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Using penny stocks to
hedge your portfolio may
be a more viable option
than you think.  
           Traditional hedging typically involves using complicated options or
    derivative securities, and doing it yourself may require opening margin,
    options, futures, commodities and foreign exchange accounts.  All
    hedging practices consist of one simple theory, however, and that
    involves the concept of insurance.  Hedging your bets is a way to help
    insure that you will be covered if things do not go as planned.  Using
    Penny Stocks, one can often hedge a much larger portfolio while risking
    only a tiny percentage on low priced shares, and be able to do it with
    ease, right from an online brokerage account.  Exchange traded funds, or
    ETF’s have emerged as a way for the average investor with a stock
    trading account to buy baskets of securities in different economic sectors
    or on different exchanges.  This can be a way to hedge your investments
    without opening up any new accounts; unfortunately several problems
    with this practice exist.
           Let’s say you’re heavily invested in bank stocks, and you want to
    ensure that rising interest rates do not destroy your portfolio.  You believe
    that bond funds will do well in this scenario, and you decide to sell half of
    your bank stocks and buy a treasury bond ETF.  If you are right, you will
    ensure that no matter what happens to interest rates and bonds, your
    account value will likely stay right where it is.  If you are wrong, however,
    you may be worse off then when you started.  By using penny stocks, you
    can still make out if your major investments continue to perform, and if
    they falter, you may still make out.  In the above example, let’s say you
    believe that if rates go up, then repossession specialists may do well.  
    You find a tiny public company that specializes in asset recovery for
    banks and financial institutions trading for just pennies a share.  You sell
    just 10% of your bank stocks and buy shares in the Micro Cap Company
    to hedge your portfolio.  If you are right, and your bank stocks fall by 20%
    on rising rates, your penny stock could easily double or triple on
    accelerated revenues more than making up for your loss.  If rates stay
    low, and your bank stocks rise another 20%, your original 10% invested
    in the high risk penny stock is all that has been risked.  If you are
    completely wrong, you have at least kept the risk down, and have not
    accelerated any losses in your portfolio.
           You don’t have to be a major player in the world’s financial markets or be millionaire to enjoy the
    benefits of hedging.  Take a look at your own job and your plans for retirement.  Maybe you are heavily
    invested in your own company’s stock options, or maybe your job and salary hinge on the profits of your
    business.  You may work for a company that buys coffee beans, and then roasts and sells them.  You
    know that your livelihood may hinge on the fluctuations in commodity prices, specifically the price of
    coffee beans, and you are aware of some threats that could send prices higher.  By selling a small
    percentage of your stock options or even by allocating a few paychecks you could buy shares of several
    different penny stocks poised to move in your favor in the event of these known threats.  These may
    include tiny companies selling pesticides to harvesters in the event of an epidemic, a company that
    delivers water in case there is a drought or other natural disaster, or just a company that sells
    unroasted beans who will experience better margins in the event of sustained higher prices.  Any one of
    these stocks could skyrocket during tuff times taking a lot of the pressure off.  If business remains good,
    you have not risked more than the small percentage of your assets used to buy the penny stocks, and
    chances are they won’t be completely worthless.

           The concept of using Stocks under a dollar to hedge is not limited to just insuring investments.  You
    can bet against rising gasoline prices, heating oil and propane or natural gas prices, electricity bills,
    food and even real estate prices to name a few.  Let’s say you have a long commute to work, and you
    understand that a one dollar increase in a gallon of gas will translate into a thousand dollars extra spent
    per year in transportation costs.  By putting a few hundred dollars into the stock of a tiny gasoline refinery
    company trading on the OTC Bulletin Board, you can hedge your commute so to speak.  Timing is
    everything, but finding a stock with just the right capital structure could yield triple or even quadruple digit
    profits in the event of a one dollar spike in the price of gas. If gas stays the same or goes down, you
    have only risked a few hundred dollars, of which is made up by the lower transportation costs.  The
    main thing to remember when hedging is that if the event or catalyst that you need to insure has already
    occurred, then it is too late.  You must place the most emphasis on hedging your portfolio specifically
    during periods of affluence and prosperity.