Investment Performance Expectations: WCM Fine Tuning
Contrary to popular belief and Wall Street propaganda, investing
is not a competitive event. Rather, it is a uniquely personal, goal-directed
activity that individuals must organize and control for themselves. Too few
appreciate that it is a long-term enterprise and only a handful, at best, have
discovered that DJIA and S & P 500 numbers are only useful at their
extremes.
You need to be buying when the doom and gloom is thick enough to
cut with a knife, and selling at reasonable profit targets when the averages
seem like they can only go up.
As much as you love (or loathe) to hear about quarterly market
value numbers and comparisons with one of the averages over short-term blinks
of the investment eye, you will not be accommodated here. Rather, we're going
to talk about investing, and some more meaningful numbers that should allow you
to fine-tune your "market value" performance expectations.
Why is market value in quotes? Because the relevance of a
market-value-only focus is, itself, suspect. Isn't it the type of thinking that
has, since November of 2007, thrown the financial markets into a death spiral?
Years ago, lenders sought as much collateral as possible to secure their loans;
to some, defaults were welcome. Interest rates charged were commensurate with
the risks assumed.
The less worthy (financially) a borrower was, the more collateral
the lender required--- and the higher the interest rate charged. Still, the fact that a secured loan could
become under-collateralized due to market forces was a given--- part of the
lending business, and the reason for insisting on reasonable down payments, or
equity.
The fact that the loan is greater than the current market value of
the jewelry, car, boat, refrigerator, bungalow, or shopping center does not
make them worthless--- just cyclically uncomfortable for the lenders. The
payments keep rolling in, most of the time.
Similarly, how many of us are going to stop making payments on our
toys and necessities just because we can't sell them for more than some fool
loaned us for the purchase? This is simply the way commerce is done. If you are
"underwater", it happens, you'll get over it. If your collateral is
less valuable than you thought, help the debtor make the payments.
From either direction, the stuff just can't be considered
valueless--- unless big dumb brother makes it so. Abandon
"mark-to-market", disarm all derivative time bombs (yes, there are
more) and get back to business as usual--- and plain vanilla stocks and bonds.
Amen
Generally speaking, the analysis of calendar period numbers
accomplishes little while generating transactions that often damage the
long-term viability of investment programs. Investors are encouraged to sell
things that move lower in price and to buy those that become most pricey--- the
unofficial cycle of fear, greed, and bubble.
How can I get you to stop fixating on monthly market values and to
focus on the purpose of the securities within the portfolio? Most of us are
trained to deal with seasons, fashion trends, biological changes, waning sports
dynasties, sunspots, etc. Instinctively, we expect, and prepare for change
effectively--- but not when it comes to investing, where planning and
preparation is only talked about.
Steps one through three in the fine-tuning process are these: 1)
Understanding that all investing involves some form of risk--- risk that can be
minimized by diversifying properly among investment grade, income-paying
securities. Each level of "derivativization" compounds all risk.
2) A security's price, or market value, is a function of far too
many variables, and cycles, to be either predictable or meaningful in the short
term. Most often, the price is determined more by investor emotions and
speculator's bets than it is by security fundamentals.
But, 3) most high quality income securities can be expected to
continue producing income regardless of their market price and most investment
grade equity securities purchased at relatively low prices will eventually
provide an opportunity for a reasonable profit. However, both will constantly
repeat their cycles.
With this understanding alone, investors at all levels (most of us
are not fat cats) could spend less time avoiding profits and bargains and pay
more attention to the purpose of the securities we own. Income securities are
acquired for cash flow. If they fall in price, buying more reduces average cost
and increases yield. A rise in price to a reasonable profit level must be
jumped upon with a huge smile.
Equity securities are much more complex, but IGVSI securities in a
WCM portfolio may be added to at lower prices to assure a more easily
attainable, and profitable, exit point. No reasonable profit should ever go
unrealized.
With these parameters branded on your investment portfolio
forehead, there are just three numbers you need to track in order to form valid
value expectations for your equity positions:
One: Issue Breadth
statistics are the single most reliable indicator of what is going on in the
stock market. Clearly, if more issues are going up in price than down, for a
meaningful period of time, so should the equity bucket of the portfolio--- and
vice versa.
Two: 52-Week High/Low data compare the number of issues
establishing new 52-week high ground with the number sinking to new 52-week
lows. Superficial analysis is very straightforward--- there should be more
highs in an upward trending market and more lows during a correction.
Three: The IGVSI bargain level monitor reports on the number of
investment grade value stocks that are at and near acceptable purchase levels.
The longer the list, the more likely your market value numbers are lower than
you would like.
So what about the thirty percent or more of your portfolio that
should always be invested in income producers? There are fewer things to
consider, but never even think the words: "I don't need the income, I'm
just investing for growth", it exposes your amateur status.
Get a feel for the aptly acronymed IRE (Interest Rate
Expectations) in the market place--- and a feel is really all that is
necessary. If expectations are for
lower rates, prices should move higher. If they haven't, make sure you understand
why--- like the 2008 credit crisis, for example, and its impact on income CEFs.
The other is to get the income job done years in advance of
retirement by using a cost-based asset allocation plan--- The Working Capital
Model.
So, if you asset allocate properly for your objectives, and stick
to your plan throughout the many cycles that will roller coaster your emotions
and market values, you will find that your income constantly rises--- and so
will your productive invested capital.
Whoa, that's the way it's supposed to be.
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 Grade,economy,market cycle,market stats,issue
breadth,Value Stock,CEFs,ETFs,REITs,market value,price,current
valueIndex,IGVSI,Performance Expectations,WCM,Working Capital
Model,stocks,bonds Portfolios
Investment Performance Expectations: WCM Fine Tuning
How can I get you to stop fixating on monthly market values and to
focus on the purpose of the securities within the portfolio? Most of us are
trained to deal with seasons, fashion trends, biological changes, waning sports
dynasties, sunspots, etc. Instinctively, we expect, and prepare for change
effectively--- but not when it comes to investing, where planning and
preparation is only talked about.