Author/Editor
Marc Lichtenfeld
Publisher
Oxford Club
Description
Monthly newsletter focusing on income investments.
Overall Rating
Rating: 4.4/5. From 956 votes.
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4.6
Rating from 3947 votes
If you’ve subscribed to Oxford Income Letter, the, please click the stars below to indicate your rating for this newsletter, and please share any other feedback about your experience using the comment box below.
Investment Performance
Rating from 1072 votes
Rating: 4.5/5. From 1.1K votes.
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Quality Of Writing/Analysis
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Rating: 4.8/5. From 962 votes.
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Value For Price
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Rating: 4.7/5. From 957 votes.
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Customer Service
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Rating: 4.4/5. From 956 votes.
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Has anyone had experience with the Oxford Income Letter ?
Hi. How’s the letter working out.
Is this for real?
Yes. They recommend 2 of my best performing stocks. I enjoy holding the report in my hands instead of reading it on a computer or iPhone or iPad screen.
What I don’t enjoy is the barrage of special offers that I get bombarded with pretty much daily.
He provides sensible stock choices , all pay good dividends. He focuses on the FCF and relative valuation. I am not giving a full review here, but a summary of my opinion, which is quite good. Definitely worth the money.
Overall, I’d say Marc’s recommendations are pretty reliable. Is he perfect? No, but who is? Wouldn’t mind if he’d find some higher yield stocks to recommend, though.
I still subscribe to The Oxford Income Letter. It’s still okay and I do like reading their take on the markets. I am also subscribed to Investor’s Alley “The Dividend Hunter”, which I noticed is not listed here under “Newsletters”. We’ll see how that one goes…
I see folks subscribed to the news letter but has anyone followed the advice and made money. Just reading won’t make money. You must act.
Wayne, yes I have made money. There are quite a few of his picks that I wish I had taken his advice and bought.
Would really love more information. Has anyone had any success with the info in these magazines???
June 24,2016, I signed up for the services your company offered and completed the forms and before doing further research sent for a membership along with my credit card information. Further research reveals that the overwhelming probabilities are your presentation is a fraud. Accordingly I am taking advantage of your offer to allow withdrawal and all my money back.
Accordingly, please cancel my enrolment immediately. IN so far as my credit card use if you have not yet submitted it for payment , DO NOT. If you have submitted it for payment I hereby invoke your money back guarantee and request you take immediate steps to accomplish this task keeping me up to date so far as your written promise goes. Lastly, of course you will suspend your automatic renewal.
If you want a response from Oxford Income Letter you’re probably better off contacting them directly at http://oxfordclub.com/income-letter/
It’s a waste of time, Travis. They will reject your cancellation of their super expensive advisory service repeatedly like a bot.
Their service is very inexpensive.
The Oxford Income Letter is not fraudulent. It’s reliable, timely information for all level of investor.
Only followed 3 recommendations over the past year, but they all made money. I personally don’t follow every recommendation of any newsletter after being burned many times, but use them as a scanner.
He has got me in to some very worthwhile stocks
I have belonged to Oxford income for several years…on another email they do not have,Mark L.had another pitch 10/2/17.Already a member,this was NEVE R sent in my monthly statement.Told i had to go to another site for this.Why isnt this sent and why hidden elsewhere as another fee requested for a service paid for.. I spoke with Devin and he refunded my membershp !11 i recorded this and am sending to my attorney as I NEVer requested a refund recorded…all i wanted to know was why wasnt this included i my monthly paid for in advance subscription newsletter…why was this hidden …appears shifty to me.why did Deven cancel my subscription I Did NOt Request….no answers were given,nor resolution…sending to my attorney . as this was paid for …were they caught for doing this as new pitch was on another email…appears shifty to me.will let my attorney review…Marcs pitch was for Oxford Income I had paid for in full….for being unable to answer my question document…makes no sense!
Unlike some other facets of the Oxford Club, the Income Letter, which focuses on dividend stocks, is a no nonsense knowledgeable letter that tries to meet needs of investors in various stages of wealth building including near retirement.
