YOUR BUSINESS AUTHORITY
Springfield, MO
Nearly half, or 46 percent, of 1,006 investors surveyed chose energy as one of the top three investment opportunities, up from 32 percent in November 2004. Though wary about the current energy situation, 66 percent of those surveyed said the potential growth of the industry is the main reason to invest.
The real estate industry ranked second, with 16 percent of shareholders selecting it as a good investment in the current environment, down from 22 percent in 2004. The third best industry to invest in this year was pharmaceuticals, selected by 12 percent of respondents.
Shareholders chose automotive, travel and government as the worst sectors for investment this year.
In the survey, 44 percent of respondents placed automotive among the top three worst segments, 36 percent pegged travel and 29 percent chose government. Shareholders said out-of-control costs were the main reason for poor placement.
Compared to a year ago, more shareholders say automotive is not a potential growth industry, at 37 percent, compared to 21 percent.
The health care industry has improved, according to shareholders. Only 11 percent said health care was one of the three worst investments, an improvement from the 23 percent that said so in November 2004.
The BetterInvesting confidence index is at an all-time low of 1.2 on a scale of -100 to 100, where zero equals a neutral attitude toward the stock market. Confidence is lowest in the Midwest with an index of -1, down dramatically from January 2004 when the region's investors had an index of 21.3.
The number of investors who believe the U.S. economy is headed in the right direction is at 46 percent - its lowest since September 2003 when it was 57 percent.
The online poll was conducted in October by Michigan-based BetterInvesting, formerly called the National Association of Investors Corp.
Wise Investing
In a recent poll, American shareholders chose their best three investments and worst three investments for 2006.
Top 3:
o Energy (46 percent)
o Real estate (16 percent)
o Pharmaceuticals (12 percent)
Bottom 3:
o Automotive (44 percent)
o Travel (36 percent)
o Government (29 percent)
Source: BetterInvesting Community Voice of the American Shareholder poll
This story originally appeared in SBJ's Jan. 3 e-news Daily Update. Click here to register.[[In-content Ad]]
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