BeatTheStockMarket.com is an on-line investment newsletter 
  specializing in stock and mutual fund recommendations.  
From 1998 to October 31, 2025 our Primary Stock Portfolio 
  has averaged 
31.9%  
  per year. We use a proprietary investment selection method that has been under 
  development since 1993. Our performance is based on simply buying and holding 
  stocks for 1-3 years. Our model portfolio has never recommended risky futures, 
  commodities or options (although at times we have recommended some options outside 
  of our model portfolio).  
We believe in investing, not gambling. And we also don't 
  utilize market timing or day trading. We simply focus on stock and fund selection 
  and let our profits ride.  
Why don't we recommend day trading? Because to profit 
  from day trading, your investment needs to make enough profit in a very short 
  time to overcome the cost of incurring frequent commissions, the higher taxation 
  of short-term trading, the cost of proprietary information systems that day 
  traders are led to believe that they need, and the excessive time that day trading 
  requires.  
Our method of investing is not time-consuming for our 
  subscribers. Merely monitor your email for our buy/sell recommendations which 
  occur roughly once every two weeks for our Primary Stock Portfolio 
  (subscribers also receive buy/sell signals for our alternative model portfolios). 
  We will tell you via email and on our web site exactly what to buy and when 
  to buy it. And even more importantly, what to sell and when to sell it. In 
  addition, subscribers receive weekly emails to keep them up-to-date on our recommended 
  portfolios.  
Furthermore, when we notify subscribers of buy/sell 
  recommendations, subscribers are notified by email in real-time. 
  That's just one of the many advantages that on-line investment publications 
  have over printed publications. Subscribers don't have to wait for us to send 
  our data to the printer so it can be printed and then mailed via the oftentimes 
  slow U.S. Postal Service. Waiting for the next regularly-scheduled publication 
  would be a disservice to our subscribers since timing is immensely important 
  in the securities markets.  
               
 
 
  
            
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