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 Location:  Home » Business Plans » Investments & Securities » Beating the Market, 3 Months at a Time: A Proven Investing Plan Everyone Can UseNovember 20, 2008  


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Beating the Market, 3 Months at a Time: A Proven Investing Plan Everyone Can Use
Beating the Market, 3 Months at a Time: A Proven Investing Plan Everyone Can Use
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Authors: Gerald Appel, Marvin Appel
Publisher: FT Press
Category: Book

List Price: $24.99
Buy New: $13.95
You Save: $11.04 (44%)
Buy New/Used from $4.55

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars(6 reviews)
Sales Rank: 155300

Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 240
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 5.8 x 1

ISBN: 0136130895
Dewey Decimal Number: 332.6
EAN: 9780136130895
ASIN: 0136130895

Publication Date: January 27, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
This is the eBook version of the printed book. If the print book includes a CD-ROM, this content is not included within the eBook version.
A Complete Roadmap for Investing Like a Pro That Requires Only 1 Hour Every 3 Months
  • The easy way to build a winning portfolio-and keep winning
  • Reduce risk, increase growth, and protect wealth even in tough, volatile markets
  • Absolutely NO background in math or finance necessary!

You can do better!

You don-t have to settle for -generic- investment performance, and you needn-t delegate your decision-making to expensive investment managers. This book shows how you can quickly and easily build your optimal global portfolio-and then keep it optimized, in just one hour every three months.

Top investment managers Gerald and Marvin Appel provide specific recommendations and simple selection techniques that any investor can use-even novices.

The Appels- approach is remarkably simple and requires only one hour of your time every 3 months, but don-t let that fool you: it draws on state-of-the-art strategies currently being used that really work.

www.systemsandforecasts.com

www.appelasset.com

www.signalert.com

If you know what to do, active investing can yield far better returns than -buy-and-hold- investing. But conventional approaches to active investing can be highly complex and time-consuming. Finally, there-s a proven, easy-to-use approach: one that-s simple enough for novices, quick enough for anyone, requires no background in math-and works!

Gerald and Marvin Appel show you how to identify, and give you specific recommendations for, the best mutual funds, ETFs, bond funds, and international funds. They do not stop there. They demonstrate how you can quickly and easily evaluate each investment-s performance every 3 months, and how to make adjustments to continually optimize the performance of your portfolio.

Using their easy to implement strategies, you can achieve better capital growth while reducing risk; profit from new opportunities at home and abroad; make the most of innovative investment vehicles; and protect your assets even in the toughest markets.

Improving rates of return while you also reduce risk

Setting intelligent investment targets and implementing strategies to meet them

Identifying today-s most profitable market sectors-

-and those that will continue to lead

Short-term vs. long-term bonds, mature vs. emerging markets

What to choose now, and when to switch




Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars Moderately interesting   October 6, 2008
  3 out of 3 found this review helpful

I got a couple of useful ideas from this book, but overall I was disappointed. The most useful ideas are (1) market sectors that outperform over one three-month period are more likely to outperform over the next three-month period, and (2) how to use ETFs to implement a timing-rotation strategy based on the first idea. The disappointments: (1) This is a thin book: 218 pages with large print. Take away the notes and index and it's 196 pages. (2) There seemed to be some internal conflict in just how to use allocations to create proper portfolios. After a while, I was not sure just what was being recommended. If I got it right, four different investment strategies ended up being recommended, and then blends of those were discussed. I got confused. Partly this may be the result of the book having two authors, and they apparently wrote different chapters independently. I'm not sure everything got reconciled. (3) The end of the book wandered into retirement topics, healthcare costs, social security...in other words, non-investing topics. This was unnecessary, annoying, and one wonders whether it was done because they needed more pages.


5 out of 5 stars Full of Valuable Information   September 5, 2008
This book contains valuable market timing strategies that anyone willing to spend the time and energy can implement. I like the presentation of the more active and less active (mutual fund) approach, and the fact that either strategy can be implemented without a great deal of time. How many times has an investor, myself included, made decisions based upon yesterday's winners, only to get in near the top of the market before a fall? I think this book offers practical strategies to make decisions based on valid indicators.


2 out of 5 stars Interesting strategy, but a disappointing book   August 29, 2008
This book suffers from two problems. First, it seems like a slimmed-down version of author Gerald Appel's "Opportunity Investing," which also discussed the use of a momentum-rotation strategy to improve absolute returns and reduce portfolio drawdown. The big difference here is that the Appels emphasize the use of ETFs for implementing their strategy.

Second, there is a lot of basic material whose purpose is to persuade the reader that they need to invest in equity markets. You see this too often in books on investing, where the authors assume that the reader need first be persuaded to invest and then to invest according to the author's strategy. I would wager that most people who pick up books on investing need no such convincing: it's preaching to the choir.

That said, the momentum-rotation strategy is an interesting concept, elegant and, in its ETF incarnation, easy to use. It is worth bearing in mind, though, that trading in and out of ETFs as might be necessary under this strategy would incur a significant tax and cost liability that the strategy would have to hurdle if it was to outperform as simple buy-and-hold plan. Alas, transaction costs and taxes do not factor into the Appels' analysis.




4 out of 5 stars interesting momenum idea   July 10, 2008
  2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Most of this book I thought was very basic & a review of what I've read in many other places. What set this book apart was thier idea of momenum play with broad stock market ETF's. They spell out thier idea in easy to understand language. I am in the process of evaluating the tax consequences of trying this but it seems more efficient & easier than most other investment methods I've tried.


4 out of 5 stars Chock Full Of Good Advice   July 6, 2008
  1 out of 2 found this review helpful

The authors have put together a fine basic plan to do precisely what the book title indicates. Most of the strategies,tips, ideas are things most investors should already be aware of. This tutorial very well reinforces the basics. It points out how the sellers of many mutual funds can be highly motivated by commissions. It is suggested that investors seriously consider etf's. In my view, most investors would benefit from this quick read.


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