Eric T. Singer Founder of Congressional Effect Fund

Eric Singer, a 25 year New York city banking and finance professional, studied, discovered, and first published on Congress’ consistently deleterious effect on daily stock prices in early 1992 (the “Congressional Effect”). Since then, Eric Singer’s shocking discovery that Congress’ activity consistently, predictably and negatively impacts stock market returns has attracted great interest and support from both the financial and academic community.

After many years of frustration with government folly and resulting investor wealth destruction, Eric T. Singer launched a Money Management firm and Mutual Fund designed to both reward investors and expose the deleterious effects of poor Congressional action. Since May of 2008, strong investor support of these endeavors and thousands of calls/emails and letters from equally frustrated Americans, has encouraged Mr. Singer that yearning for Freedom still exists in the hearts of many.

 

 
Congressional Wealth Destruction Monitor
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Congressional Wealth Destruction Monitor
Enter your e-mail address to register for the Congressional Wealth Destruction Monitor, an e-Letter reporting on Congressional deliberation likely to negatively impact industries and investment wealth.


 

Go to Congressional Effect Management

Congressional Effect Management
is a Money Management and Advisory service for individual and institutional investors. The Advisory firm publishes the Congressional Wealth Destruction Monitor, an e-mail newsletter exposing negative unintended consequences of pending and proposed legislation. To subscribe, please enter your e-mail address in the bottom left of this page.

Go to Congressional Effect Fund

The Congressional Effect Fund
is a no load mutual fund launched in May of 2008. It is the first and only mutual fund that explicitly seeks to minimize investor exposure to the typically negative impact of new and proposed Congressional legislation on the broad stock market. In a torture test year for financial investments, the Congressional Effect Fund finished its first year in the top 1% of Mutual Funds in its Morningstar category, simply by avoiding the stock market when Congress was in Session.