Investment
Grade Value Stock Index (IGVSI) Soars 24% thru July 2009
The
Investment Grade Value Stock Index is a barometer of a small but elite sector
of the stock market. Some Investment Grade Value Stocks are included in all
averages and indices, but even the Dow Jones Industrial Average includes
several issues that are below Investment Grade and very few boast an A+ S &
P rating.
The
IGVSI tracks a portfolio of approximately 400 stocks--- and less than half of
them are likely to be found in the S & P 500 average. This new market index
was developed in late 2007 to provide a benchmark for the equity portion of
investment portfolios managed without open-end mutual funds, index funds, or
any of the other popular speculations and hedges that are included in most
professionally managed portfolios.
Two
related indices (the WCMSI and WCMSM) track portfolios of closed-end income
funds. Between the three, they serve as an excellent performance expectation
development tool for investment portfolios managed according to the disciplines
of the Working Capital Model (WCM). Through July 31 2009, these indices soared
approximately 24%---- about five times the growth of the S & P 500 and
twelve times that of the DJIA.
The
reasons are fairly simple: A diversified portfolio of high quality,
dividend-paying equities, combined with an equally well diversified collection
of conservative interest paying securities is what investors move into after
licking their wounds from failed speculations.
Indices
that contain the highest quality, dividend paying equities and a variety of
historically solid income producers in a manner similar to a conservative
personalized portfolio are valuable in helping investors "fine tune"
their portfolio performance expectations and their forward-going action plans.
The IGVSI is telling us several things right now:
There
should be profits in your portfolios so make certain you don't let any of them
slip through your fingers.
Sticking
with the QDI (quality, diversification, and income production) safety structure
clearly moves you away from market bottoms more quickly than approaches that
are based on more speculative methodologies, gimmicks, and hedges. It also puts
the brakes on slip-sliding-away market values much sooner than the conventional
sell everything low methodology.
Clearly,
adding dollars to portfolios during corrections (portfolio income plus regular
contributions) is a far more productive approach to investing than loss taking
and waiting for Wall Street to tell you when the next upturn is about to begin.
Just ask yourself: Have I benefited twenty-plus percent from this five-month
rally?
Additionally,
individual securities portfolios are much easier to manage and to monitor as to
monthly income production than other forms of investing in times of financial
chaos. Income produced by the twenty-five closed end income producers in the
WCMSI is pretty much the same now as it was when the downturn began in May of
2007--- particularly when you factor in profits and reinvestment of dividends.
Without
a doubt, investment portfolios that are able to use the IGVSI, WCMSI, and the
WCMSM as their benchmarks are most likely to out-perform the most well known
Wall Street benchmarks. They have done so in an environment where congress has
killed major institutions and where many interest rate sensitive securities
failed to move higher in the face of the lowest interest rates in modern
history.
It's
time to move away from the speculative underbelly of investing; it's time to
build an investment future on a foundation of quality, diversification, and
income.
Steve
Selengut
http://www.valuestockindex.com
sanserve(at)aol.com
Professional
Portfolio Management since 1979
Author:
The Brainwashing of the American Investor
Investment
Instruction provided through Kiawah Golf Investment Seminars
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Investment
Grade Value Stock Index (IGVSI) Soars 24%
The
IGVSI tracks a portfolio of approximately 400 stocks--- and less than half of
them are likely to be found in the S & P 500 average. This new market index
was developed in late 2007 to provide a benchmark for the equity portion of
investment portfolios managed without open-end mutual funds, index funds, or
any of the other popular speculations and hedges that are included in most
professionally managed portfolios.