Now quantitatively we rank things on something called alpha over standard deviation, which is the return independent of the market divided by volatility. Usually, to get a high ranking, you need some buying pressure. – Louis Navellier
Our system is dynamic, always shifting gears. What I do is I build models to beat the market. – Louis Navellier
What we do is we test what works on Wall Street. And sometimes it is earnings momentum, and sometimes it’s earnings surprises. Sometimes it’s price-to-sales cash flow, and then we put together our stock selection models. – Louis Navellier
I’m from Berkeley, California, so I’m fully trained in socialism and all, but basically what they teach you there is markets are efficient and we can’t beat them, so we might as well index. – Louis Navellier
I expect my return to be 18 to 25 percent in 1988, while the Standard & Poor’s 500 should rise 8 to 12 percent and OTC stocks gain 15 percent as liquidity emerges. – Louis Navellier
I simply can’t buy as much of some stocks such as Detection Systems or United Education & Software as I’d like because there just aren’t all that many shares available. – Louis Navellier
When volume drops off, prices settle down. Volume is the force that turns stocks higher. – Louis Navellier
I grade my stocks. I’m what they call a quant, one of the geeks of the stock market. – Louis Navellier
There are several things that can create an alpha – stock buybacks are one. High dividend yields are another, especially nowadays because the stock market yields more than the banks and the tenure treasury. But by and large, it tends to be companies with a strong cash flow, rising sales, accelerated earnings, a profit margin expansion. – Louis Navellier
My advice to the average investor in 1988 is to be patient and think long-term. It will take 18 months for confidence to get better and, in the meantime, this is absolutely no place for short-term money. – Louis Navellier
I want attractive stocks that will benefit from persistent institutional buying pressure. – Louis Navellier
If you go back to 2001, the market had two violent short covering rallies then, although I know the market didn’t officially get going until March 2003. – Louis Navellier
Optimization tells us precisely how to diversify the portfolio, whether I should have 12% in semiconductors or 4% in biotech, etc., and it literally tells me how to diversify not only the industry groups but the stocks. – Louis Navellier
I’ve been investing in the stock market for 27 years and, within that time, have helped investors beat the market nearly four to one. – Louis Navellier
I had Dell for four and a half years, and its sales are still phenomenal, but their operating margins started to contract, so I sold it in early 1999. There’s nothing wrong with Dell! It’s a fine company. It’s just the business risk they took. – Louis Navellier
There’s 4,000-plus stocks out there, and sometimes it gets a little confusing. And we like them to start with the portfolio grader, but if they’d like to see how I use the system and pick stocks – we offer that as well. – Louis Navellier
There’s something we calculate called an alpha, and that’s the stock’s return that’s independent, uncorrelated to the market. And the only way you really get a high alpha is for something to zig when the market zags. – Louis Navellier
We test everything on a one- and a three-year cycle. And you want to stress-test a model, and the three-year test usually does that because you have a growth and value bias. You have different interest rate environments. – Louis Navellier
We really believe in the earnings. We’re very proud that often we do well in the down market. But you know, there are some markets where they just lose liquidity, like 2001, 2008. – Louis Navellier
One of the things that launched the strength in biotech is when the pharmaceutical industry itself got a little slow. – Louis Navellier