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Best Stocks for 2008: PowerShares DB G10 Currency Harvest (DBV)

For 25 years, Steven Halpern, editor of TheStockAdvisors.com, has surveyed the leading financial newsletter advisors asking for their favorite stocks for the coming year. This article is one of 100+ ideas in the Best Stocks for 2008 report.

In his Forbes ETF Trader, Jim Lowell says his top 2008 speculative bet is PowerShares DB G10 Currency Harvest Fund (ASE: DBV).

"This exchange-traded fund is a unique way to play the bank shot of the wildly volatile currency markets. It seeks investment results that correspond to the price and yield performance of the Deutsche Bank G10 Currency Future Harvest Index.

"This index is intended to take advantage of the fact that currencies associated with high-interest rates tend to rise in value relative with those associated with low-interest rates.

"The ten currencies that the index selects from are the US dollar, the euro, Japanese yen, Canadian dollar, Swiss franc, British pound, Australian dollar, New Zealand dollar, Norwegian krone, and Swedish krona.

"The upshot: interest rates are always rising in one of the above economies while falling in another -- 2008 will be no different."

Best Stocks for 2008: Gateway (GATEX) gains from conservative strategy

For 25 years, Steven Halpern, editor of TheStockAdvisors.com, has surveyed the leading financial newsletter advisors asking for their favorite stocks for the coming year. This article is one of 100+ ideas in the Best Stocks for 2008 report.

"My favorite conservative fund for 2008 is Gateway Fund (NASDAQ: GATEX)," says Ron Rowland, editor of All Star Fund Trader.

"This past year, the markets struggled. The question is where 2008 is heading. Our indicators show continued challenges in US equities based upon fundamental economic weakness. Because of subprime mortgage defaults and other related issues, investors should consider a strong but conservative strategy for a portion of their holdings.

"One place to look is Gateway Fund. With over $4 billion in assets and an impressive, long-term track record, Gateway typically meets the objective of a higher total return with less risk than the S&P 500. Its five-year chart resembles a gentle upward slope -- exactly what you want when reviewing conservative funds.

"Other funds have tried a similar strategy, but none have the longevity or track record that GATEX offers. To defend
against further market irregularities, look to Gateway Fund in 2008."

Best Stocks for 2008: Defensive stance with iShares Lehman TIPs (TIP)

For 25 years, Steven Halpern, editor of TheStockAdvisors.com, has surveyed the leading financial newsletter advisors asking for their favorite stocks for the coming year. This article is one of 100+ ideas in the Best Stocks for 2008 report.

In his Forbes ETF Trader, Jim Lowell says, "My top conservative pick for 2008 is the iShares Lehman TIPs (NYSE: TIP). This exchange-traded fund enters the mix as a less-spirited way to play the recessionary hand that 2008 could deal.

"While the performance behavior of the underlying holdings will make the case for this being nothing more than a dolled up basket of long-term Treasuries, the market reality is that in times of duress, the momentum tends to favor these instruments over most others.

"But don't buy it for yield or price. Instead, view it as a life raft on the deck of all the above picks. It's good to know it's there if you need it -- and according to consensus estimates, in 2008 it's not a case of if but when."

As an alternative, conservative investors can buy the iShares S&P 100 Index Fund (ASE: OEF). The S&P 100 Index is comprised of the largest 100 stocks in the S&P 500 Index. As such, it's an intermediate play between the Dow 30 and the S&P 500, and ought to continue to benefit from the current flight to quality in '08.

Continue reading Best Stocks for 2008: Defensive stance with iShares Lehman TIPs (TIP)

Best Stocks for 2008: A 'hot' choice with FUNDX Aggressive (HOTFX)

For 25 years, Steven Halpern, editor of TheStockAdvisors.com, has surveyed the leading financial newsletter advisors asking for their favorite stocks for the coming year. This article is one of 100+ ideas in the Best Stocks for 2008 report.

"My favorite conservative pick for 2008 is the FUNDX Aggressive Upgrader Fund (NASDAQ: HOTFX), one of DAL Investment Company's mutual funds," says Tom Bishop, editor of BI Research.

"This fund consists of 50 of the top-performing, no-load mutual funds and iShares with focuses all over the world. In fact, this fund currently has 82% foreign exposure and 18% domestic. So there is a lot of diversification here in one fund.

"And if you are nervous about a recession in the US, here is a good place to diversify away from being totally invested at home. Face it, in any given year there are often much hotter countries than the US.

