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Alpesh Patel
Alpesh Patel's columns :
03/09/2005Thinking about Investment Courses
03/02/2005Thinking About Mistakes
02/25/2005Itchy Teeth
02/16/2005When does a stock story get old?
02/07/2005Return Free Risk
01/24/2005What You Need To Know
01/12/2005What You Need To Know
12/21/2004Year End
12/14/2004Of Mountains and Markets
12/08/2004Strong Dollar Policy and Other US Macho Nonesense
11/30/2004Irish Eyes Are Smiling
11/22/2004Oil. Oh it's so last month
11/15/2004Eat my shorts
11/08/2004Big Rally Big Fall
10/31/2004Big Week
10/25/2004Vacuum
10/15/2004Dip and dive or dip and rise: 4600, 4700�4500.
10/11/2004Oil making us boil.
09/27/2004The Trends Re-Appear
09/27/2004Oil
09/21/2004No Retail Therapy Here
09/14/2004Do you feel lucky punk?
08/23/2004The Market Wants To Move Higher
08/17/2004August a good swing trader's month
08/06/2004Where are the jobs?
08/02/2004August a good swing trader's month
07/26/2004Takeovers abound
07/19/2004What does Branson tell us?
07/12/2004Well valued FTSE?
07/02/2004Well hello July
06/28/2004Summer aint bad
06/21/2004The Real Hot Stuff
06/04/2004Not bad at all
06/01/2004May was better than April, hows about June then?
05/21/2004Broader Market View

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Alpesh Patel – A weekly look at market opportunities and pitfalls
Alpesh B. Patel is one of the UK's best-known traders and financial journalists. He writes a regular column for the Financial Times, has written seven bestselling books on trading, and makes regular television appearances for Bloomberg, Sky Television, Channel 4, The Money Channel, and the BBC.

The Year's High

01/02/2004

Well I posed the question last week, 'are we getting a slow down or a speed up' to the year end. The Dow's close at the year high answers the question I guess. Now if the FTSE follows, as it often does then we would be targeting 4423 - well it looks like we may well break it before year end.

The US driver seems to be company investment rather than the ever reliable consumer - that is going to be the key market driver in the early part of next year. I recommend paying closer attention to company capital spending than consumer spending.

Which stocks are 'in play'? Carpetright looks set to reach 900p. I picked this on Bloomberg last year, since when it has risen 50%. I was asked at the time, 'what about everyone fitting wooden floor' and I replied that you could not get away from the fundamentals the stock was exhibiting.

Check out Kesa Electricals for a potential 'flyer and faller', that is something that climbs to fast, dumb money then gets sucked in and it falls. It may not necessarily do so and when I just can't get a handle on the direction, I tend to go in the direction the price moves - ie if it makes a new high relative to the previous day then go long.

Informa is also back on the treck up to and worth a look.

Valuations and Growth

For value and growth Kier Group is on the radar - but with resistance at 650p, the more cautious will wait for a break of that level first. Care UK as mentioned last week continues on a strong trend; it will pause and it is a value-growth stock so the pause will be longer than for a momentum stock - expect a couple of months.

By the way...getting to a million.

It is times like the end of the year that people start thinking about longer term financial futures. Okay so here is some simple investment maths for you. Imagine you put £70,000 away in the markets in 1987. You added £7,000 annually in saved capital. By 2004 you would have £1,000,000 if you just achieved a 14% return each year. By the way, the FTSE 100 achieved 6% annually BEFORE dividends over that period. In other words, it would be pretty mediocre and no more than expected to get to the £1m mark - it's all the FTSE 100 gives you.

You can email me for a free 28 page document of how to trade and invest better by me exclusively for ADVFN readers: alpeshpatel@tradermind.com


Alpesh B Patel, author of “Alpesh Patel on Stock Futures” available from the ADVFN bookstore.