1Minimum is an estimate based on a price of the stock at day close.
2Maximum is an estimate based on a lowest price of the stock on the day we recommend to buy it and on a highest price of the stock on the day we recommend to sell it.
The performance data quoted here represents past performance and is not necessarily an indicator of future returns.
Do our performance numbers look too good to be true? That's because they are! And no, we haven't lied. But in order to stay on par with our competition we displayed row performance data, same as they did (only our performance is actually much better than theirs). Basically, we summed the loss or gain percentage of all of our stock picks. In other words, these numbers represent a total percentage of all transactions. But you might have several holdings at the same time. So even though you can gain, for example, 10% in one transaction, the money invested in that transaction could represent 50% of your capital. So the gain of your capital would not be 10%, but only 5%. Consequently, when you see in tables above a 100% gain in a given month, that's not the gain of your capital, but the sum of all gains or loses for stocks we recommended to buy that month. For example, each time we recommend to buy a stock you spend $1,000 and you get 500% gain for that year, that means you earned $5000. But since you would be holding several stocks at the same time, your maximum capital might be $10,000. So in reality, you don't get 500% gain but only 50%. Though it does look promising, in order to better estimate your potential gain based on the history of our stock picks, we recommend trying our Estimator tool below.
Date | Action | Gain/Loss |