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Check out these 5 stocks as examples of things you should look for when making your own picks.
There are lots of those advisory services and newsletters out there that charge you a small fortune for access to a guru's mysterious stock picks. Here at LearningMarkets.com, we think smart picks are built on smart investing principles. 
Oddly enough, we really don't like picks. We think the most important thing investors and traders can do is educate themselves to make wise decisions on their own, not blindly following some "expert." So the "picks" you'll find here are certainly good stocks, but we offer them as examples of the types of stocks you should be watching, and the principles you should use in making your own picks.
That said, here are five stocks or symbols you should be watching, and our explanation as to why:
| {loadposition livevideopromo} | | | | | {loadposition homeaccordion2} | | | {loadposition contentad} | | | | | Pick 1: Dell Dell, Inc (DELL) has a solid market cap of over $30 billion, and the stock trades in the affordable $15 range. But that's not the reason we recommend you look into this stock. What makes this one such a great find is its incredible Return on Equity (trailing twelve months), or ROE, which is over 48% in DELL's case. ROE, in very basic terms, is a measure of how well a company turns assets into profits. If you don't know what ROE is, or you don't use it, you MUST read Using ROE to Screen and Analyze Stocks and become familiar with this simple but very powerful fundamental measure. Pick 2: Verizon
Verizon Communications, Inc. (VZ) is a major player in many portfolios, and the blue chip is trading near $30 but has been relatively flat this year. But we don't advocate it because of its short-term (or even long term) growth outlook. We think you should own Verizon because the company nearly always pays a good dividend. And dividend investing is just smart investing. In fact, we've actually lovingly thrown the idea out there that non-dividend paying stocks are kind of like Ponze Schemes. Be sure to read more about Dividend Investing and Coca Cola, and Turbocharge your Dividend Strategy to learn how to really make profits with dividend investing. Pick 3: Tupperware Anyone trading Tupperware Brands Corporation (TUP)?The reason we picked this gem is it happens to be in a great industry group that happens to have significantly outperformed the market since the bottom earlier this year. Tupperware is in the Packages and Containers industry of the Goods and Services sector. The stock has doubled in value in the last six months while the S&P 500 (.INX) or SPX has gained about 25%. Comparing a stock to its industry, and an industry to the market in general, is called Relative Strength Analysis. Every trader should know it and use it. Pick 4: Treasury Inflation Protection Securities in ETF form
We think bonds should be a part of every investor's portfolio. And iShares Barclay's TIPS Bond ETF (TIP) is a great pick. Sure, they aren't sexy, they don't deliver those elusive but sought-after 1000% returns. But what they do is designate a part of your portfolio that's dedicated to conservative, long-term growth. Both as a hedge, and as a wealth-building strategy. Learn more about Bonds in Your Stock Portfolio and TIPS (Treasury Inflation Protection Securities). Pick 5: Linn Energy Linn Energy, LLC. (LINE) is an energy company that, since the market bottom earlier this year, has nearly doubled in value, trading in the $25 range today. Despite that tremendous growth, value investors will argue this stock is still undervalued, as it's PEG ratio is under 1, at .60. Value investing involves using financial ratios, primarily Price/Earnings/Growth (PEG), to asses what a stock's potential to grow is compared to its price and fundamental value. Start with Using the PEG Ratio and Value Investing to learn more.
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