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The following two Special Reports Have been created Just for You. We hope that you enjoy them. “All it Takes to make a Million Dollars is Time, Consistency and the Rate of Return,” by Timothy McMahon, editor “15 Quick and Easy Ways to Beat 95% of All Investors” by Timothy McMahon, editor Financial Trend Forecaster www.fintrend.com

15 Quick and Easy Ways to Beat 95% of All Investors

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Before I explain how to beat 95% of all investors, you have to understand why a small difference in your rate of return makes a BIG difference in your financial future. The difference between earning 5% per year and 15% per year is like the difference between a minnow and a whale!

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Page 1: 15 Quick and Easy Ways to Beat 95% of All Investors

The following two Special Reports Have been created Just for You.

We hope that you enjoy them.

“All it Takes to make a Million Dollars is Time, Consistency and the Rate of Return,”

by Timothy McMahon, editor

“15 Quick and Easy Ways to Beat 95% of All Investors” by Timothy McMahon, editor

Financial Trend Forecaster www.fintrend.com

Page 2: 15 Quick and Easy Ways to Beat 95% of All Investors

“All it Takes to make a Million Dollars is Time, Consistency and the Rate of Return,”

by Timothy McMahon, editor Financial Trend Forecaster

www.fintrend.com© 2005 Reprint info at the end

Before I explain how to beat 95% of all investors, you have to understand why a small difference in your rate of return makes a BIG difference in your financial future. The difference between earning 5% per year and 15% per year is like the difference between a minnow and a whale! If you had a nest egg of $10,000.00 and invested it for 32 years at 15% you will have One Million Dollars!

But at 2% you will only have $ 20,000 ! Which would you prefer $20,000 or One Million? Investing $10,000 for 30 years at:

2% will give you $ 18,194 4% will give you $ 33,003 7% will give you $ 80,191

10% will give you $193,581 15% will give you $829,034

And at 20% $10,000 will increase by 34,791% to $3,489,120 in 30 years!

Think about that- Three and a half Million vs. Eighteen Thousand! Why does a few points make so much difference? Compound Interest! Compound Interest Creates a Chain Reaction more Powerful than Nuclear Energy! During the heyday of Atomic Energy, a reporter looking for a hot story about Nuclear Fission approached Albert Einstein and asked “What is the most powerful force on earth?” … … but he was sorely disappointed when Einstein replied, “Compound Interest.”

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Why would one of the most brilliant men who ever lived feel that compound interest was more powerful than Atom Splitting?

Simple, splitting an atom releases a huge amount of energy because it creates a chain reaction. Each split releases particles which cause other atoms to split, releasing other particles, causing more atoms to split, etc., etc.

But… once the fuel is gone the reaction stops. Therefore, although the amount of energy released is huge it is still finite.

But in releasing the power of compound interest you can create a chain reaction that literally goes on forever. Don’t want to wait 30 years? Another interesting study shows that even if you don’t have a nest egg you can retire a millionaire. Simply by saving $10 per day and investing it at 15% per year you will still reach Millionaire status in 25 years. Is 25 years too long to save become a Millionaire? The average mortgage is 30 years! So why are people willing to go in debt for 30 years but not save for 25 years? I have a friend who always complains about not having any money. Life is always throwing surprises at him so he can’t save anything! He makes a good salary as a computer consultant… He is single so his salary is all his… But he eats lunch out everyday… He eats dinner out frequently… And he owes the IRS back taxes, and has his credit cards maxed out! Do you know anyone like that? How many people do you know who complain about not having any money left over to save, but think nothing of spending $10/day on restaurant lunches? $5/day on cigarettes? $4/day on Beer or Starbucks Coffee? Or even $2/day on Coke and Candy Bars from a vending machine? Or whatever? Most Americans easily waste more than $10 a day without even realizing it! Think about it! Just by eating in… Rather than eating out… You can retire a Millionaire! And You’ll probably be healthier for it too!

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The key components of compounding are Time, Consistency and the Rate of Return, so you need to start right away! If you already have a $10,000 nest egg… $10 per day plus a $10,000 nest egg drops the time down to 22.9 years but you still need time on your side. Time and Consistency- The place to start is here; the time to start is NOW! Decide to Start- Once you decide to start you are halfway there. The first two elements needed are time and consistency and both are simply a matter of choice.

