3 Essential Rules For Every Aggressive Growth Investor

Every intelligent investor’s portfolio must devote assets to aggressive growth.

No exceptions.


—Recommended Link—
THE LIST — Our Recent Picks Are Beating The S&P 500 3-to-1
When smart investors want to bag triple-digit gains, they turn to THE LIST. Our research team has produced gains of 310%…452%…569% along with dozens of other triple-digit winners. This year’s picks could be the most profitable yet. Get a glimpse of our groundbreaking research now.

Because finding a winning aggressive growth stock isn’t easy, I want to share with you how I do it…

I look for companies with products, technologies or other innovations that materially change the baseline assumptions for doing business in an industry.

#-ad_banner-#These are the companies seeking to hit one out of the park by finding The Next Big Thing.

You see, I have a knack for this. I don’t mean to brag, but in my years with StreetAuthority, I’ve picked more triple-digit gainers than just about any other analyst.

A few years ago, for example, I recommended AuthenTec, a company beginning to dominate the market for biometric readers — fingerprint scanners on personal electronic devices.

Not too long afterward, Apple agreed to buy the company.

Readers who followed my advice saw a total gain of 228%.

Another example: CalAmp (Nasdaq: CAMP), a maker of wireless communications hardware, rose 290% after I recommended it.

That’s just the tip of the iceberg.

And I’ve done it by following three simple rules that any investor can follow.

Rule No. 1: Be realistic to the point of hyper-rationality.
I lost track years ago of how many clinical trials I’ve read about various drugs.

But do you know something? At the end of every report, I wanted to buy every one of the stocks behind those drugs. The studies are detailed and educational. They set up the problem and then offer a unique solution. The science, the explanation, the data and the financials are always very appealing.

But these early-stage drug-development companies are very risky. Heck, they are damn risky. No matter how good the initial trials look, there is no guarantee of approval, and a negative action by the Food and Drug Administration can cut a small drug company’s stock price in half quicker than you can say Jack Robinson.

The other side of that coin, of course, is that the FDA (or one of its international counterparts) could rule in the drug’s favor, in which case the little company’s stock price chart resembles a space shuttle launch.

Now, the world’s leading drug companies spend tens of BILLIONS a year looking for new drugs. But the FDA may only approve, say, 50 new drugs in a given year. But according to the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, only 1 in 10,000 of the compounds studied by drug companies becomes a product for sale on the pharmacy shelf.

How does an investor mitigate this risk? Research, research and more research.

I began my career as a journalist, and I learned there was no substitute for good old-fashioned shoe-leather reporting.

Aggressive growth investors must cut through all the hype. They must prosecute every claim. They must use facts and hard data to quantify a stock’s likelihood to head skyward.

Rule No. 2: Aggressive growth investors must be patient
Gains can take time to achieve — time that should be marked in years, not weeks or even months. Aggressive investors are by nature contrarians, as they are usually betting on developments the rest of the market has not yet perceived, and they must have strong conviction in these “buy” decisions to weather the storm. (Because sooner or later, it always storms.)

Consider Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL), a hall-of-fame game-changer if there ever was one.

The iPod, the device that began Apple’s transformative march, was released in November 2001. The share price was around 20 bucks at that time, and the stock was functionally dead money for two years.

Thereafter, the shares rallied, though the company also saw periods where the stock turned strongly negative. Then, of course, the iPhone came along, and more money was made for early investors. Yet the stock still had periods where sentiment turned strongly negative.

But investors who had the foresight to see where Apple was headed scored big.

To echo my earlier point: Research-driven conviction brings on confidence, and confidence brings about resiliency. The aggressive investor must nurture all of these virtues.

Rule No. 3 is simple: Allocation, allocation, allocation.
I said earlier that all portfolios should have an aggressive growth component. But the aggressive growth segment of a portfolio, because of its risk profile, should be only a small percentage of total assets. I like the 10% rule, but it should never be more than 20%.

Is that too little? No. It’s just prudent. That’s enough upside potential to move the needle on your overall portfolio without shouldering an excessive amount of downside risk. That doesn’t mean that the other 80% to 90% of your portfolio can’t seek growth, it only means limiting exposure to the most aggressive securities.

Following these three rules isn’t easy. Heck, if it was, everyone would be rich. And I would’ve invested in Apple back in 2001 and be lounging on a beach right now. But these three rules have guided me to a string of triple-digit gains over the years (and a few quadruple-digit gains, too), and there’s no reason why they can’t do the same for you.