"DAL's Upgrader Funds are constantly monitoring mutual funds and markets worldwide for the top performing countries and mutual funds and endeavoring to stay invested in whatever funds are performing the best, rotating in and out as necessary.

Continue reading Best Stocks for 2008: A 'hot' choice with FUNDX Aggressive (HOTFX)

Best Stocks for 2008: Emerging growth with Lux Nanotech ETF (PXN)

For 25 years, Steven Halpern, editor of TheStockAdvisors.com, has surveyed the leading financial newsletter advisors asking for their favorite stocks for the coming year. This article is one of 100+ ideas in the Best Stocks for 2008 report.

"Although the nanotech sector in general is more speculative, a relatively more conservative pick within this space is PowerShares Lux Nanotech Portfolio (ASE: PXN), a favorite of mine for 2008," says nanotech and science guru Josh Wolfe, editor of the Forbes Wolfe Emerging Tech Report.

"With a significant amount of hedge fund assets in companies with market caps below $5 billion, the past quarter's liquidity crunch has hurt small-cap companies. The PowerShares Lux Nanotech Portfolio has seen significant decline with its small-cap constituents.

"But it also has large-cap multinational companies with significant overseas business. A year ago I liked it because it was a representative diversified index of companies that derived value from incorporating nanotech into their product lines.

Today, it's on sale today and if you want exposure to this long-term secular trend of advanced materials and nanotech and you're willing to be a long-term holder, I'd make it a piece of a broader portfolio. (Full disclosure: I'm a shareholder in Lux Research, which partnered with Powershares to form the index)."

Best Stocks for 2008: Top performer goes for StreetTracks Gold (GLD)

For 25 years, Steven Halpern, editor of TheStockAdvisors.com, has surveyed the leading financial newsletter advisors asking for their favorite stocks for the coming year. This article is one of 100+ ideas in the Best Stocks for 2008 report.

"Fear or war or nuclear conflagration is not the main reason for owning gold; rather, investors should buy gold to protect against inflation," explains Vivian Lewis, editor of Global Investing Pro, and the top stock picker in last year's Best Stocks report, with her selection of DryShips.

"This is not advice only for US investors. All central banks face a dilemma: On one hand, they can cut interest rates and print money to deflect subprime and credit crunch dangers while letting inflation rip. On the other, they can insist on discipline and inflation fighting, letting the economy's chips fall where they may.

"My top conservative investment idea for 2008 is StreetTracks Gold Trust (NYSE: GLD), which is an exchange-traded fund. In fact, the amount of gold held by StreetTracks now exceeds the gold reserves of China. It holds 602.37 tonnes of the yellow metal, whereas China only holds 600 tonnes. (A tonne is a metric measure equal to about 3,520 ounces.)

"US investors can also consider iShares Comex Gold (ASE: IAU). Both are ETFs that own physical gold bullion. However, they track different gold market prices.

"GLD tracks the London fixing and Comex ETF tracks the Chicago commodity price. You can buy whichever one is cheaper at the moment you decide on going for the gold."

Best Stocks for 2008: ETF favorites with Materials (XLB) and Brazil (EWZ)

For 25 years, Steven Halpern, editor of TheStockAdvisors.com, has surveyed the leading financial newsletter advisors asking for their favorite stocks for the coming year. This article is one of 100+ ideas in the Best Stocks for 2008 report.

"There's no question that this booming growth in the emerging countries has been a huge factor driving the strongest markets," explains Pamela Aden, editor of The Aden Forecast.

"Three billion people are now participating in the global economy who weren't involved before and that's a dramatic force.

"As these countries build their infrastructure, demand for raw materials has soared. Again, this mega-trend is poised to continue, along with strong growth.

"My favorite conservative way to play this trend is with the Materials Select SPDR (ASE: XLB), which moves with the raw materials sector. Instead of picking individual stocks, this provides a good way to generally profit from what's happening globally.

Continue reading Best Stocks for 2008: ETF favorites with Materials (XLB) and Brazil (EWZ)

Best Stocks for 2008: Contrary call on US Home Construction ETF (ITB)

For 25 years, Steven Halpern, editor of TheStockAdvisors.com, has surveyed the leading financial newsletter advisors asking for their favorite stocks for the coming year. This article is one of 100+ ideas in the Best Stocks for 2008 report.

"My favorite 'home run' speculation for 2008 is playing a rebound in the beaten-down US housing sector," says Mike Burnick, editor of Global Market Investor.

"Specifically, I like the iShares Dow Jones US Home Construction ETF (ASE: ITB). This exchange-traded fund is a pure contrarian play not based on valuation, since fundamentals continue to deteriorate in the US housing market.