Time machines only exist in movies- Time- The only way to get time is to start NOW! Unfortunately, time machines only exist in movies so you can’t start yesterday or last week or 30 years ago. You have to start NOW! Consistency- If you get half a million dollars will you quit? Worse yet will you quit at $100,000? Or $50,000 or $25,000 or perhaps never even start at all?

The major reason for people failing to reach their goals is they simply quit! If they had just continued a little longer they would have been over the hump and it would have been downhill sailing the rest of the way! That last hump eliminates all but the true winners! Let me tell you a true story about a guy named Bob

(not his real name) Bob had a neighbor named Dr. Steve. Dr. Steve had a good practice and had been investing for a while and he was pretty good at it, too. One day as Bob was talking with his neighbor Steve, Steve offered to manage some of Bob’s investments. They were good friends and Steve had been successful so Bob agreed. Bob and Steve each invested $10,000.00 of their own money. Naturally, Bob kept an eye on what Steve was doing with his money and after only a few years his $10,000.00 investment had grown to $100,000.00 (Steve was making him more than 20% per year!)

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At that rate in a few more years Bob would be a Millionaire…

But because Bob didn’t understand what Steve was doing and how he did it he began to wonder…

Maybe Steve’s good luck would run out Or the market would crash

Or the world would end Or something and Bob would have nothing.

At this point…

What would you do if you were Bob? Would you hang in there? And Risk the $100,000.00? (which really only cost you $10,000) Or would you take the money and use it for a nice motor home? Bob chose the motor home. With the swipe of a pen he turned a nice rapidly appreciating asset into a liability.

…if you don’t know why this is a liability …you need to read this article:

THE WEALTHY BUY ASSETS THE POOR BUY LIABILITIES THE MIDDLE CLASS BUY LIABILITIES BELIEVING THEY ARE ASSETS By Tim McMahon, Editor

www.YourFamilyFinances.com But back to Bob- Bob chose the motor home and gave up the possibility of ever becoming a Millionaire. Dr. Steve on the other hand turned his investment into well over a Million Dollars and quit his practice and now he watches his investments for an hour or so a day and plays golf the rest of the time. The point of this story is Persistence! Had Bob stuck with Dr. Steve a few more years he could have bought the motor home and had the investments. But he quit a little too soon. He let fear of loss overcome his plan. He wasn’t in control (he was letting Steve do all the thinking). He should have had Steve show him how it was done and taken over the investing himself. Persistence is the key to success that most people lack.

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We are living in a society that teaches instant gratification. Watch any commercial and what do you see? Someone has a problem, bad breath, or sinus problems or hemorrhoids, or whatever, but less than 60 seconds later they are smiling… problem resolved! Unfortunately, real life requires persistence. If you want to lick bad breath you have to use the mouthwash every day! To cure the infection the bottle says, you have to take all of the prescription- don’t quit after half just because you are feeling better. The problem will come back and be twice as hard to resolve! Bob had started taking the prescription, was almost over the hump, but now he has an additional payment on his beach house. Making it twice as hard to cure the problem. Persistence and Money- If you really want to retire a Millionaire don’t give up and you will be one! In as little as 22.9 years. Or less, if you save more per month or start with a bigger nest egg. The 20/20/20 Rule Start with $20,000. Invest it at 20% and it will only take 20 years to become a Millionaire! Twenty years seems like a long time-

Until you realize that it is less time than the average mortgage.

Most Mortgages are 30 years! Why are people willing to be in debt for 30 years,

but won’t work 20 years to become a Millionaire?

A forty year old easily has enough time to become a millionaire by the time he or she retires as long as He doesn’t quit.

So the big problem isn’t time, just hang in there.

As the commercial says… Just Do It!

