Ever think you could pick stocks as well as the fund managers who appear on financial TV shows?
A new crop of Web sites has sprung up to give you a shot. No, I'm not talking about the online ghetto of financial chat sites that are filled with rumors, hype, threats and bad grammar. These sites let anyone post stock picks. The catch is: Your picks are automatically tracked and ranked along with those from other community members. (TSC visited a few of these sites in a previous story.) At the best of these sites, you can use search functions to pull up the portfolios of the communities' top-performing amateur analysts. You can even receive email alerts when the amateur analysts you follow make trades. One site doles out cash awards to its best stock pickers. And as you'll see, some mutual funds are being set up like Web community sites, where astute amateur analysts actually help pick the funds' holdings.Gonzo Trader
ClearStation was the first site to track its members' stock picks. And it gets the award for putting a semi-crazed, gonzo face on what might otherwise be a very dry business of ranking amateur stock analysts. The site was launched back in 1998 by computer-programmer-turned-trader Douglas Fairclough, who goes by the Web handle Kensey. Fairclough describes himself as a cross between Jim Morrison and Hunter S. Thompson. No doubt if he had been a member of those artists' generation, he might have plunged into writing the Great American Novel or a screenplay. Instead, Fairclough created the Great American Web Site over an 18-month period while he sequestered himself in his San Francisco basement apartment. Less than a year later, he and his partners sold ClearStation to online brokerage E*Trade (EGRP Quote) for a reported $23 million. So far, E*Trade hasn't moved to quash ClearStation's wild-haired spirit. As evidence, an online tour of the site is called "Introduction to Spanking Wall Street." Also, when you register, you receive frequent emails from Fairclough himself (under his nom de Web, Kensey). These emails contain his market predictions, written sometimes in near-poetic rants that might well have emanated from Morrison or Thompson. A recent example (the punctuation is his):how do selling panics like the one we are seeing in chips end? answer : they just do. there is no warning. the market just ups and turns around. for sure the trading desks at DLJ and Salomon will be active. gradually, talking heads on CNBC talk!! about an 'over-reaction' to a published industry figure. remember, these people don't indicate where things are going to go, they just react and put a smile behind what is taking place.But I digress. At the heart of ClearStation's philosophy is something called "3-point investing." Each day the site posts a list of computer-generated picks that are based on technical and fundamental indicators as well as the consensus recommendations of community members. Indeed, the real stars of this site are its 170,000 amateur stock pickers. Anyone who registers can join in and compare himself or herself to other members -- like "sun," who racked up a winning-trade average of 67.5%, according to stats on the site. Click on sun's name and you get to see his entire list of recommended stocks. Click on any of these stocks and you get sun's own rationale behind the pick. Here, for example, are some of sun's recent thoughts about JDS Uniphase (JDSU Quote): "So young, so strong, so beautiful. The market's getting smacked and JDSU is marching toward its all time high." If you agree with sun's thoughts about JDS Uniphase and the other stocks he's picked, you can "subscribe" to his portfolio, and you'll be notified by email each time sun makes a trade.




