IGVSI
Performance Expectations – WCM Portfolios
No
investor should ever be surprised by the changes in market value that appear on
his or her monthly brokerage account statements. In general, media noise
throughout the month should lead to a feel for what has been going on and
investors should understand that the market prices of investment securities are
constantly changing.
No
investor should be particularly surprised by the changes in market value that
have taken place over the preceding year. In general, short-term changes in
portfolio values will correlate positively with shorter-term prognostications
about the economy, interest rates, and government plans for the political
direction of the country.
No
investor should make changes to his or her WCM portfolio based upon short-term
events or media/Wall Street/Washington speculations of the impact of such
events on the future direction any cycle or financial market.
Most
investors back into the portfolio development process by making short-term decisions
based on guesswork, hype, "insider" information, media stories, etc.
Their selections are expected to "perform" (Wall Streetese for go up
in price better than other similar speculations.) quickly, or at least within
the calendar year of their purchase.
Most
investors wind up with "buckshot" portfolios that are asset
allocation confused, qualitatively questionable, diversification rule
indistinguishable, and income generation not thought "aboutable".
Most
investors are caught in a devious "product" trap. They think in terms
of buying an investment product instead of making an investment in something of
value. They believe that any upward price movement in their product choice is
good, sustainable, and unrelated to anything else in their environment save the
genius of this year's financial advisor.
Most
investors have no use at all for any bad news that adversely impacts the market
value of their investment products. Those few who learn to buy on bad news to
take advantage of oversold market conditions benefit exponentially from their
sound judgment. Most of these, however, forget to realize their profits.
Some
investors take the time to think about where they are going before they get
started selecting securities to put inside their portfolios. They distinguish
between the income generation purpose of one class of securities and the
realized capital gains, or growth, potential of the other, more exciting class.
Some
investors have learned that the Working Capital Model (the WCM) allows them to
put the extremely important asset-allocation-plan step on autopilot, so they
can focus their efforts on selection, diversification, and profit taking. These
investors generally know what they want (and expect) from every security they
add to their portfolios.
Some
investors have learned what to expect from income securities in various IRE
(Interest Rate Expectations) environments and understand that price changes
rarely have a negative impact on income production. Most WCM investors have
been patient enough to see nearly all income securities survive severe credit
market problems with only minor payout reductions, if any.
A few
investors understand that they will eventually want to partially support
themselves with the income their portfolios produce, and they program their
decisions to assure an annually increasing level of essential retirement
"base income". Few mutual fund investors even know what base income
is, much less think about it.
A few
WCM investors have learned how to focus on their growing base income while most
mutual fund, index fund, and NASDAQ investors rely on growth in market value to
somehow fund their pension plans. In the real world of cycles, dislocations,
Madoffs, and credit crunches, the market value plan just doesn't do it.
A few
investors try to pick and choose those elements of the WCM that they will or
will not include in their approach to the securities markets. That doesn't do
it either.
All
investors need to become intimate with both the content of their portfolios and
the workings of the various cycles that impact on security market values. They
need to expect, even anticipate cyclical changes in the market values of their
securities by taking reasonable profits in either classification willingly,
gleefully, and without hindsight.
All
investors need to plan their portfolios in a manner that allows them to add to
positions at predefined, acceptable, lower price points during cyclical (and
hysterical) market value downturns. Fear control allows these WCM types to
create larger cash flows and more easily attainable profit-taking target levels
for the eventual upswing.
All
investors need to exorcise the two major Wall Street demons: (1) blind devotion
to portfolio market value change analysis from one blink of the market cycle's
eye to the next, and (2) focus on the length of time it takes the planet to
travel around the Sun while ignoring the cyclical- facts of investment life.
No
person should become an investor until and unless he or she forms a set of
precise expectations about the behavior of securities values--- all securities
values, at all stages of the stock market, interest rate, and economic cycles.
No
person should become an investor without first having established reasonable
long-term goals and objectives and/or without understanding which classes and
types of securities are most likely to safely move him toward achievement.
No
person should be so fearful of current financial conditions that he is thinking
more of loss taking than bargain hunting or that he is expecting market value
growth when he should be embracing a rising working capital.
WCM
people think of performance in terms of growing productive working capital and
annually increasing levels of base income--- irrespective of market conditions.
WCM equity investors think in terms of their completed profitable trades--- how
many, average gain per trade, holding period.
WCM---
you can do it.
Steve
Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.com/
http://www.kiawahgolfinvestmentseminars.com
Professional
Investment Management from 1979
Author
of: "The Brainwashing of the American Investor: The Book that Wall Street
Does Not Want YOU to Read", and "A Millionaire's Secret Investment
Strategy"
Investment
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IGVSI
Performance Expectations – WCM Portfolios
All
investors need to become intimate with both the content of their portfolios and
the workings of the various cycles that impact on security market values. They
need to expect, even anticipate cyclical changes in the market values of their
securities by taking reasonable profits in either classification willingly,
gleefully, and without hindsight.