As we all know, investing in micro-cap or “penny” stocks is a high-risk / high-reward proposition. How many times have we all heard “No Risk, No Gain”? The majority of the companies we profile will fall into the “High Risk” category. Many are fundamentally unstable and their stock prices can be highly volatile. Despite our digging and prodding, a fair number of these companies are under-funded and lack the financial infrastructure to execute their business plans as intended.
For those of you that seek out these high-risk investments, you are undoubtedly not averse to the volatile sprice wings that come with the territory.
It is also quite evident that you are not looking for 10% growth in your penny-stock portfolio. Rather, you are probably looking for the explosive return that is commensurate with the risk that you bear in these investments. After all, many penny stocks actually do turn the proverbial corner and evolve into compelling business successes, and in turn reward shareholders handsomely. We all remember Commerce Planet at less than 20 cents not much more than a year ago, or Nighthawk Systems last December at less than 4 cents. The opportunities are certainly out there and our goal is to find them.
We can’t guarantee these kinds of results, and we don’t. We do, however, aim to identify interesting and compelling situations in the market with early stage businesses that we think are worth consideration with that percentage of your investment portfolio that is designated as high-risk and speculative. Ultimately, stock performance should be a direct result of the company’s business and financial performance. So our methodology is to provide insight into the business and financial progress of the companies that we follow – the good, the bad and the ugly. Our hope is that we will have more good to report than not. In full disclosure, some of the companies that we follow have paid us to do so.
More information pertaining to particular companies can be found in our disclosures which can be reached from our homepage. We do not make any guarantees to client companies as to the nature of our commentary, and our commentary is based solely on performance – good or bad. We believe that this is a fair approach and again, we hope to bring timely and rewarding information to your desktop that you might not have had have had easy or immediate access to before. We urge you to do your own diligence on companies that we mention and follow, and the SEC website www.sec.gov is the best place to start.



Despite the inertia that seeps into every traders brain when they have an active trading morning, keep in mind that your risk/reward ratio changes throughout the day… dramatically!
A weaker volume market is a more volatile market and a more volatile market is harder to trade when using any type of trading system (which you are… right?). Remember that the first hour after market open and the last hour before market close are the strongest and most trend following hours of the entire trading day. The hours in between should only be traded by savvy and impeccably disciplined traders who do not mind twiddling their thumbs in order to keep from getting trigger happy.
Read the rest of this tip »


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The MSP Team