"The US housing market is still a mess, home prices are plunging, sales continue to slump, and inventories of unsold homes are at record highs. There's very little we can see to like in this sector.

"But, in fact, that's often the key to earning big returns in the stock market: Make well-timed contrarian bets on the most unloved stocks and sectors.

"However, I believe that negative sentiment in the sector has reached an extreme. Put/call volume on homebuilder stocks is at an extreme, and short interest is near record highs. I believe the turning point for this sector is close at hand.

Continue reading Best Stocks for 2008: Contrary call on US Home Construction ETF (ITB)

Best Stocks for 2008: Timing expert goes for US Dollar Index Bullish (UUP)

For 25 years, Steven Halpern, editor of TheStockAdvisors.com, has surveyed the leading financial newsletter advisors asking for their favorite stocks for the coming year. This article is one of 100+ ideas in the Best Stocks for 2008 report.

"My top pick for 2008 is the PowerShares U.S. Dollar Index Bullish (ASE: UUP)," says seasonal timing expert Sy Harding in his Street Smart Investor.

"The US dollar has been in a frightful decline against most global currencies for six years now. Its decline has served the US economy well. Among other positives, the weaker dollar made US exports less expensive for foreign consumers, while making imports more expensive for US consumers.

"That has been a win-win situation for US manufacturers in a period when US manufacturing has been a struggling sector of the economy.

"The weaker dollar has made travel to the US, and shopping here, a happy experience for foreign travelers. Without purchases of second homes by foreign buyers, the plunge in the housing market would have been even more severe.

Continue reading Best Stocks for 2008: Timing expert goes for US Dollar Index Bullish (UUP)

Best Stocks for 2008: Overseas potential from ING Global Real Estate (IGLAX)

For 25 years, Steven Halpern, editor of TheStockAdvisors.com, has surveyed the leading financial newsletter advisors asking for their favorite stocks for the coming year. This article is one of 100+ ideas in the Best Stocks for 2008 report.

"My favorite more speculative pick for 2008 is ING Global Real Estate (IGLAX)," says Peter Slatin, editor of the Forbes/Slatin Real Estate Report.

"Institutional and private money managers have been moving their real estate securities money into global -- i.e., non-U.S. real estate stocks.

"This is a difficult and dangerous game for individual investors without the wherewithal to look at conditions on the ground or talk to partners there, but there is a growing number of funds that have the human and capital resources and infrastructure to do the hard work.

"And it's paying off. Dutch banking giant ING's Global Real Estate fund has returned a very respectable 7.2% year-to-date which, against a U.S. REIT index that's in negative double digits, looks pretty great. Add in a 4% yield and an international market that is likely to continue its moderate growth, and it's a winner.

"But this is a long-term play: although the entry point is $1,000, the fund has a hefty front-end load of 5.75% -- with a five-year return of more than 25%."

Best Stocks for 2008: Emerging growth with Malaysia ETF (EWM)

For 25 years, Steven Halpern, editor of TheStockAdvisors.com, has surveyed the leading financial newsletter advisors asking for their favorite stocks for the coming year. This article is one of 100+ ideas in the Best Stocks for 2008 report.

"Everyone knows about the economic boom in China, but US investors may not be aware that several of its Southeast Asian neighbors are also growing by leaps and bounds," explains Sean Broderick, resources expert for Money and Markets.

"Take the iShares MSCI Malaysia Index Fund (ASE: EWM), our top speculation for 2008. The country's economy surged 6.7% in the third quarter, the fastest pace in three years. Exports are rocketing -- up 14.3% in October alone.

"Domestic inflation is under control. And its currency, the ringgit, is climbing. Malaysia's economy is expected to grow by more than 5% both this year and next. That's a heck of a lot better than the US is doing, and it's being fueled by strong demand for Malaysian exports.

"EWM, an exchange-traded fund, holds 56 of the top financials, utilities, and other companies operating in Malaysia, including Bumiputra-Commerce Holdings, Malaysia's second-largest commercial bank, IOI Corp., the world's largest producer of palm oil, and Genting, the largest casino and hotel operator in Asia.

"Malaysia's benchmark Kuala Lumpur Composite Index was up more than 30% year-to-date as of early December. We expect another year of double-digit gains in 2008."

Best Stocks for 2008: iShares Dow Jones US Regional Banks (IAT)

For 25 years, Steven Halpern, editor of TheStockAdvisors.com, has surveyed the leading financial newsletter advisors asking for their favorite stocks for the coming year. This article is one of 100+ ideas in the Best Stocks for 2008 report.

