2015 ROE Comparison Between Biweekly Investing and Investing According To CAP

Hi All,

Happy New Year! I would like to provide you a quick update on an important benchmark that might help you with your New Year resolutions.

Most of us place our 401K and 529 college saving plans on an auto-pilot mode – investing on a regular interval (biweekly, for example).  In 2015, if you invest biweekly in S&P 500, the year’s return is about 0.72%, worse than putting your money in a money market account that has a typical return of 0.90%.

In the same year, allocating your equity and investing in S&P 500 according to CAP, Capital Appreciate Point from Crystal Clear Indicator, L.L.C. delivered a return of about 6% – 8 times higher than that of biweekly investing.  If your other investment return is lower than 6% in 2015, try free trial on Starter A- S&P 500 CAP.

The reason for us to invest and take on risk is to get a higher return.  Why settle for a lower return when facing similar risks?  The application of CAP is abundant and rewarding: S&P 500 CAP can be used on other investment vehicles.  Please click the link below to view the application of CAP on other indices and trade records to support the value of CAP.