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Why We Love Wild Penny Stocks

Penny stocks have huge potential -- that's their blessing and their curse.

The potential rewards are enormous. In fact, a few pennies have impressively bucked the bear market trend lately. Since Oct. 1, about the time of the market meltdown, NexMed (Nasdaq: NEXM  ) and Northfield Laboratory (Nasdaq: NFLD  ) were each up more than 60%!

Those quick jumps look like easy gains, considering that Visa (NYSE: V  ) and Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT  ) would need to add more than $30 to their share prices to do the same.

Everybody loves pennies
It's the potential of quick gains in "cheap" stocks that keeps investors coming back. We typed "penny stocks" into Google, and the search engine spat out "about 2,180,000" hits. We did the same for more time-tested terms such as "blue-chip stocks" and "dividend stocks" -- the terms folks should be searching for in a bear market like this -- and got just 363,000 and 594,000 hits, respectively.

Sure, we expected a discrepancy, but the size of the gap was startling. It became even more interesting when we broke down those hits with Google Trends. According to Trends, penny stocks are particularly alluring to investors in Tampa, Miami, and Orlando -- the locales where the term is most often searched.

We hope the folks Googling "penny stocks" down there aren't retirees trying to cope with this crazy, crazy market.

This stock is set to take off! Or not.
According to the Securities and Exchange Commission, the term "penny stock" generally refers to low-priced (below $5), speculative securities of very small companies. To quote the SEC: "Investors in penny stocks should be prepared for the possibility that they may lose their whole investment." (It's worth noting that the emphasis in that last sentence is in the original.)

Pay attention to the SEC's entire definition, not just the stock price. Going solely on price would wrongly categorize billion-dollar companies such as Sprint Nextel (NYSE: S  ) and Ivanhoe Mines (NYSE: IVN  ) as penny stocks.

Regardless, the SEC is spot-on when it says that true penny stocks are among the surest ways to lose money in the stock market.

Well, then, why do we love penny stocks?
We love penny stocks because they're fascinating. The world of pennies is inhabited by hardworking average Joes and Janes hoping to strike it rich, as well as by pumpers and dumpers, hypesters, and scammers. In pennies, the logic and reason that applies in the rest of daily life is replaced by zeal and prayer.

However, we don't love them enough to actually buy them. Yes, they have big potential, but their daily gyrations are unpredictable -- the stock-price movements have next to nothing to do with the underlying company the stock represents. In fact, trading in pennies is highly illiquid, and prices are often manipulated by forces not at all related to the business.

The dangers of incredible promises
If you're buying stocks without paying attention to the businesses you're buying, then you might as well be buying a lottery ticket. Or, to use another analogy, you might as well buy up every baseball card of a benchwarmer on the Akron Aeros Class AA baseball team and hope that he someday rises up, fulfills his potential, and becomes an all-star for the big-league Cleveland Indians.

There's a better way
Before you start saying the rest of the stock market is boring -- though you're probably not saying that any longer -- let us introduce you to some underfollowed small caps. They're nothing like penny stocks, yet they still offer some of the best returns on the market. Unlike penny stocks, promising small caps:

  • File reliable financial statements.
  • Are transparent.
  • Have conference calls that individual investors can listen to.
  • Don't simply hype their stock in press releases.

That's a starting point. There are more -- and more important -- criteria to help you find great small-cap companies. Our team at Motley Fool Hidden Gems, for instance, looks for a balance sheet with lots of cash and no debt, and a tenured CEO (or founder, if possible) who holds a substantial ownership stake in the business. In other words, we're looking for big returns with good old-fashioned bottom-up analysis.

You can view the 50-plus small caps our team has already found with a free 30-day trial. There's no obligation to subscribe, and we particularly recommend it for the penny-stock-o-philes reading in Florida. You know who you are.

This article was originally published July 27, 2006. It has been updated.

Tim Hanson and Brian Richards disagree about whether the U.S. Treasury should do away with the penny ... but the Treasury is probably busy with other issues right now. Neither owns shares of any company mentioned. Google is a Motley Fool Rule Breakers recommendation. Sprint Nextel is an Inside Value selection. The Fool's disclosure policy is finger-lickin' good.


Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On January 13, 2009, at 12:33 PM, PauvrePapillon wrote:

    How about this small cap? Flying well under the Wall Street radar, it has a truly disruptive and revolutionary technology.

    http://www.accuray.com

    From Breakthroughs That Will Change Lives in 2009…

    “Cyberknife has the potential to replace surgery as the first form of treatment for cancer,” says Dr Nick Plowman, director of clinical oncology at St Bartholomew's Hospital.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1106224/From-machi...

    And it’s just now being discovered by, and moving into, a huge market…

    From Is CyberKnife Ready for Prime Time in Prostate Cancer?

    “You are able to give very high doses and sculpt those doses to the tumor,” said Omar Dawood of Accuray Inc. in Sunnyvale, Calif., which has installed more than 90 systems in the United States as doctors have started using the machine for other cancers. “It could revolutionize the way prostate cancer is treated.”

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    And most CAPS players like it…

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  • Report this Comment On February 04, 2009, at 6:20 PM, thegrayone63 wrote:

    i have watched [ nexm ] over recent news is very good.i have made money on this stock over the years .nice one to grow with.it is at a very low price now .somestime it goes from 15 to 35 cents in a couple of hours .you may want to watch this one. not pumping just fact.god bless all.i remain the grayonep.s. 52 week high 1.78

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6/10/2009 3:59 PM
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