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Monday, February 7, 2011

Here are 2011-best-stocks part 2 for making more money



No.6 BMC Software (BMC)


BMC develops products that run corporate data centers, which house critical computer systems. Consensus estimates project per-share profits will advance 15% in fiscal 2011 ending March - and grow 14% annually over the next five years. "Reflecting this optimism and better-than-expected results for the September quarter, BMC in October raised profit guidance for fiscal 2011. With a trailing price/earnings ratio of 15, BMC trades at a discount to its three-year average P/E of 22 and five-year average of 27. If the P/E returned to the three-year average and BMC matched consensus profit estimates, the top stock would trade at $58 next year

No.7 Brazil Small Cap (BRF)


The global bull market is back in Brazil. Global markets recovered in the beginning of November; at that time, we looked to one of the hottest markets on the planet, Brazil, through the Market Vectors Brazil Small-Cap ETF (NYSE: BRF). The ETF remains our top pick for 2011. Brazil, as its place on the cover of Economist magazine recently confirmed, was the flavor of the month in emerging markets. Brazil had recently won the right to host the Olympics in 2016, raising its profile much like the Beijing Olympics did for China. Investors were pouring in. In December, the Inter-American Development Bank approved a $3-billion conditional credit line with Brazilian small and mid-sized businesses on Thursday. Around 75% of the new jobs created in Brazil this year were created by small and mid- sized businesses. 

No.8: Electronics Arts (ERTS)


Electronic Arts (NASDAQ:ERTS) – a major player in the video game industry. ERTS is one of the largest creators and sellers of multi-platform content in the industry and it finally odered some guidance for the year ahead. Expectations for earnings for 2011 are 87 cents per share with revenues of $4.26 billion. EA came out and said that revenues should fall between 4.2 and $4.4 billion with earnings ranging from $0.70 to $1. "That type of wide range never sits well with Wall Street, which likes much narrower ranges and more specific guidance.

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