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“15 Quick and Easy Ways to Beat 95% of All Investors” by Timothy McMahon, editor

Financial Trend Forecaster www.fintrend.com

© 2005 Reprint info at the end

So.. How do You make 15% to 20% per year? I’m glad you asked, because that is really what this report is all about! I’ve spent all this time explaining the importance of Compound Interest and the need for time and persistence, because if you don’t start investing right away… making 20% on Zero dollars won’t help you a bit! You have to start somewhere, sometime. So, the only hitch left is finding some place where you can actually earn 15-20% per year. Whenever you read about compound interest they always tell you “If you can only earn 15% …” but where can you earn 15%???!!! Would you like a list of 15 places that will earn 15% or more per year for the next 10 years? I will tell you that in a moment…

but before I do, I would like to do even more than that for you. Remember the ancient Chinese proverb about giving a man a fish? It goes like this, “Give a Man a Fish and you feed him for a day, but teach him to fish and you feed him for a lifetime”.

Most investors go through life looking for a series of “Hot Tips”

All they want to know is what is hot this week, or this month, or this year. And they hunt for the hot guru who will give it to them. And the newsletter industry loves that mentality because it sells lots of newsletters. The problem with HOT TIPS is that by the time you get them they may be

Warm Tips or even Cool tips or perhaps even

Cold tips or worse yet they can be… Downright Lies

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The questions YOU should be asking are:

• How do I know it is Hot? • Why is it HOT? • Is it getting Hotter or Cooling off? • Does the Tipster have anything to gain by giving me this tip?

Looking for Hot Tips is just like begging for a fish. Which lifestyle would you prefer, if given only two options? Would you rather spend each day begging for a fish? Imagine spending all day long on a hot dirty street corner saying “Please Sir may I have a fish?” Perhaps, after time you would find a generous person who would give you a fish on a regular basis, but what if he died or stopped being generous? Perhaps, you need more than one fish today? Do you want to have to beg day after day? Or, would you prefer to learn how to fish? Then every day you can take your net down to the dock, reach into the water and scoop up a fish. If you want two fish scoop again! If you want to be able to give a fish to the beggar on the corner, scoop again! That’s all there is to it! Which is the better lifestyle? Perhaps by the time you read this, the individual investments in it will be stale, but the methods will last forever. In this report, I would like to “Teach You to Fish”. Not only to be an ordinary fisherman either but a top 5% fisherman. Would You like to be the master of your own destiny, Free to choose for yourself? If you are relying on the source of the tip, you are at the mercy of the tipster, you have no control. You have no way of knowing whether the information they are providing is good or bad, you might as well go out and buy a lottery ticket. What you really need is a system that will help you to make your own decisions. Based upon cold hard facts, not on hunches or feelings, or tips. By basing your decisions on a system you will once again be the master of your own destiny, in control of your investment life. You will be the expert and at the mercy of no one. Most Market participants fall victim to their feelings Most Market participants (I won’t call them investors) fall victim to too many feelings. The big two are Fear and Greed. First they fear missing out. Does this story sound familiar?

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Someone at a party talks about their hot stock that just went up 20% and everyone wants in on the action. Then you see a story on the same stock in the paper or on TV, so you jump in and sure enough it goes up another 10%. Now you are thinking… WOW this is amazing… 10% in 3 weeks. Now Mr. Greed begins poking you with his pitchfork and says, “you can make 20% too, just like that guy at the party.” You begin to think, at this rate, I’ll be a Millionaire in only 3.7 years! Then suddenly the stock hiccups, just a little bit… but you just “know” it’s going to start upwards again. It just has to… your future Millions are riding on it! But, by now, this over-hyped dog is falling like a stone. Before you know it, you are down 10% and you can’t get out at a loss, (fear again… or maybe pride) so you hang on and the loss just gets worse and worse. Until you finally can’t stand it any more, so you sell out just as the stock is bottoming and getting ready to rise again. This is not the way to invest! This is the way to line the pockets of the smart investors! In this report I am going to tell you the easy way to average 15%-20% per year for the rest of your life. On our website www.fintrend.com I will show you ways to earn much more than 15% per year (but with a little more work). And on our sister site www.yourfamilyfinances.com I will show you how to save $10 or more per day to start your investment program and other ways to get your nest egg started. Are you ready to learn how to join the ranks of the top 5% of all investors? The methods in this report are based upon a simple system that is so easy a child can do it, and yet most people don’t bother to do it. I have owned stocks since I was a child and have been picking my own stocks since I was a teenager. I began by reading my grandfather’s investment newsletters while taking breaks from mowing his lawn. Before long I was buying stocks and earning decent enough returns to put myself through college

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and then I began investing in options, sometimes selling “covered calls” to juice up the returns. But for this report, I am going to show you a simple easy way to earn excellent returns.

