do that well, you won’t see such an enormous gain. Good luck.
There are a few stocks in Navellier’s Accelerated List that he would not recommend in the cheaper, more conservative Growth service. The three names that come to mind are GMAB, YPL and Wabash WNC. Some stocks are introduced three or four weeks sooner in the Accelerated list before moving to Growth like GLP and RS.
I am pleased being a Navellier subscriber to the cheaper Growth List. I did take advantage of his offer to sample the Accelerated list for three months. I think Accelerated is a very good service but I do not do enough trading to justify the $2000 fee. The $80/year Growth service works fine for me.
I agree with the comments below about using Growth Investor instead of the more expensive InvestorPlace services. They hype the heck out of the high price newsletters and seem to re-package them every few months with a different “breakthrough formula” for picking the winners. Luke Lango’s newsletters are the same way so it must be an InvestorPlace sales tactic. Stick with the low cost newsletters – your success rate with wins vs losses will be about the same.