Investment Results You Won't Hear About Anywhere Else by Alwyn BeikoffAs 2005 draws to a close there are 3 questions that all investors need to ask:
1. What results have each of your investments produced for the year?
2. How much time and effort did you have to put in to achieve those results?
3. And if you are not entirely satisfied with your responses to the above two questions what are you going to do differently in 2006 in order to experience the results that you really want?
In this special report I'm going to share with you some privileged information that demonstrates the degree to which the world's top fund managers have outperformed the rest of the world. You'll be shocked at the gap between the results of true professional fund mangers compared with the poor results that most fund managers, and therefore most investors, produce. As you'll see, the top fund managers really are in a league of their own.
And while I can't supply you with the actual names of the funds (which are available in the list of Top 20 funds) I will give you a concise one paragraph snapshot of:
what they invest in,
how big their fund is,
who audits the fund,
their compounded returns and
their best and worst years.
It's the most that I can do to give you a small taste of the data available in the Top 20 funds list and that big institutional firms pay as much as $50,000 for, without 'giving away the farm'.
The fund information outlined in this report is an extract from the highest yielding offshore funds over the last 5 years, as at 31st of March 2005. I've also provided you with year to date results as at 30th September 2005. That way you can see how each of them are tracking this year. The data provided below represents perhaps less than 10% of the data that is provided on each of the funds in the Top 20 funds list.
Ranked No.1 - 1038.09% Ranked in first place over the last 5 years is a fund that invests in the restructuring of the power sector within an emerging market economy, with a bias to small and medium sized corporations. Over the last 5 years they have achieved a compounded return of 1038.09%*. In other words if you had invested US$50,000 5 years ago, today you would have a balance of $519,045.
The fund is audited by KPMG (one of the top 5 accounting firms in the world) and the dollar value of funds under management is $70.82 Million. Their best return was in 2003 when they achieved 158.92% and their worst return was in 2000 when they returned only 11.8%. Over the last 5 five years the fund has never made a loss within a calendar year. And as at 30th September 2005 they had already returned 52.95%. So again they appear to be on track to another great year.
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