Why Choose the Turnaround Letter?
Why should you choose to subscribe to The Turnaround Letter? Because it is trusted and established and can help you make money. Listed below are the most common reasons that our subscribers tell us why they subscribe to The Turnaround Letter.

Performance
– The Turnaround Letter has one of the best track records of all investment newsletters.
Over the last five years our stock recommendations realized an
annual 25.3% increase.
Clear and easy to read – The Turnaround Letter is written in a manner that is clear and easy to read. You don’t have to be a Wall Street analyst to understand the reasons for their buy and sell recommendations.
Recommendation follow up – We track the performance of all our recommendations from “Purchase” to “Sell”.
We don’t follow the crowd
– Most brokers and Wall Street analysts avoid turnaround
situations because they have been burned by the stock on the way down.
Most investors chase the same stocks (which are followed
by hundreds of highly trained analysts) and so it is hard to outperform. The Turnaround Letter seeks out unloved, down-and-out turnaround situations. When these stocks eventually do come back into Wall Street’s good graces, they can soar as investors pile into them.
Flexible - You can use the Turnaround Letter to build a whole portfolio or for just individual stock ideas.
Turnaround Letter Investment Philosophy
Our approach is simple. We avoid the "blue chips" and "hot" stocks that
most investors are stampeding into. Instead, we search out companies that
have had some problems and are temporarily out-of-favor, but are in the
process of turning around. These stocks seem like laggards when we first
identify them, but as the turnaround becomes more evident, Wall Street will
jump into the stock and push the price up - often dramatically.
We also try to minimize risk in several ways. First, we believe there is
much less risk in a "troubled" stock that has already been hammered down by
the market than in a "hot" stock that is trading at 30 or 40 times earnings.
The hot growth stock will come crashing down if there is just a little bad
news (or perhaps even good news that wasn't quite as good as Wall Street
expected). But a stock that is already perceived as troubled may hardly
budge on more bad news.