Rule #1- Spread the RISK Most investors focus on individual stocks and hope for a “good” return. But in order to safely invest in stocks you need to diversify. You need to spread the risk over a large number of stocks. In recent years investors have learned that almost any stock can fall victim to corrupt management or the whims of the market.

So to avoid that, you need a portfolio of many different stocks spread over many different industries. That requires a fairly hefty “nest egg” even our hypothetical $10,000.00 will not provide adequate diversification. So we will focus on mutual funds. Most mutual funds list at least 30 different stocks, many funds have much more than that, and they have professionals to watch them. Earning 15%/year will put you in the top 5% of all investors!

The return on the 1235 mutual funds I surveyed averaged 7.04% over the last 10 years. These are funds that are managed by professional managers supposedly to maximize the profits for their investors. So if professionals can’t average better than 7% it is easy to see why an individual stock picker doesn’t stand much of a chance. So the next time that guy brags about his stock going up 20% ask him what his whole portfolio did. How many went down 50%? No one ever seems to mention those! Consistently, earning 15% per year will put you in the top 5% of all investors! 90% of all mutual funds perform worse than the S&P500 index. While we are on the subject of Mutual Funds, let me warn you about something. Do you know why all the big fund management companies have 20 or 30 different sector funds with different strategies? To provide a variety of choices for the consumer? To meet varying investment needs? The answer is yes and no. 90% of all mutual funds perform worse than the S&P500 index. The primary reason there are so many funds, is so that at least some of the advisors funds are up at any one time. So they market the good ones just like the party tipster. Ever wonder why bad funds get merged into good funds and funds disappear? The managers can’t market them anymore, so they start new ones and vaporize the bad ones. If the average mutual fund earned 7% over the last 10 years, it is safe to assume that the average mutual fund investor made less than 7%, due to poor timing and always chasing last year’s “hot fund”. At that rate it will take you 67 years or more to become a

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Millionaire! That is too long! If you start at age 23 you will have to wait until you are 90 years old! What can the average investor do, settle for a measly 1 ½% on a CD from the bank? NO! Let your know-it-all neighbor happily earn 1 ½% on his CD…

You can be confident in the knowledge that You are safely earning TEN TIMES that amount.

Even if you just bought the S&P500 index you could have averaged 10.38% per year over the last 10 years but because of the Tech Wreck years from 2000-2003 you would actually be losing money over the last five years (not counting dividends). If you had bought at the peak in 2000 you would be very near breaking even. If you had purchased Vanguard’s low load S&P Index fund you would have done almost as well. Because of the low fees your actual return would have been 9.27% and minus 1.85% respectively. Not bad considering that three of those years have been “lackluster” (that means downright bad in investment talk). Did you hear that? 9.27% for doing nothing!!! A simple index

fund! By simply buying the index fund, YOU would out perform 90% of all investors. But you would also own the worst performing stocks as well as the best, since by definition an index fund holds every stock in the index. And you would have had to hold through good times and bad. And not buy at the top. Is owning the worst performers all that bad? Actually, owning the worst performers isn’t as bad as it first appears. If you own two stocks both priced at $10 and one doubles and one falls to half, you are still even right? Wrong! Your one stock will rise to $20 and the other will fall to $5, so your total portfolio is now worth $25 up from $20. The average price is $25 divided by 2 or $12.50. So you actually made 25%! So if you own the top 500 stocks and half of them decline and the other half rise you should actually come out ahead. And since they are the top 500 stocks in the world, 7 out of 10 will actually be winners in good years.

Maybe we can do a little better…

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Remember that every 1% increase in return makes a big difference in the long run, so we can’t afford to give up even 1%. The top 5% of all investors consistently earn 15-20% returns on their investments, year in and year out! Our goal is to join them! We will start by determining our goals

If you have No Destination any path will get you there.

The following is a hypothetical interview with Joe Average Investor:

Interviewer: Mr. Average, What is your investment goal?

Joe’s Answer: To make money!

Interviewer: Can you be a bit more specific?

Joe’s Answer: To make Lots of Money?

Interviewer: A bit more specific yet!

Joe’s Answer: I don’t know you tell me!

