Two Technologies that Could Send Penny Stocks Soaring
Penny Stock Egghead as your secret weapo Wall Street Insiders and brokers have a vested interest in you thinking that trading penny stocks is difficult and complicated.
But in truth, its not.
As Nathan Gold will show you, its actually as easy as clicking your mouse a few times
or making a quick phone call.
Join the Penny Stock Eggheads One-Trade-A-Week team today, and in addition to receiving first-word on soon-to-explode penny stocks
youll get an instantly downloadable quick-start guide that will walk you through how to trade these ridiculously affordable stocks step-by-step.
Even if youve never traded a stock in your life, now you can buy and sell these wealth-creating stocks just like the big shot investing pros.
Author: Jonas Elmerraji By Jonas Elmerraji
On May 15, 2009, the internet changed forever. Did you miss it?
The widespread acceptance of the internet lead to a monumental shift in the way we do things. Communications now happen instantly across thousands of miles, e-commerce has generated billion of dollars for companies like Amazon.com and eBay, and, with the advent of search technologies like Google, the planets information is at our fingertips.
But in spite of all of those advances in technology, there was something missing.
After all, why should you have to scour pages and pages of Google results to find out which country is the worldâs 5th smallest exporter? How is it that that sort of factual information isnât readily available? In the past, search technologies had a big limitation â" they required you to ask a question thatâs already been asked and answered. But on May 15, with the public release of Wolfram Alpha, that all changed.
Wolfram Alpha is a computational knowledge engine. What that means is that it answers factual questions based on structured databases that catalogue information. And itâs creating quite a stir among technology experts. â[Wolfram Alpha] doesn't simply return documents that (might) contain the answers, like Google does, and it isn't just a giant database of knowledge, like the Wikipedia. It doesn't simply parse natural language and then use that to retrieve documents⊠Instead, Wolfram Alpha actually computes the answers to a wide range of questions,â said Nova Spivak in an article posted on Twine, a social networking site.
So, if you really do want to know what the 5th smallest exporter nation is, or the average salary of a school bus driver, or what 20/200 vision looks like, with Wolfram Alpha the answer is truly only one click away⊠without having to rummage through search results.
Not a Search Engine
The most critical thing to remember about Wolfram Alpha is that itâs not a search engine â" itâs an answer engine. While searching for âpenny stocksâ will yield you 5.7 million results on Google, Wolfram Alpha wonât return a single web page. Where Wolfram shines is in answering factual questions (asking subjective questions like âwhich car is coolerâ wonât get you much success).
So, enter something like âWhat is the circulation of the Wall Street Journal?â or âWhat is the density of milk?â and youâll get your answer (2.012 million readers and 242 g/cup respectively).
The most important thing about Wolfram Alpha isnât what itâs capable of right now, itâs how the unique way it handles data makes big advances possible in the future. âWhere Google is a system for finding things that we as a civilization collectively publish, Wolfram Alpha is for computing answers to questions about what we as a civilization collectively know. It's the next step in the distribution of knowledge and intelligence around the world -- a new leap in the intelligence of our collective âGlobal Brain.â And like any big next-step, Wolfram Alpha works in a new way -- it computes answers instead of just looking them up,â explains Spivak.
Putting Wolfram Alpha to Work for You
And as an investor, Wolfram Alpha has some abilities that transcend the potential of its technologies. With this platform, you can instantly get a slew of financial information on a stock just by typing its ticker into Wolframâs engine.
You can also make interesting computations on the fly, like this chart of GM revenues divided by Fordâs revenues:
Revenues: GM/Ford
source: Wolfram Alpha
If youâre interested in options, bonds, or currencies, Wolfram Alpha also has the ability to make complex calculations (like the value of a straddle option) instantly for you.
Keeping an Eye on the Future
Thereâs little question that the work the folks at Wolfram Research are doing on Wolfram Alpha is going to change the way we interact with data. I think itâs clear that those changes are going to trickle down to make data more available to investors â" and theyâre also going to fuel huge growth for the handful of companies who are working on computational engine technologies. Visit wolframalpha.com to check out this amazing new technology for yourself.
Meanwhile, bigger, more recognizable companies are making technological innovations that could trickle down to smaller, more exciting stocksâŠ
BusinessWeek calls it the âApple Economyâ â" the flurry of new products, services, and companies that have sprung up over the last few years to cater to Apple customers. In recent years the Apple economy has become a multi-billion dollar business for scores of smaller companies who want a piece of the pie. And this summer could be a big catalyst for penny stock profits.
Over the last few months, the dozen or so Apple-obsessed websites published leaked photos, product specs, and speculation about the possibility of a new iPhone â" one that was officially announced in mid-June. One of the reasons for the hysteria is Appleâs culture of secrecy. The Cupertino, California-based technology company keeps new products closely guarded until the time is right for a big release.
That release came on Friday, June 19, with the announcement of Appleâs iPhone 3G S â" a newer, faster, and more advanced version of the iPhone 3G that was released last summer.
The Small-Cap Connection
All of those big releases have meant big money for Apple â" the company took in $32 billion in revenues last year. Theyâve also meant big money for the handful of small companies that makes money by selling peripherals, software, and support to Appleâs customers.
One of the best examples is Zagg (OTC: ZAGG), a company that makes cases, headphones, and other accessories for the iPhone. While the company posted net losses in 2006 and 2007, since the iPhoneâs release itâs managed to swing to a pretty substantial profit. ZAGG stock is up 420% since January as a result.
And some people are seeing even bigger returns from the Apple economy.
Look no further than Ethan Nicholas, a one-man team who watched his iShoot, a game sold on Appleâs iPhone Application Store, climb to No. 1 on Appleâs list of most popular paid applications.
In just two weeks, iShoot netted Nicholas almost $400,000 in profits⊠and the application is still selling as we type. That mountain of money has prompted Nicholas to quit his day job at Sun Microsystems to pursue game development full time.
Since the App Store was launched in July 2008, the company has sold more than 1 billion applications to iPhone and iPod Touch users. Clearly Nicholas hasnât been alone in his Apple windfall, and penny stock game developers are cashing in too.
Among them was an over-the-counter stock that small-cap analyst Greg Guenthner recently recommended to his readers over at Bulletin Board Elite. Since his recommendation, the company has grown its net income by 42% this year, removing any doubt that even the little guy can profit from whatâs going on right now.
âHi, Iâm a Macâ
Appleâs come a long way from the computer company that almost went bankrupt in the mid 1990s. Since Steve Jobs returned to the helm of this prolific company fortunes have been great for Apple â" and for the Ethan Nicholases and Zaggs of the world.
Keep your eyes open â" the emerging technologies coming out today could mean money in your portfolio too.
Cheers,
Jonas Elmerraji
Jonas Elmerraji is the editor of the Rhino Stock Report and a contributor to The Penny Sleuth, which offers unbiased commentary from expert analysts and authors on penny stock trading.
Powered by CommonSense CMS script - http://www.sensesites.com/
|