Read This Before You Put Any New Money Into The Market

Longtime readers know that I make it my business to identify "the next big thing." This can come in the form of a product, service, technology or a company that materially disrupts the baseline assumptions for doing business in a particular industry.

In my premium newsletter, Game-Changing Stocks, I usually focus on a big idea and give readers my take on stocks that could deliver triple-digit gains for investors. I also recommend allocating about 20% of your portfolio to these kinds of picks in order to really juice your portfolio while compounding the other 80% of your money in "autopilot" mode through safe, stable index funds or blue-chip stocks.

But lately I've been making the case that the market is too overvalued and volatile for anything but the most tactical of new investment dollars. Until things return to normal, it's the prudent thing to do right now.

So recently, I had a reader ask me this:

Andy, if I'm sidelining new S&P 500 allocations, is there anything I should invest in in the meantime? If the S&P 500 is a no-go for a while, do you have any suggestions that meet YOUR criteria for a good 80% "Autopilot" stock?

It was a great question that gives me a lot of confidence in my subscribers. They know not to expect a steady stream of triple-digit gains year-round.

Now I believe in teaching a man to fish is far more valuable than simply feeding him. So before I answered this reader's question with a pick, I laid out specific criteria for finding prudent investments in this market environment. I'd like to share them with you today.

How To Find Great Investments In A Troubled Market

1. Look for stocks with a market cap in excess of $10 billion.

[More from StreetAuthority.com: 2 Firms To Buy In This $445 Billion Market]

These companies tend to be stable and less volatile. They tend to have mature business models, viable brands and an established customer base.

2. Locate any companies with an institutional investment of greater than 75%.

This is a metric reported on most financial news sites. It's a good gauge of the degree to which the "smart money" -- institutions, insurance companies, banks, pension funds, etc. -- is investing in a given company. This is "Being Right" insurance. If you've bet on a company that has major institutional ownership, you can bet that its analysts have done more modeling, research and other due diligence than you have.

3. Find a price at the lower end of the 52-week range.

Picking up stocks close to the bottom is a nice feeling. And, interestingly, it seems like when the overall market gets a little overheated, there are a couple of dozen of these companies available.