Interviewer: Let me help you, How would you like to earn 15-20% per year over the next 30 years?

Joe’s Answer: That sounds good to me. Is that guaranteed?

Interviewer: Unfortunately, we don’t have any guarantees; we can only make educated guesses. Even though the SEC forces all investment firms to state, “Past performance is no guarantee of future success” it is still the best indicator that we have.

Joe’s Answer: So how do we know which fund will earn 15-20% per year over the next 30 years?

Interviewer: What do you think Joe?

Joe’s Answer: We are going to pick the fund that did the best last month right?

Interviewer: Wrong again.

Joe’s Answer: How about picking the one that did the best last year?

Interviewer: Nope! Conditions change from year to year, whichever stock gained ground last year will probably lose ground this year.

Joe’s Answer: What about just buying the S&P500 index and taking the easy way out?

Interviewer: For diversification purposes it probably wouldn’t hurt to put a portion of your funds (maybe 20%) into an index fund like Vanguard S&P500 index fund symbol VFINX. But lets try to do better with the rest. (On the following pages we will tell you how to do better.)

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How to choose a Mutual Fund that will grow 15% - 20%/year In order to choose the best mutual fund we will use Morningstar’s free web site. And we will start by finding the top 40 performers over the last 10 years. As Joe learned in the above interview, a fund that performed well last year may not do well this year but a fund with an excellent 10-year track record is a good place to start looking. Why did we choose a 10-year timeframe? Because a 30 year timeframe wasn’t available! Seriously, the longer the time frame the better and 10 years is the maximum for Morningstar. If a fund does well over a long period of time, chances are better that its management philosophy will continue to perform well. First we go to http://screen.morningstar.com/fundsearch/fundrank.html in the pull-down box we will choose Fund Quickrank. For Fund Category: we will choose “All Funds” Set Select Ranking Field to: “Total return % 10 year Annualized” Click “View Results” This will provide a list of the top performing 40 funds over the last 10 years.

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At this point we get a chart that looks like this: (Note: I have added the “Rank” column to make it easier to refer to the list by number) Morningstar Sample Results-

So we have the Best 40 Funds to choose from…

What now? The first thing we want to do is eliminate all the funds that did worse than the S&P500 index. Since Vanguard’s S&P500 index fund earned 9.27% All of the above 40 funds performed better, so we won’t eliminate any this time. (Note that the average of all funds is 6.83%) So there are many that performed worse than the S&P- 500 But Forty funds are way too many, we still need to eliminate some, we want the cream of the cream. Once again what are our

goals? To consistently earn 15-20% per year over the next 30 years So what would we look for? How about consistency? Do we want a fund that is up 100% one year and down 30% the next? Probably not. There will be some bad years for any fund. But we want our funds to be minimally

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down or even flat to up slightly during bad years. To help cover for some of the volatility we will be investing in several different funds. Just like a fund diversifies over several stocks, if we can diversify over several well performing funds we should have the best of the best. Then even if one fund has a down year the other funds should make up for it. In order for diversification to work we must be sure to choose funds that invest in different sectors, simply choosing 3 different funds in the same sector will not provide much diversification.

How many funds should we diversify over? The answer to that question is a nice firm “That depends”. It is impossible to answer that question without knowing the size of your portfolio. Some funds have a minimum investment (although if you are using them for an IRA the minimum is usually lower). (By the way do you have an IRA? If not, start one with this investment program today! An IRA is the best gift the government ever gave an investor.) Here are some guidelines for deciding how many funds to diversify over. You probably want to limit your exposure to any one fund to a maximum of 20% of your portfolio (so you need to invest in at least 5 different funds). If you have $10,000 to invest you would choose 5 funds and put $2,000 in each fund. If you have $100,000 you would choose between 10 and 15 funds. 15 is probably the maximum you would want… above that amount it becomes difficult to track and so even if you had a Million Dollars you would probably just diversify into 15 funds or maybe 20. That is why the title of this report is 15 Quick and Easy Ways to Beat 95% of All Investors. We are going to choose 15 funds that earned 15% or more over the last 10 years and you will very likely out perform 95% of all investors over the next 10 years. We have 40 funds, How do we select the 15 (or 5) Best for us?