I get the sense that while, to have the platform(Oxford Club) as a base of operations, he acquiesces to participation in some of the marginal advocacies of that organization, that the Income Letter is Marc’s baby and he seriously engages in honest education and has quite a teaching skill. I like that he acknowledges when his picks do not work out and makes an attempt to explain what went wrong. Overall his portfolio is a solid, albeit not to trounce the market, but to significantly beat it.
His letter, especially the lifetime option, is by far the best value at Oxford. Included are the blue chip bond picks of Steve McDonald and some savvy advice from Karim Rahemtulla who focuses on carefully chosen put sells, including the net yield of tying up required cash vs margin, while acknowledging risk and how to quantify that risk. In the context of this particular letter, the trustworthiness approaches that of Travis Johnson and Doc Gumshoe(together -the sine qua non)..
It was a little expensive to get into the top level. I get more stock recommendation’s each week than I can use. Each turns into a good profit, mostly 10-25percent. Lots of tutorials on options and bonds. Very happy.
Hi people, I have to agree, Marc Lichtenfeld’s book “Get Rich with Dividends” was a decent read. But that led me to the stupid decision to subscribe to his Stock Sequence Trader’s advisory service offered by the Oxford Club. This trade recommendation service is supposed to pick companies which are potential candidates to be bought over or targeted to start issuing dividends. Mind you, the subscription is not cheap, setting me back almost $1,600 for an annual subscription. It’s worth the price if Marc Lichtenfeld picks were good. But they weren’t. Recently his few picks suck badly. These companies have very bad fundamentals and their share prices drop the moment their earnings announcement were made. They were hardly the type of candidates to be acquired or issue any sort of dividends. The sucker punch was Marc Lichtenfeld recommended subscribers to buy call options to leverage our potential to earn higher profits in case the anticipated event(s) did materialize. But they didn’t. And since these companies’ share prices crumble after earnings, the call options were all reduced to sub pennies, where some of these calls were bought at few hundreds per option contract. So my warning is, don’t spend your hard earned money on Marc Lichtenfeld Stock Sequence Trader service. And be careful of the Oxford Club too. They refuse to let me cancel my subscription to get back my refund repeatedly.
SSigned up for Oxford club and their recommendations. Signed up for FEsslers report and listened to his recommendation to by Zoom. Bought at 106, put a trailing stop at 85. Came down to 84, lost over $4000.00. Called and asked for a complete refund because of this. The folks at Oxford told me they couldn’t refund me my $1200.00 for the Fessler report. Pursuing action with the BBB. Made other trades and lost a few additional thousand in the first week. See you in court, folks!
Especially true for Fessler. I too ponied-up and lost. I must correct you….The stocks drop THE NEXT DAY ! It make me wonder whose shares I am buying. Please let us know how you do in court.
Front running?
Have you seen the price of Zoom lately? You have to be patient, especially with a stock like Zoom that can take you on a wild ride.
has anyone subscribed to the Extreme Dividends letter? results?
I have belonged to this Newsletter for many years and have done very well. He sets a stop lose on all his picks so some do get stopped out, but None have bombed out. All stocks bounce up and down with the times and some people can handle the ups and downs – some not some much. Actually, I belong to all of the Oxford news letters.
I like this advisory; it’s different from others I subscribe to in that it’s not based so much on predictions of sky-rocketing stock prices, but more on stability and annual dividends.
I like and use thge advise, but dislike the videos—too much repeat, but mostly never know how long they are and how much time to alocate. Offer written text also.
Grateful to have your help!
Marc is extremely clear, succinct and, sincere in everything he writes. I make a point to read his email whenever I see it, whereas I am on a mission to delete as much as I can daily. Every minute reading his material is worth much more than the time it takes. I highly recommend Marc!
I am also an avid reader of The Dividend Hunter, which, like the Oxford Income Letter, has been found to be quite reliable. In addition to common stocks, the Dividend Hunter delves deeper into REITs, CEFs, and preferred stocks. Any dividend investor can get along quite well with these two letters.