The Big Promise Of Small, Game-Changing Stocks

A couple of weeks ago, shares of a little-known small-cap company -- Fleetmatics (NYSE: FLTX) -- jumped 40% in one day. Over the prior weekend, the company agreed to be bought by Verizon (NYSE: VZ) for $60 per share in cash -- a massive premium to the previous day's closing price. A 100-share stake that was worth $4,296 on one day was now worth $5,959.

Only a month earlier, Medtronic (NYSE: MDT) bought HeartWare (Nasdaq: HTWR), a maker of surgical implants for the heart, for $1.1 billion, a 93% premium to the previous day's closing price.

These deals signify a fact of life that corporate executives -- and successful game-changing stock investors -- know too well: it's easier to buy something than to build it from scratch.

In the case of Fleetmatics, for instance, Verizon was looking to instantly enhance its IoT (Internet of Things) portfolio. Instead of having to develop its own surgical implants that mimic the heart's blood-pumping function, all Medtronic will have to do is sign the dotted line (and fork over the cash).

Companies that possess disruptive or proprietary technologies, or those that have made inroads into a new, riskier business -- those are the ones that have the best chance to be taken over. Those are the ones that offer investors strong potential for a substantial price appreciation -- not to mention a no-brainer exit strategy.

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These are exactly the kinds of stocks I'll be spending a lot of time looking at and bringing to your attention to as the newly-appointed Chief Investment Strategist of Game-Changing Stocks.

Most of my analysis in Game-Changing Stocks will be concentrated on smaller-cap stocks, companies with market capitalizations under $3 billion but which are still highly liquid in terms of trading volume.

That, of course, is because it's much more likely that The Next Big Thing -- a true market disruptor, a possessor of a riskier technology that has a potential to be a game-changer -- is a company that's just getting started, or is sufficiently nimble enough to pursue promising new opportunities. Many of these companies have started with just one idea, a new product or technology, an industry shift or a new market trend.

Smaller stocks can also appreciate faster than larger-caps in similar businesses, thanks in part to the law of large numbers (which makes it easier for a $2 billion company to double in value than a $200 billion company).