Part of the choice process is personal preference. You are going to have to live with this fund for 30 years so choose funds that you will be comfortable with. Don’t do anything you will feel uncomfortable about. If the fund invests in the “Gaming Industry” and you don’t believe in gambling don’t buy it. The same goes for tobacco, alcohol, or whatever. You have 40 to choose from you can be picky! Unfortunately, if you want the best performing funds you can’t stop them from investing in some individual stocks you might not agree with but you can avoid buying the sector fund. Once you have eliminated the industries that you will not invest in, you still have quite a bit of choosing to do. And at this point the job gets a bit tedious. Why not just choose the top 15 funds and be done with it? Actually, that wouldn’t be the worst but it is possible that several of them are in the same industry at any given point. Perhaps the decade was

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especially good to the electronics industry or oil or whatever. So if you eliminate duplicate sectors and just choose the first 15 different sectors you would probably do well. As I said earlier, for diversification purposes you may want to include the S&P500 index as one of your funds, even though more than 40 other funds out performed it over the last decade. By clicking on the Fund symbol you can find more detailed information about each fund. Remember you only need to do this once every several years, so spend some time and do it right! (You don’t need to keep the funds for 30 years but you don’t want to be changing all the time either. Perhaps you want to look over the newest list every New Years Day and readjust your allocations some.) This report is not meant to be personal investment advice but purely for educational purposes. You will ultimately have to make your own decisions and live with the consequences. At this point, you have enough information to outperform 90% of the investors out there. The choice of which funds to include in YOUR list becomes a very personal choice. I can only give you some broad guidelines. How you choose will determine whether you make it to the 95% level. Here are the guidelines for Choosing Your Funds:

1. Some Funds might be “closed” meaning you can eliminate them right away because they will not take any more investors.

2. Diversify over different Industry sectors 3. Choose Funds that perform well in Bear Markets (we don’t want to lose our

gains) Morningstar provides a Bear Market Decile Rank with a 1 being best and a 10 being worst. Choose funds with 1’s or 2’s or 3’s. (from the Morningstar Ratings tab)

4. Choose only funds that have a Morningstar “Overall Rating” of 4 or 5 stars. (on Morningstar Ratings tab)

5. Everything else being equal, choose Funds with a lower expense ratio over those with a higher expense ratio.

6. Beware of funds with a “front load”. An example is Calamos Growth (CVGRX); it carries a 4.75% front load. That means that you will start with only 95.25% of your money working for you.

7. The only thing worse than a “front load” is a “back load”. Morningstar calls it a “Deferred Load”. If the fund gains enough over thirty years to make you a million dollars, imagine paying 3% to the fund! Looking at it that way, paying 3% on the original $10,000 doesn’t look so bad. There are many “No Load” funds to choose from, so choose them first.

To help you choose, you may want to create your own table Include additional information so you can see all the information at one time. On the following pages, I have created several such a tables. I started with the Morningstar table above and inserted columns for the 1 and 5 year annualized returns. Morningstar calls them “total returns” but it means the return per year. I also inserted a column for the

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Morningstar Rating and for Bear Market Decile, and Load. Then using the sort utility on my spreadsheet I sorted based on Morningstar rating first, then on Bear Market Decile and finally on Load. The funds that meet our primary criteria I have listed their sector. Our secondary choices (because they are load funds have a question mark after the sector). Of course this list will change with time (sometimes drastically) so it pays to look at the list once a year or so and decide on any changes you might want to make. Even though this list is based on 10 year performance it is heavy in Real Estate, and Natural Resource Funds. But if you look at the Sectors we have on our “A” list it is fairly well diversified and most almost all the funds on the list are Bear Market resistant. So we have come up with a Realty Fund, a Micro Cap, Natural Gas, Brokerage, another Natural Gas, Insurance, Energy and a Mid-Cap Value Fund. So the only choice we have to make is which Natural Gas Fund we prefer. In this case, Fidelity Select Energy Service only has a Morningstar Rating of 2 and a poor performance during Bear Markets so we should go with Fidelity Select Natural Gas. This gives us 7 funds. What do we do if we need more than 7 funds? We have to lower our standards a bit for the sake of diversification. So we would either go with the load funds or continue further down the list. Notice that there is not a single large Cap fund on the list. So we may have to continue down or include the Vanguard’s S&P500 index fund.

