The man from WAM has done it again. Fund manager Geoff Wilson has once again blitzed The Australian's field of assorted share-watching luminaries to win our 2012 stock tipping comp, with an average 34 per cent gain across his 10 individual stock selections.
The Wilson Asset Management principal edged out Patersons Securities financial adviser and AFL football nut Sam Fimis, whose average 18.4 per cent gain was blotted by only one dud speculative coal play (and his character weakness of being a Carlton supporter).
Wilson's performance, based on a portfolio of industrial stocks and weighted to recovery plays, compares with the broader market's gain of about 14 per cent over the period.
But no one could have foreseen the bronze-medal performance of psychic Simon Turnbull, except of course the Australian Psychics Association president himself.
Using a technique called remote viewing (a form of clairvoyance) and tarot cards, Turnbull notched an 18.1 per cent gain across a selection of blue-chip brand-name stocks.
THE man from WAM has done it again. Fund manager Geoff Wilson has once again blitzed The Australian's field of assorted share-watching luminaries to win our 2012 stock tipping comp, with an average 34 per cent gain across his 10 individual stock selections.
The Wilson Asset Management principal edged out Patersons Securities financial adviser and AFL football nut Sam Fimis, whose average 18.4 per cent gain was blotted by only one dud speculative coal play (and his character weakness of being a Carlton supporter).
Wilson's performance, based on a portfolio of industrial stocks and weighted to recovery plays, compares with the broader market's gain of about 14 per cent over the period.
But no one could have foreseen the bronze-medal performance of psychic Simon Turnbull, except of course the Australian Psychics Association president himself.
Using a technique called remote viewing (a form of clairvoyance) and tarot cards, Turnbull notched an 18.1 per cent gain across a selection of blue-chip brand-name stocks.