"For the investor who has some money with which he or she is willing to take some risk, I suggest they take a look at the regional banks ETF iShares Dow Jones US Regional Banks (NYSE: IAT), which I've selected as my top speculative pick for 2008," notes Leonard Goodall, CFA and editor of No-Load Portfolios.

"I recommend this ETF for two reasons, a fundamental reason and a timeliness reason. From a fundamental perspective, most of the regional banks in this portfolio have good solid financials and they know their areas of service well enough to avoid the worst aspects of the current real estate crisis.

"The three largest holdings in the fund -- US Bancorp, Suntrust Bank and PNC Financial -- all have records of consistently improving earnings over the last five years. US Bancorp and Suntrust have raised their dividends each of the last five years, and PNC has raised its dividend in three of the five.

"Purchase of the fund now is timely because its price has been pushed down along with all financial stocks that have been the victim of the subprime mortgage crisis.

Continue reading Best Stocks for 2008: iShares Dow Jones US Regional Banks (IAT)

Best Stocks for 2008: Bullion bet with StreetTracks Gold ETF (GLD)

For 25 years, Steven Halpern, editor of TheStockAdvisors.com, has surveyed the leading financial newsletter advisors asking for their favorite stocks for the coming year. This article is one of 100+ ideas in the Best Stocks for 2008 report.

"Everyone should have some gold, but it is an individual decision as to what best fits one's risk tolerance and personal financial makeup," says resources expert Curtis Hesler, editor of Professional Timing Service.

"Bullion in some form, be it bullion coins or bullion ETF's like StreetTracks Gold ETF (NYSE: GLD), should be fitted into one's portfolio -- for diversification, if no other reason. I would consider this a top speculative idea for 2008.

"However, be mindful that bullion profits, even in the ETF form, are taxed at a higher rate than gold-mining stocks. So, bullion ETF's are perhaps best held in a tax-sheltered account, but that is an individual call."

Best Stocks for 2008: Balanced gains with Fidelity Puritan Fund (FPURX)

For 25 years, Steven Halpern, editor of TheStockAdvisors.com, has surveyed the leading financial newsletter advisors asking for their favorite stocks for the coming year. This article is one of 100+ ideas in the Best Stocks for 2008 report.

"For a conservative investor who wants to incur only low to moderate risk, I would recommend a well-established mutual fund, the Fidelity Puritan Fund (NASDAQ: FPURX), as my top pick for 2008," says Leonard Goodall, CFA and editor of No-Load Portfolios.

"This is a balanced fund, with a portfolio that includes about 67% stocks, 26% in bonds and the rest mainly in cash. A major problem for most mutual fund investors is that the return they actually receive from a fund is well below the announced return on the fund.

"This is because they make bad-timing decisions. They buy the fund after it has run up in price and then sell it after it has suffered a downturn.

"The researchers at Morningstar have produced some work recently that suggests that for balanced funds the return that investors actually achieve is closer to the announced return of the fund than for most other types of funds.

Continue reading Best Stocks for 2008: Balanced gains with Fidelity Puritan Fund (FPURX)

Best Stocks for 2008: Bad habits lead to good gains for Vice Fund (VICEX)

For 25 years, Steven Halpern, editor of TheStockAdvisors.com, has surveyed the leading financial newsletter advisors asking for their favorite stocks for the coming year. This article is one of 100+ ideas in the Best Stocks for 2008 report.

"The market is looking increasingly fragile -- and our top pick for 2008 is a stellar investment that has all the makings of a bear-market killer: The Vice Fund (VICEX)," says Eric Roseman, editor of Commodity Trend Alert.

"This fund will do well as long as people continue to drink, smoke and gamble. The fund might not be the most wholesome investment in your portfolio, but it sure earns a big score for making bundles of dough from many industries currently shunned by investors and portfolio managers.

"And best of all, as the economy contracts, stocks in its highly concentrated and aggressive portfolio usually grow their corporate earnings while the broader market corrects. Bull or bear, it doesn't matter. The Vice Fund can generate profits in any economic environment -- provided people continue to gamble, drink and smoke.

"Launched in 2002, the Vice Fund is advised by Mutual Advisors, Inc, a small outfit with $177 million under management. But its size is actually highly advantageous to investors because of its ability to quickly enter and close trades and buy some companies that might be thinly traded.

Continue reading Best Stocks for 2008: Bad habits lead to good gains for Vice Fund (VICEX)

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Last updated: February 12, 2012: 12:39 PM

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