вторник, 15 февраля 2011 г.

"Gentleman, start your engines"


Major Investment Vehicle Starting to Heat Up

 


 

Who cares if this technology changes the world?  I don’t.  I only care that this stock, which is trading for just pennies, hits $0.50 in the next three months!

Right now, you can buy 10,000 shares for just $250… and when it hits 50 cents, those shares will be worth a cool Five-Grand!  For just $500, you can pick up 20,000 shares that could be worth an amazing $10,000 by the end of the summer.
Sounds too easy?  Well it is.  Once you read my Free report (by clicking here) you’ll see exactly why… heck, you may want to pick up a hundred thousand shares right now!

In Today’s Issue…
àWhy VCs Are Moving Back In (TF)
**************************
àIPOs: Back In Force (Tim Fields)
Before the market crash 2 years ago, one of the major investment vehicles that traders used to pick up gains ranging from 10-20% and all the way up to 200-600% were IPOs or Initial Public Offerings.
Investing in IPOs during this time was a very lucrative time in our economy and there were a tremendous amount of very sexy companies that were looking for public dollars so they could grow their businesses into monsters.
From 2006 to 2008 we saw some very solid companies bring back some very impressive returns to investors.  Within a few short months of investing, members of our IPO service, The 123 Advisor were picking up gains literally in the hundreds of percent.
We saw gains from companies like New Oriental Education, Starent Networks, Chipotle, MasterCard, Lululemon Athletica, Riverbed Tech, Mead Johnson Nutrition, changyou.com and China New Borun to name a few, that contributed to a 1028% gain in our portfolio.
But things changed.  The financial collapse happened and as a result, nothing was coming from the IPO market at all… nothing worth even a head turn.  But slowly, things started to change. 
As venture capitalists started to see that the worst was behind us and that we would not only have a flat market for some time, but eventually one that would start to slowly pick back up the pieces, they started to buzz.
VC’s are the crystal balls to the stock market and they generally see things that the ordinary investor doesn’t and it their cases, they were about 6 months ahead.
The venture capitalists saw that the bottom was indeed here and that people would start to return their money back to the market.  They saw the simple fact that a tremendous amount of casual investors (investors who typically only have a 401k and IRAs) were turning to the market because they lost so much damn money.
In some cases, entire fortunes were lost; I don’t need to tell you about that.
So back to the VC’s – they saw all of this happening and they saw that the economy, while in the crapper, was showing signs that it would start to pick up.  So VC’s started to timidly pour their cash back into the market in forms of backings on potential IPOs.
A few months later, as the first couple of IPOs trickled back to the market, everybody was scared.  Investors were worried that if they put their cash into an IPO, it would tank and as a result, the demand for IPOs was poor.
But this changed. 
It changed because the companies now were not just some “debt ridden good ideas” that were trying to access public cash to pay off their internal investors.  These new IPOs were solid companies with workable business plans that had strong earnings.
VC’s weren’t stupid.  They were not going to throw their cash behind a company that would surely fail.  They wanted the best rate of return and that can’t be achieved with debt.
At this point, the IPOs coming out were slow.  The ice needed to get broken and investors watched as these companies became public like they’d watch the New Year’s ball drop.  All eyes were trained.
When the companies debuted and did well (by well I mean, didn’t crash) it was a success.  What generally happened was the IPO would hit, there would be low demand and it would stay pretty flat.  However after the debut, the wolves pounced and snapped up shares.  This was the very mechanism that sent IPOs through the roof.
Fast forward to today.  We are not in the same situation we were in back in 2009.  Today there are a lot of strong companies looking for public cash and there are also a tremendous amount of IPO investors just waiting for the next big thing, the next Google...
And they will get it.  IPO investors have waited long enough and folks, we are on the verge of a very impressive moment in IPO history.  We are at the point of “Major IPOs” getting ready to hit the market. 
I’m talking about major events like “LinkedIn” and “Pandora” to name just two. 
Folks, if you’ve been waiting for the next “Google”, the next “MasterCard” and the next “New Oriental Education” you’ve waited long enough and your dreams have a very, very high probability of coming through and making returns that literally could touch 200-300%.
The demand for these IPOs is going to be so significant that unless you have boatloads of cash to invest, the underwriters aren’t going to want to play ball.  They aren’t going to let someone who wants to invest a measly $5k into their world.  They want the big fish, and rightfully so.  It’s just the nature of the high demand IPO market. 
However there is another way in.  There is another way to go around the underwriters and get exactly the amount of shares you’re comfortable with; and I’ll show you exactly how you need to go about doing it.  You want a piece of Pandora?  You want a piece of LinkedIn?
Email me here right away and I’ll show you everything you need to know.
I’m giving you my personally email address, so please contact me only if your serious.  If the above link doesn’t work for you, my email address istim.fields@yahoo.com
Have a great day and I look forward to hearing from you.
 

By Showing You This Secret, I’m Painting
A Huge Target On My Back…
Dangerous as it may be, I need to get the word out, because we don’t have to wait by their heels, begging for scraps any longer.
Don’t get me wrong, I don’t physically fear for my life, or my family…
It’s just that using the exact same techniques that Billionaire investors have built their fortunes upon, makes these powerful people very unhappy.

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