Saturday, November 17, 2012

Apple: All Signs Point to Growth

By Timothy Lutts

The second most important rule for growth investors might be to respect strong charts.

Case in point, Apple (AAPL), which broke out of a basing pattern on Wednesday, gapping up to new all-time highs.

Now, Apple is far from an undiscovered stock. With revenues of $37 billion and a market capitalization of $192 billion, it’s a giant, and my preference is for smaller companies with more obvious upside potential in investor perception.

Nevertheless, Apple’s chart is sending a strong signal.

For the past 10 weeks it’s been building a base at the 200 level, which is where the stock topped out at the end of 2007. And Wednesday it gapped up to all-time highs, telling us big institutional money is moving in.

The only “news” lately is speculation that Apple’s long-rumored tablet computer will be released on January 26, in both 7″ and 10″ screen formats, and that it will be a big hit. It certainly sounds plausible, and combined with the fact that Apple still has great numbers (revenues up 25% in the third quarter and earnings up 44%), I think it’s reason enough to buy the stock.

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