• Publications
    Expected Returns Articles
  • Research
    Companies Funds Top 40 My Studies
  • Stock Screen
    New Stock Screen Manage Screens
  • Dashboards
    My Dashboards New Dashboard
  • Forum
  • Events
  • Search
  • Contact Us
  • Sign In

Expected Returns, August 2006

Our search for quality investment opportunities is continuous.
Treasure Hunt, Regularly by Mark Robertson Aug 01, 2006

Our search for quality investment opportunities is continuous.

Cisco Systems by Mark Robertson Aug 01, 2006

Cisco Systems is a quality company in an important industry, Communications Equipment.

T. Rowe Price Science & Technology by Cy Lynch Aug 01, 2006

This fund's focus on large, industry leading companies makes it a high quality candidate for portfolios able to tolerate increased volatility.

Mutual Fund Manifest by Mark Robertson Aug 01, 2006

Oberweis Micro-Cap continues atop the list this month.

Sweet 16 by Mark Robertson Aug 01, 2006

Highest rated companies this month include Cisco Systems,\r\nAbercrombie & Fitch, Microsoft and Bed Bath & Beyond.

Tin Cup Model Portfolio by Mark Robertson Aug 01, 2006

The monthly contribution was used to accumulate more shares of Microsoft.

Solomon's Status Report by Mark Robertson Aug 01, 2006

We check in on Solomon to see how we're doing at this time.

© 2006 - 2025 Manifest Investing. All rights reserved.
About | Terms of Service | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy

Legend
Quality Legend:
Blue Excellent with quality greater than 80.
Green Good with quality between 60 and 80.
Neutral Average or below average with quality between 20 and 60.
Red Poor with quality less than 20.
Companies with less than 10 years of history are penalized by 5 points per year.
PAR Legend:
Green PAR is within the target range of MIPAR +5-10%, currently 5.1%-10.1%
Yellow PAR is above the target range of MIPAR +10%, currently 10.1%
PAR Projected Annual Return
MIPAR The Manifest Investing Median PAR of all stocks in the database.
Company Name Legend:
* Not covered by Value Line Standard Edition.
b Uses price-to-book value for valuation purposes.
P/CF Uses price-to-cash flow for valuation.