Winning Shares List

27 May 2024 By PDSNET

Investment in the share market is not about certainties – it is about probabilities.

Success comes from bending the odds in your favour, so that it becomes like playing a roulette table where you have a 60% or 70% chance of winning.

That, of course, means that you must fully expect to lose 30% or 40% of the time – which is why every successful investor has an effective stop-loss strategy. It just does not make any sense to keep losing money indefinitely in a share which is falling. Being successful in the share market is not so much about winning as it is about not losing.

The Winning Shares List (WSL) is one of the most effective mechanisms available to help you to bend the odds in your favour on the JSE. It cuts the number of possible investments that you have to choose from down from the approximately 300 listed shares to just those shares which have a strong possibility of doing well.

Right now, there are 86 shares on the WSL and only 18,6% of them (or 16 shares) have fallen from the prices at which they were first added to the list. The worst of those is Grinship (GSH) which is down just 4,14%.

This means that 69 of the 86 shares (80%) on the list are going up, with the best share on the list being 4Sight (4SI) which was added 295 days ago at a price of 31c and closed on Friday the 24th of May 2024, at 84c – a gain of 170,97% so far.

The list is designed to include only those shares which we consider to have the potential for a significant capital gain. The fact that a share is included does not mean that it is necessarily of “good quality” or that it is “highly rated”. It simply means that we have assessed that it has significant upside potential.

On 16th May 2024 we added Kore to the WSL at a price of 20c per share. We did this because of the massive and unusual volume traded on the previous day which was more than seven times the average daily volume traded in that share. The price was also up by 5c on the day – showing that insiders were busy buying up all the shares they could lay their hands on.

By Friday the 24th of May 2024, just 7 trading days later, the share closed at 35c and we still did not really know why the share price was rising – but it was up a massive 75%. Consider the chart:

Kore (KP2): 4th of January 2024 - 24th of May 2024. Chart by ShareFriend Pro.

Here you can see that since the beginning of this year, Kore was a very uninteresting penny stock hovering between 12c and 16c on relatively thin volumes. It is a potash mining exploration company with interests in the Republic of Congo. Then suddenly on 16th May 2024, the share traded a massive 13,4m shares and the price popped up to 20c. This is a classic example of the insiders buying up all the loosely-held shares that they could because they knew the share was about to explode. So we added it to the WSL.

On a previous occasion, we added Quantum to the WSL on Monday the 5th of March 2024 at 525c per share and it subsequently rose to 1830c just 23 trading days later.

These insider trading opportunities are relatively unusual, but can be extremely profitable when they occur. Many of the other shares added to the WSL are not so dramatic, but have done consistently well over a longer time frame. Some recent examples include:

Harmony (HAR) was added to the WSL on 16-11-23 at 9920c and closed on Friday last week at 17328c – a gain of 74,6% in just over 6 months.

Murray and Roberts (MUR) was added to the WSL on 21-12-23 at 106c and is now trading at 175c – a gain of 65% in just over 5 months.

Pan African (PAN) was added to the WSL on 31-1-24 at 430c and is now trading for 575c – a gain of 33,72% in just under four months.

So, we suggest that, when you are looking for shares which have the potential to perform well, you begin with the WSL and make your selections from that.


DISCLAIMER

All information and data contained within the PDSnet Articles is for informational purposes only. PDSnet makes no representations as to the accuracy, completeness, suitability, or validity, of any information, and shall not be liable for any errors, omissions, or any losses, injuries, or damages arising from its display or use. Information in the PDSnet Articles are based on the author’s opinion and experience and should not be considered professional financial investment advice. The ideas and strategies should never be used without first assessing your own personal and financial situation, or without consulting a financial professional. Thoughts and opinions will also change from time to time as more information is accumulated. PDSnet reserves the right to delete any comment or opinion for any reason.



Share this article:

PDSNET ARTICLES

Stefanutti Stocks

The construction industry is a high-risk industry from an investment perspective. Its fortunes are dependent on winning profitable contracts, usually from government or quasi-government organisations like state-owned enterprises (SOE). Projects often take years to complete and involve significant capital outlays. This makes their cash-flow management

Bitcoin's Collapse

We have said previously that cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin cannot be assessed using fundamental analysis – because they have no fundamentals. They have no balance sheet or income statement, and they generate no income for investors. For this reason, they can only be assessed technically - by looking at the charts.

Speculative Opportunity

PDSnet is mainly concerned with teaching private investors about investment and medium to long-term opportunities on the JSE. The foundation of this approach is that South African tax law treats any gain on a share held for longer than 3 years as a capital gain. In other words, holding a share for more than 3 years means that the investor will not be treated as

Scary Government Debt

Just like a household or an individual, a country’s government goes into debt because it spends more than it receives in taxes and other revenue. The important difference, of course, is that governments (unlike households or individuals) can actually create money out of nothing to finance their deficit if they choose to. This is known as quantitative easing (Q/E).

Correction

On the 10th of July 2024, we tweeted (on “X”) that “...some sort of correction is looking more and more likely.” Four trading days later on the 16th of July 2024, The S&P500 index reached its highest point (5667.2) and began that correction. So far, the S&P has fallen 8,5%. Consider the chart:

WeBuyCars - Follow-up

WeBuyCars (WBC) was spun out of Transaction Capital (TCP) and separately listed on the JSE on 11th April 2024 – just over three months ago. Before the listing we published an article on the 8th of April 2024, in which we suggested that the share would be a solid blue-chip

Bell Equipment

We are often asked what prompts us to add a share to the Winning Shares List. The answer is that it is a variety of factors – but usually because the share appears to be very cheap in relation to its fundamentals. In other words, we expect it to be upwardly re-rated as its fundamental value becomes recognised by the institutional fund managers. A

JSE All Time Record High

On Friday last week, the 12th of July 2024, the JSE Overall index closed at 81686 – an all-time record high. Consider the chart:

The chart shows that the Overall

Construction

The entire construction industry was decimated by the 2008 sub-prime crisis, the ANC under Jaco Zuma’s presidency and then finally by the pandemic in 2020. Hundreds of thousands of jobs were lost and massive companies like M&R were reduced to penny stocks on the JSE.

The JSE Construction and Materials Index (JS5011)

Murray & Roberts

A company’s debt is critical in establishing the risk inherent when investing in its shares. High debt levels expose the company to high interest and capital payments and can swallow up a large part of whatever profits it makes. Low debt levels give the company the headroom to invest in further growth either organically