Dave, I agree with alot of what you are saying and perhaps i can't articulate some things as well as you... and for others, that's ok to have your own opinion... i have averaged 25% per year for the last 10 years (without ever using leverage)... i am not an investment professional and i think that gives me certain advantages when making decisions...(i don't think i'd make such risky investments if i had the conscience of looking after other people's money... i'd rather just disclose what i do, and if someone wanted to copy my portfolio, then great!)...lol
i've learned that:
1.the main key is to practice patience...
2.it is much harder for a 30,60 or 90 dollar stock to move 20% or more so i focus on stocks priced between 2 and 5 dollars...(i sometimes look at beta, or volatility to make sure it's a stock that can move)
3.i only consider stocks that have been publicly traded with a history of 10 years or greater
4.i look for stocks that have traded at much higher levels in the past and have the potential to trade at those levels again.
5.i swing for the fences on troubled stocks... meaning, i'll hold a portfolio of 25 stocks in different sectors that all have a chance at either going bust or doing a ten-bagger or better... only 2% of these stocks ever really go into receivership, so the chances of me loosing my money 100% are close to nil... and it's never happened- i've lost 100% of a badly picked stock before, but i've also had a 40% overall return that year from my other stocks...
6.i follow a list of CEO's and other managers that are really good at turnarounds... look for them and you'll see where you should put your money... one example is Jos Wintermans and James Shannon... they have helped me with a few companies in the past.. a vitamin company, Sodisco Howden, SkyJack... so when they move, i follow them... they are with Cygnal technologies right now, which i haven't purchased yet as it hasn't hit its bottom yet... but, when it does i'll buy and probably set a selling target at about 5 bucks- the key is i'll wait 10 years for it to occur.
7.i use stock screeners once a month to make a list of 100 stocks across the tsx and NYSE to watch... but, i only make about 3-6 trades per year- this raises my return as my commissions are very low.
8.each stock has its own story to tell. sometimes p/e ratios are important, sometimes debt ratios are more important, i predict what future changes may be and how they will impact the company i am considering... consider after 9.11 i purchased airline stocks... but i waited until 2002 to do so... my logic was that 'given demographics and a global economy, in 5 or 6 years more people will be flying then ever'... sure you can say "hindsight... he's making this shit up!" but, there is more to it, i wanted to pick an airline that wouldn't go bankrupt from as it was and still is a very risky field to invest in... i had another trend in mind and that was the falling of the U.S. dollar... i though i'd look at foreign stocks on the NYSE and see if any were airlines...(buying a foreign company trading on a domestic stock exchange would give you a positive return should your domestic dollar fall as compared to the foreign dollar)...so i looked and like a north star on a clear cold night KLM airlines jumped right out at me. i did my research and found it fit my criteria perfectly... i bought KLM for about 11bucks...it was a deal as it's book value showed it worth $41/share and had positive cash flow of $960million, but it wasn't a perfect picture... KLM had a heavy debtload and debt/equity ratio of 2 to 1 and big losses were expected for 2002 as passenger traffic was falling drastically... so i wasn't ready to buy, but on further investigation, i found out the Dutch government was going to inject $24.7million into the company... some good news. and 9/11 as horrible as it was, would actually be good for the airline industry going forward as it will force airlines to streamline operations more efficiently and new security measures will make flying moreso safe than in the past. so i bought. since then air france merged with klm giving me an unexpected portfolio boost... hey, someone else out their noticed the value! i still own 1000 shares of air france at around $22-$23/share, my $$$ up 166% since i bought KLM in 2002. (i just gave this example as to how i go about picking stocks- it might sound crazy to you, but this method has worked for me... it takes little time and i can do it all on my own)
etc...
none of this is a secret... i've come up with most of these ideas from reading investment newsletters and books by david dreman, etc... as evident by how much time i waste on terb, you can see i have alot of time to spare for reading...
i think investing for these slightly better returns is alot like many other things in life such as dieting or penis enlargement for that matter- if you just rely on pills you might get a bit bigger or harder..., but, if you employ an exercise regime for your unit and stay disciplined for 10+ years then going from looking like a cigarette in front of a beachball to some girth and length that resembles the size of 2 coke cans stacked on top of eachother is 100% possible... DISCIPLINE is all it takes.
oh, and i have to admit... i absolutely suck at picking stocks on the short term... i tried those online stock picking contests and i do brutal... probably because i pick troubled stocks where it is hard to know exactly when the turnaround will occur... and my worst ever year was 2000 when everyone else was making money, i lost over 17%...