Epic Advisors

Personal Information
Education
College of William and Mary
Qualifications
BBA, CFA, CFP
Date of Birth
March 30, 1975
Job Title
President
Industry
Financial Services
Investment Experience
Investing since 1997. Worked for Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan before founding Epic Advisors.
Company Information
Company Name
Epic Advisors
4116 Enfield Ridge Drive
Cary
North Carolina
United States
27519

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Important Information

  1. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
  2. Performance of the model manager’s account is calculated by Covestor on a daily time-weighted basis, including cash and broker commissions. Manager returns include trades that fail Covestor’s trading rules, do not reflect any Covestor suitability or risk score restrictions and are exclusive of Covestor fees. More
  3. Average subscriber performance (“Avg Sub”) is calculated by Covestor and is composed of the average, daily, time weighted returns of all active subscriptions to this model. These returns include cash, brokerage commissions, Covestor advisory fees, and reflect individual client suitability and risk score restrictions. More »
  4. Month to Date returns and Since Inception returns are revised daily. All other returns (month, 3 month, year to date, et al) are calculated as of the most recent month end date.
  5. All graph data is as of the end of day for the referenced period, unless otherwise specified.
  6. The subscription minimum is the minimum subscription required to follow a particular model. The minimum amount is determined by Covestor, based on the characteristics of the underlying model. It should not be considered as specific investment advice for your investment situation.
  7. Benchmark returns have been calculated by Covestor using a time-weighted calculation of daily index valuations and do not include cash or transaction costs.
  8. Leverage indicates the level of margin utilized and is calculated by dividing gross exposure by portfolio net liquidation value.
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Aggressive model utilizes both a heavy fundamental analysis along with a market timing approach. Combines heavy lifting accounting analysis from a 150 stock universe with day trading positions.

Subscribe to this model
2.00% of assets p.a.
$30,000 subscription minimum

Daytrader: $30k Minimum Account Balance required.

Call Customer Service on 1.866.825.3005 to discuss this model

INVESTMENT
ADVISOR
Inception date
Risk Score
Strategy
Asset class
Cap. bias
Long/Short
Current holdings 32
Avg. trades per month
Latest trade EBAY
Subscribers

Performance and Risk

Performance Summary (as at end of )
Manager*
S&P 500
1M 3M YTD 1Y SI
Inception Manager* S&P 500 Avg. Sub.
Month to date (%)
1 month (%)
3 month (%)
1 year (%)
Annualized since inception (%) ? ? ?
Since inception (%) n/a
Sharpe (since inception) n/a

* Includes trades that fail Covestor Trading Rules

Past performance is not indicative of future performance

Strategy

Summary

This aggressive model utilizes both a heavy fundamental analysis along with a market timing approach.  It combines the core portfolio positions with day trading positions. 

Asset Allocation

Top Holdings (excluding cash) (as at end of )
Symbol Security Allocation(%)
ICE Intercontinentalexchange, Inc. - 20.48
EWZ iShares MSCI Brazil Index Fund 20.15
ADP Automatic Data Processing, Inc. 11.92
DRYS DryShips Inc. 10.99
EWC iShares MSCI Canada Index Fund 10.20
  Top holdings total (excluding cash) 32.78%
  Cash 18.72%
  Total number of holdings 32
  Leverage 1.99

View all holdings »

Investment Report

June 2010

“Don’t even hear a murmur of a prayer
It’s not dark yet, but it’s getting there.”
-Bob Dylan, “Not Dark Yet”

For the bulls, it is getting awfully dark. As recently as one month ago, every piece of data was spun positively and the market went straight up. Those days are now a distant memory. Instead, we are living with a market that refuses to rally, wastes buying power, and is set to fall lower.
The eternal optimists have decided to view the recent sell-off as a pullback in an ongoing bull market. After all, prices went so far so fast, that a consolidation was both reasonable and expected. Agreeing with the need for a consolidation, those who witness the recent action as normal are deluding themselves.

As evidence look at the past two trading days. From Tuesday’s intraday low to Wednesday’s intraday high, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (Dow) climbed an impressive 423 points. However, it was for naught. Both days finished lower as the Dow has declined 11% from its April 26 peak. Ominously, it is below the psychologically important 10,000 barrier for the first time since February 8.

Spin the story anyway you like, but this is not bullish. Instead, we have a market that is trading below its 200-day moving average and 50% retracement level. This rally is over.

Despite the overwhelming evidence, bulls will continue to grasp for reasons why this is an orderly pullback that presents an excellent buying opportunity. Four main arguments are as follows:

1.    Stocks are cheap – Forecasting robust earnings growth, we often hear that the market is trading at cheap levels. This is false. The Value Line median P/E ratio stands at 17.4. This compares with 19.7 at the July 2007 peak. While not extremely overvalued, stocks are not cheap.

2.    Excess Cash – As a result of the credit crisis, everyone has increased their liquidity position by hoarding cash. Many believe this excess cash will eventually find its way into stock buybacks, dividends, and mergers. They are wrong. For many years, both corporations and individuals viewed access to credit and cash equivalently. When banks could not renew repo lines and consumers saw their credit lines cut, the difference between cash and credit materialized. Cash levels may be high, but they represent a new norm where people seek safety over return.

3.    Economic Growth – Hiring is expanding and GDP growing. Does not this signal a boom is underway? No. Numbers are improving, but they remain so far below pre-recession levels that it will be years before lost ground has been reclaimed. The current economic bounce is welcome, but it is still very early.

4.    Oversold Bounce – Markets are oversold and many are looking for a bounce. However, oversold markets can remain that way for a long time. Just because the market went down does not mean it must now go back up.

I consider the bullish arguments weak. With the market below key support levels, the trend is lower. Eventually a rally will occur, but those occasions should be used to limit exposure and curtail risk. Until we receive a decisive rally pushing prices above the 200-day moving average, stay away from this market.

History

Monthly Performance (%)
Month Return Avg. Sub. Risk Performance

Background provided by the manager

Transactions

Latest Transactions (as at end of )
Executed Symbol Security Type Price
Jul 27, 2010 EBAY eBay Inc. Buy $21.03
Jul 27, 2010 RFMD RF MICRO DEVICES INC Buy $4.44
Jul 26, 2010 TWX TIME WARNER INC Buy to cover $31.71
Jul 26, 2010 GE General Electric Company Buy to cover $16.12
Jul 26, 2010 BIDU BAIDU INC Buy $80.40
Jul 23, 2010 ADI ANALOG DEVICES Buy $30.54
Jul 23, 2010 ICGE Internet Capital Group, Inc. Buy to cover $8.71
Jul 22, 2010 EWU iShares MSCI United Kingdom Index Fund Sell $15.08

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