Rank Ticker Name YTD Return

3 Year Annual Return

5 Year Annual return

10 Year

Annual return

Bear Market Decile Rank

Morning-star

Overall Rating Load/Closed Sector

1 WMICX Wasatch Micro Cap 8.8 22.09 20.31 23.46 4 5 Closed

2 BRUSXBridgeway Ultra-Small Company 5.66 36.89 27.13 23.38 2 5 Closed

3 SSGRXBlackRock Global Resources Inv A 39.14 54.2 32.37 22.7 1 5 5.75%

4 GMCDXGMO Emerging Country Debt III 11.81 23.92 20.63 21.63 2 5 Closed

5 BRAGXBridgeway

Aggressive Investors 9.29 21.83 5.68 21.34 8 4 Closed 6 CGMRX CGM Realty 18.92 45.68 28.73 21 1 5 None Realty 7 CVGRX Calamos Growth A 9.29 21.83 5.68 20.91 5 4 4.75 Growth?

8 FIMPXFirst American

Small Cap Growth 5.14 19 5.18 20.48 10 4 1 Mill Min

9 SSRAXBlackRock Aurora

Inv A 1.8 20.49 11.36 19.93 5 4 5.75 10 BRUFX Bruce 5.33 44.05 30.73 19.84 1 5 None Micro Cap 11 MVALX Meridian Value 0.18 16.24 9.94 19.26 3 4 None 12 FSTEX AIM Energy Inv 41.5 36.45 16.69 19.14 2 4 Closed

13 FSESXFidelity Select Energy Service 38.99 28.59 12.52 18.84 5 2 None Nat Gas

14 VGENX Vanguard Energy 35.09 37.93

21.34 18.84

1 5 25K Min

15 EUEYXAlpine U.S. Real Estate Equity Y 4.83 38.42 28.75 18.81 2 5 None

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16 FSLBX

Fidelity Select Brokerage & Investmnt 26.23 24.36 8.34 18.67 9 4 None Brokerage

17 VGHCXVanguard Health

Care 10.86 14.71 6.22 17.83 1 5 Closed

18 UMESXExcelsior Energy &

Nat Resources 34.46 36.9 15.46 17.71 2 4 None 19 RSPFX RS Partners 8.8 34.15 24.3 17.43 1 5 Closed

20 MSUSXMorgan Stanley Inst

US Real Estate A 14.14 30.13 20.6 17.3 1 5 $500K Min

21 NAGPXNicholas-Applegate Intl Growth Opp I 12.1 27.24 4.47 17.04 5 4 $250K Min

22 KSCVXKeeley Small Cap

Value 9.7 26.89 17.75 16.84 2 5 4.50% Small Cap?

