This Strategy Has Outperformed The Market For 83 Years

Today I want to tell you about an investing strategy that defies logic. It shouldn't work based on everything you've learned about the stock market.

Yet it does. In fact, for over half a century, investors and traders have used this strategy to produce unparalleled results.

And no, for those of you who may be wondering, this strategy doesn't involve options, derivatives or any other obscure financial product.

What's more, what I'm about to show you can be used as part of any general investing strategy -- regardless of whether you're focusing on income, growth, blue chips, small caps or commodities.

Specifically, I'm talking about relative-strength investing.

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Longtime readers might already be familiar with relative-strength investing. We've talked about it before in previous StreetAuthority articles. But for those who need a refresher, allow me to provide a brief recap.

Relative-strength investing is simply a type of momentum investing. It involves buying the best-performing stocks (relative to the market) and holding them until their momentum changes course.

To most investors, especially those considered value investors, this strategy probably sounds ridiculous. After all, most people have heard the phrase "buy low, sell high." Since relative-strength investors buy stocks that are already outperforming today, many view this style of investing as counterintuitive.

But that's a mistake... and it's one many people make whenever they approach a stock pick.

[More from StreetAuthority.com: Revealed: A Stock You Can Own 'Forever']

Most investors have been trained to think that the stocks with the most upside potential are those that are the most "undervalued." The definition of undervalued varies by investor, but normally people define it using metrics like low price-to-earnings ratios, price-to-book ratios or discounted price-to-sales values.

The problem is that this kind of approach leads investors to pass up the market's best-performing stocks in favor of the ones doing the worst. Since underperforming investments usually sport the "lowest valuations," we tend to think these stocks are the more attractive buys.