Topic: How To Invest

Q: Pat, just wondering if it’s wise to invest in at least a few low-priced stocks. That way if they go up, you can make a good return quickly. But, if you buy Apple, for example, at $223 a share, it has to go up a lot before you make money, it looks like.

Article Excerpt

A: Many investors start out thinking that they can double or triple their money in low-priced stocks, then shift their newfound wealth into the higher-priced, less exciting investments we focus on here at TSI Network. Some say they “can’t afford” to buy stocks that trade well above $100, such as Apple or even Canadian Pacific Kansas City, at $104. They prefer to buy stocks trading between, say, $1 and $10. They can buy more shares that way, and the shares can produce big percentage profits with a small dollar gain. Almost all investors who think this way wind up losing money. It’s easy to see why. Occasionally a $1 stock goes to $5, if not $50 or more (perhaps splitting its shares several times along the way). But the odds are against it. That’s because low-priced stocks aren’t just those companies that are just starting up. Low-priced stocks include those stocks that are outright shams. Ostensibly, they exist to carry out mining…