23 FSNGXFidelity Select

Natural Gas 33.79 37.25 13.99 16.68 1 4 None Nat Gas

24 PRGNXJennison Natural

Resources B 36.83 36.53 23.62 16.63 1 4 5% Defer

25 FSPCXFidelity Select

Insurance 14.47 17.94 9.66 16.6 1 4 None Insurance

26 NBGNXNeuberger Berman

Genesis Inv 13.81 21.34 15.65 16.55 2 5 Closed

27 FSENXFidelity Select

Energy 41.56 33.63 13.73 16.43 2 4 None Energy

28 HWSIXHotchkis and Wiley Small Cap Value I 7.57 32.75 26.58 16.39 2 5 Closed

29 PHRAXPhoenix Real Estate

Securities A 9.85 27.07 20.65 16.21 1 3 5.75

30 DFAVXDFA U.S. Small Cap

Value II 5.92 29.38 19.24 16.18 3 4 $2 Mil Min

31 SACPXSalomon Brothers

Capital O 6.06 21.61 5.81 16.11 7 4 Closed

32 DMCVXDreyfus Midcap

Value 3.67 24.74 8.16 16.08 9 3 Closed

33 RYLPXRoyce Low-Priced

Stock Inv 3.72 20.11 12.7 16.05 6 3 Closed

34 DFSVXDFA U.S. Small Cap

Value 5.64 29.02 18.97 16.02 3 4 None

35 ESPAXEvergreen Special

Values A 8.52 21.63 15.72 16.02 2 4 Closed

36 REACXAmerican Century

Real Estate Inv 11.98 27.63 20.86 15.98 1 4 None

37 FLPSXFidelity Low-Priced

Stock 4.47 21.63 17.5 15.94 1 5 Closed

38 MUHLX Muhlenkamp 4.25 24.72 12.45 15.92 7 4 None Mid Cap Value

39 JSIVXJanus Small Cap

Value Instl 6.57 19.42 12.81 15.91 3 3 Closed

40 ACREXVan Kampen Real

Estate Secs A 13.2 29.07 19.57 15.89 1 3 4.75%

Group average of

4425 funds 6.83

Page 19: 15 Quick and Easy Ways to Beat 95% of All Investors

Individual Evaluation- Next I would like to look at some of our top picks and evaluate them individually to give you an idea about how to choose from the list.

Rank Ticker Name YTD

Return

3 Year Annual Return

5 Year Annual return

10 Year

Annual return

Bear Market Decile Rank

Morning-star

Overall Rating Load/Closed Sector

6 CGMRX CGM Realty 18.92 45.68 28.73 21 1 5 None Realty The first stock on the list is CGM Realty we can see that this year alone it has produced almost 19% with a 10 year annual average of 21%... very good it also has a 5 star rating, no load and with a bear market decile rank of 1, so it holds up even when the stock market doesn’t. Which makes sense of course, because it is tied to the real estate market not the stock market. But with the recent talk about a Real Estate bubble do we want to be invested in Real Estate? The answer is probably still yes, because that is the whole point of diversification. We aren’t trying to guess what is going to do well when we are trying to pick funds with good track records over the long term. However if the Real Estate market is falling at the moment it would be prudent to wait for lower prices before buying.

Rank Ticker Name YTD Return

3 Year Annual Return

5 Year Annual return

10 Year

Annual return

Bear Market Decile Rank

Morning-star

Overall Rating Load/Closed Sector

16 FSLBX

Fidelity Select Brokerage & Investmnt 26.23 24.36 8.34 18.67 9 4 None Brokerage

The next fund I’d like to look at is Fidelity Select Brokerage it is almost the exact opposite of CGM Realty it has a 4 star rating and does terrible in a Bear market. Obviously being a brokerage investment that would make sense. But even with the tech wreck in the first 3 years of this millennium it still has averaged 18.67% over the last 10 years and even more remarkably 8.34% over the last five years (when three of them were part of the wreck!) So long term we might still use it to help balance out the portfolio. For simplicity’s sake lets assume we only had two funds in our portfolio over the last 10 years. If we put half in CGM Realty and half in Fidelity Brokerage what would our results be? Name 1 Year 3 Year 5 Year 10 Year Decile Morningstar Load CGM Realty and Fidelity Brokerage

22.57 35.03 18.53 19.83 NA NA NA

Note: This is just the average of the two funds, not bad but you can see how it tends to balance out more evenly the more funds you add.

Page 20: 15 Quick and Easy Ways to Beat 95% of All Investors

To diversify even further you might add some other funds that have a floor built in which if used properly actually guarantees that you can’t lose money. See our article A Risk Free Way to Invest in the Stock Market. At : http://fintrend.com/ftf/Stock_Market/Mitts.asp The final question is when and how often should you reevaluate your selections and what criteria should you use to change positions? Obviously if we are in for the long haul we don’t want to jump ship just because a fund has a bad year. But if the ten-year performance falls out of the top 40 that would certainly be an indicator that there is a problem and you would probably want to switch out. Also if there is a radical shift in fund management that would be a good indicator that performance may change. Or if it is obvious that a certain sector is headed for a bad spell you might want to reevaluate your positions. Please visit our sites: Financial Trend Forecaster for information about current trends in the market at http://www.fintrend.com also http://InflationData.com for information about inflation. And http://www.YourFamilyFinances.com for information on managing your family finances, saving, investing, college, insurance, budgeting, etc. Have you found this report helpful? Please send any comments or suggestions. Contact me at http://fintrend.com/feedback.htm Tim McMahon, Editor Financial Trend Forecaster ©2005 All Rights Reserved- Reprint information- You may freely copy small portions (up to 2 paragraphs) of this report as long as credit and a link to www.fintrend.com is included. Full Document Resale and Affiliate rights are available.