I am very lucky to be able to make a living doing what I am truly passionate about. This blog post isn’t about how great I am because there are plenty of microcap investors ten times smarter than me. Heck, my last five years 1099 statements have fluctuated so much it would make a F-16 pilot nauseous. Read More …
-
Reminiscences of a Full Time MicroCap Investor
Posted May 22, 2013 By Ian Cassel in Blog, Educational With | 1 Comment
-
The 14 Stages Of Investing Psychology
Posted April 23, 2013 By Ian Cassel in Blog, Educational With | No Comments
I’ve seen this illustration and description a few places before, so I don’t know who the original author is, but I think it’s an amazingly accurate account of the 14 stages of investing psychology: (View Below) Read More …
-
The First Ever MicroCapClub Member MeetUp
Posted April 7, 2013 By Ian Cassel in Blog With | No Comments
Some of the best times I’ve had as an investor have been simply sitting around a table with other likeminded investors talking about microcap stocks and/or issues affecting the space. No agendas, no egos, no BS, which normally come with organized events. This is the environment we look to replicate for our member meetups. We had our first ever MicroCapClub Member MeetUp on Friday in Philadelphia. The event was free to members, and it was a full day of discussion, socializing, and talking about topics relating to microcap. 35 investor-members attended the event, and we will look to do more in the future. Here are a few pictures of the event: Read More …
-
The Emerging Era of MicroCaps (Conclusion)
Posted March 25, 2013 By Ian Cassel in Blog, Educational With | No Comments
By Marc Robins
This is the final chapter in a four part series entitled The Emerging Era of MicroCaps. You can view the previous three parts here: [Part 1] [Part 2] [Part 3].
“We Lose the Winners, and Gain the Losers”
One of the great things about my publication, The Red Chip Review, between 1993 and 2002 was the talented creative and editorial team. This incredible group of professionals originated financial by-lines, ad headings, whole advertisements and logos (like, We Discover Tomorrow’s Blue Chips Today or Like ‘Insider Information’ Without All that Unpleasant Jail Time) better than many of the nation’s magazines and ad agencies. One of my favorites, not because it was so very clever, was “We Lose the Winners and Gain the Losers”. For those that haven’t figured it out, this relates to how successful small- and micro-cap stocks that work, move up in the capitulation strata and out of the micro-cap realm. It means that discoveries that were made in the $20 million to $100 million market cap range that work, eventually rise in price and market cap until they are bounced out of the micro-cap classification. Top of mind examples that I was involved in include Precision Castparts, Nike, Costco, Expeditors International, Celgene, Medicis, etc. Those that don’t do so well…typically major big cap names that have plopped-out due to technology changes or poor management, like Kodak, couple of major banks back in the past decade, an auto company or two, and multiple others…fall from vaulted valuations down into our realm. Read More …
-
The Emerging Era of MicroCaps (Part 3)
Posted March 14, 2013 By Ian Cassel in Blog, Educational With | No Comments
By Marc Robins
For those of you suffered through [Part 1] and [Part 2], congratulations! Only two more parts remain. Three times I’ve started this article, trying to wrap-up the series on the New Era of Micro-caps. Given the verbal constipation, one would think I might be having difficulty expressing a concluding thesis. Nyet! My troubles have to do with holiday cheer (or too much of it!), technology breakdowns (“Thumb-drives” {especially the free ones handed out at various conferences that look like they’re ‘info-vaults’} are not to be depended upon. They rank right up there with technological abortions like MS Software, the Hindenburg, 8-track stereo, the Yugo, and cold-fusion.) Twice, I had made really good progress on Part 3 and TWICE, the “dumb-drives” I was using for storage experienced malfunctions. In other words, the documents were “Lost in Space”. Read More …