Investment
Performance Evaluation Re-Evaluated: Part Two
The
Working Capital Model (WCM) looks at investment performance differently, less
emotionally, and without a whole lot of concern for short-term market value
movements. Market value performance evaluation techniques are only used to
analyze peak-to-peak market cycle movements over significant time periods.
Security
market values are used for buy and sell decision-making. Working capital
figures are used for asset allocation and diversification decision-making.
Portfolio working capital growth numbers are used to evaluate goal directed
management decision-making over shorter periods of time.
WCM
tracking techniques help investors focus on long term growth engines like
capital gains, dividends, and interest--- the things that can keep the working
capital line (see Part One) moving ever upward. The "base income" and
"cumulative realized capital gains" lines are the most important WCM
growth engines.
Please
refer to the chart in Chapter 7 of "The Brainwashing of the American
Investor: The Book that Wall Street does not want YOU to Read", and
on-line at sancoservices.com/WorkingCapitalLineDance.htm.
The
Base Income Line tracks the total dividends and interest received each year. It
will always move upward if you are managing your equity vs. fixed income asset
allocation properly. Without adequate base income: (1) working capital will not
grow normally during corrections and (2) there won't be enough cash
replenishment to take advantage of new investment opportunities.
The
earlier you start tracking your dependable base income, the sooner you will
discover that your retirement comfort level has little to do with your
portfolio market value.
The
"Net Realized Capital Gains" line reflects historical trading
results, and is most important during the early years of portfolio building. It
will directly reflect both the security selection criteria you use, and the
profit-taking rules you employ. If you use investment grade value stocks and WCM
buy/sell disciplines, you will rarely have a downturn in this important number.
Any
profit is always better than any loss and, unless your selection criteria is
really too conservative, there will always be something out there worth buying
with the proceeds. Obviously, capital gains growth should accelerate in rising
markets, and cost based asset allocation assures that such gains add directly
to the future growth of base income.
Note
that an unrealized gain or loss is as meaningless as the quarter-to-quarter
movement of a market index. The WCM is a decision model, and good decisions
should produce net realized income.
One
other important detail: no matter how conservative your selection criteria, a
security or two is bound to become a loser. Don't judge this by Wall Street
popularity indicators, tealeaves, or analyst opinions. Let the fundamentals
(profits, S & P rating, dividend action, etc.) send up the red flags.
Market Value just can't be trusted for a bite-the-bullet decision--- but it can
help.
The
"Total Portfolio Market Value" line will follow an erratic path,
constantly staying below Working Capital. If you observe the chart after a
market cycle or two, you will see that the Working Capital, Net Realized
Capital Gains, and Base Income lines move steadily upward regardless of what
the market value is doing!
You
will also notice that the lows in market value begin to occur above earlier
highs --- but this may take several cycles to develop. It's comforting to know
that, although market value movements are not controllable, the WCM growth
engines are. We can actively manage a portfolio to produce increasing base
income levels, and we can conservatively select and monitor our equities to
assure that all reasonable profits are brought to the bottom line.
The
market value line should never be above the working capital line, except
occasionally in 100% income portfolios. When it gets close, a greater movement
upward in Net Realized Capital Gains should be expected. If it hasn't, you've
become greedy--- "let no profit go unrealized" must become your
success mantra!
Studies
show rather clearly that the vast majority of unrealized gains are eventually
brought to the Schedule D as realized losses--- and this includes potential
profits on the boring securities housed in the income side of your portfolio.
One
other use for market value: When that line is at or near an all time high, look
around for a security that has fallen from grace with the S & P rating
system and bite that bullet. Loss taking should be done slowly, and downgraded
securities should be the first to go.
What's
different about this approach, and why isn't it more high tech? There is no
mention of an index, an average, or comparisons with anything except valid
expectations based on securities and market cycles. It will get you where you
want to be without the hype that encourages unproductive transactions, foolish
speculations, and incurable dissatisfaction.
In the
WCM, market value is used as an expectation clarifier and an action indicator
for the portfolio manager. Most investors focus on market value and market
indices out of habit. Market values, realistically, are neither bad nor good.
You need to step outside the "market value vs. something" box, and
focus on the opportunities for growth that security price changes provide.
All
performance assessment lines need to be treated as learning tools instead of
knuckle slappers, and they need to be looked at as inter-dependent pieces of
the road map to goal achievement. But there is one more line to add to the
chart.
The
"net invested capital line" is the pulse of the investment plan and
it should beat most rapidly in the early years of portfolio building. Steady
deposits assure that opportunities are not missed and that base income attains
the levels needed many years in the future. Most investors curtail their
deposits in bad markets, a major error in judgment.
The
retirement phase of the investment plan should be based on a 70% or lower draw
from base income. In tax deferred plans, the 70% level includes Uncle Sam's
portion. Gotcha! With that discipline in place, the base income line will
continue to grow at a rate in excess of most recent inflation levels.
Steve
Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.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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investing,trading,dividends,interest,strategy,Working Capital,asset
allocation,market value,performance,government
Investment
Performance Evaluation Re-Evaluated: Part Two
The
Working Capital Model (WCM) looks at investment performance differently, less emotionally,
and without a whole lot of concern for short-term market value movements.
Market value performance evaluation techniques are only used to analyze
peak-to-peak market cycle movements over significant time periods.
Security
market values are used in buy and sell decision-making. Working capital figures
are used for asset allocation and diversification decision-making. Portfolio
working capital growth numbers are used to evaluate goal directed management
decision-making over shorter periods of time.