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MFI Rebounding Better Than Dwight Howard
By: Steve Alexander   Tuesday, June 16, 2009 1:29 PM

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From Lehman Brother's collapse on September 15th, 2008, until March 9th of this year, the S&P 500 and stocks in general were in a massive free fall seldom witnessed in the market's history. The SPY S&P 500 ETF closed at 68.11 on that day, its lowest point since September of 1996! Since then, the market has rebounded strongly, and SPY is up an impressive 46%, closing last Friday at 95.08. Consumer confidence has improved, housing is showing signs of stabilization, banks are again reporting profits, and overall the worst appears to be behind us.

Nearly all investors have performed well, but Magic Formula investors in particular have really benefited, especially those that focus on small cap picks. This makes sense, of course. Small cap, value based stocks are the best performing class of stocks over the history of the market. The inherent volatility in small cap stocks provides investors ample opportunity to buy them at a discount, and in market downturns these stocks get significantly cheaper than the perceived "safer" large-cap companies. Of course, a low stock price more than mitigates these "risks", in many cases.

Those brave enough to buy have been handsomely rewarded in just 3 months. I recently looked at the Top 100 MFI stocks over 50 million market cap for March 9th and how they had performed individually and in aggregate during the market rebound. The results were quite impressive. The screen in aggregate shows a 77% average increase for all 100 stocks, which crushes the S&P's appreciation by a phenomenal 31%.

Possibly even more impressive is that fully 27 of those stocks have doubled in value over the last 90 days - several tripling in value and one, CTC Media (CTCM), quadrupling your money! (I predicted a possible 5 bagger but with high risk) What's more, 10 additional stocks showed gains of 80-99%. The list below shows all of the 2, 3, and 4 baggers. This is proof that big gains don't always have to be tied to big revenue growth, as many of these stocks have not shown any significant rebound in business results yet. This pushes through a point I stress here a lot - cheap stocks can provide an investor with profits even without outstanding business results. Expensive stocks can provide an investor with losses even with outstanding business results.

The large cap screen for March 9 (top 50 over 2 billion market cap) performed well also, delivering an average 52% gain per pick, but that's just 6% better than the S&P overall. Only one stock doubled (Coach - COH - appreciated 122%), although 7 delivered 80% gains or better.


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The above story is the opinion of the author only and it does not reflect iStockAnalyst opinion. Further, the author is not personally advising you regarding the suitability of the story for your investment needs. In no event iStockAnalyst will be liable for any loss or damage including without limitation, indirect or consequential loss or damage, or any loss or damage whatsoever arising from or arising out of, or in connection with the use of this information. Please consult your investment advisor before making any investment decision.
  
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