Quarterly
Window Dressing - A Recurrent Wall Street Scam
"The
time has come the walrus said, to talk of many things": Of
corrections--portfolios--- and window dressing--- of market cycles---
wizards--- and reality.
Quarterly
portfolio window dressing is one of many immortal Jaberwock-like creatures that
roam the granite canyons of the Manhattan triangle, sending inappropriate
signals to unwary investors and media spokespersons. Many of you, like the unsuspecting young oysters in the Lewis
Carroll classic, are responding to the daily news nonsense with fear instead of
embracing the new opportunities that are surely right there, cloaked, just
beyond your short-term vision field.
Older
and wiser mollusks who have experienced the cyclical realities of the markets
tend to stick with proven strategies that are based on a solid foundation of
QDI (quality, diversification, and income production). They know that
corrections lead to rallies, and that rallies always give way to corrections.
If only the corrections could elicit patience instead of fear; if only rallies
didn't produce greed and excess. There's a lot of confusion in a world that
considers commodities safer instruments than corporate bonds.
Long
lasting investment portfolios are consciously asset allocated between high
quality income and equity securities. Each class of securities is then
diversified properly to mitigate the risk that the failure of a single security
issuer will bring down the entire enterprise. Simply put, a portfolio with 100%
invested in the absolute, hands-down, best company on the planet is a high-risk
portfolio. There is no cure for cyclical changes in security market values---
diversified portfolios thrive on it, in the long run.
The
differences between a correction in either a market (equity or debt) or a
market sector (financials, drugs, transportation, etc.), and a fall from grace
in a specific company are important to appreciate. Corrections are broad
downward movements that affect nearly all securities in a specific market. This
particular one has impacted prices in both investment markets, while creating
rallies in more speculative arenas. Ten years ago, the dot-com bubble began
under very similar circumstances. Ten years earlier, it was interest rates---
and on, and on. When all prices are down, opportunity is at hand.
There
are approximately 450 Investment Grade Value Stocks, and at least half are down
significantly from their 52-week highs; fewer than ten per cent were in this
condition just over a year ago. But very few companies have thrown in the
towel, or even cut their dividends. Closed end income fund prices are still
well below the levels they commanded when interest rates were much higher, yet
they provide the same cash flow as before the financial crises. The economy and
the markets have been through much worse.
Why
aren't the wizards of Wall Street assuaging our nerves by explaining the
cyclical nature of the markets and pointing out that similar crises have always
preceded the attainment of new all time highs? Right, because the unhappy
investor is Wall Street's best friend.
Why can't politicians address economic problems with capitalist-economic
solutions? Fear, and the panic it evokes, creates an easy market for walruses,
oyster knives in hand.
Wall
Street plays to the operative emotion of the day--- greed in the commodities
markets and fear in the others. Once per quarter, they trim their holdings in
unpopular sectors and add to their positions in areas that have strengthened.
Under current conditions in the traditional investment arena, don't be
surprised by larger than usual cash holdings (certainly not "Smart
Cash"). Window dressing pushes the prices of your holdings lower, in spite
of their continued income production and sustained quality ratings.
How
have the wizards managed to re-define the long-term investment process as a
quarterly horse race against indices and averages that have no relationship to
investor goals, objectives, or portfolio content? Why do these proponents of
long-term investment planning and thinking religiously conspire to make
short-term decisions that prey upon the emotional weaknesses of their clients?
The "art of looking smart" window-dressing exercise accomplishes
several things in correcting markets:
The
things you own are artificially manipulated lower in price to make you even
more uncomfortable with them, while the things you don't have positions in
stabilize or move higher. The glossies from the new fund family your advisor is
talking about show no holdings in any of the current areas of weakness. It's
easy to make fearful investors change positions and/or strategies. Sic 'em
boys. Brilliant!
Value
investors (those who invest in IGVSI stocks, and income securities with an
unbroken cash flow track record) may lapse into fearful thinking as well, and
this is where the Working Capital Model comes to the rescue. By focusing on the
purpose of the securities you own, their enhanced attractiveness at lower
prices becomes obvious. Higher yields at lower market valuations and more shares
at lower prices equal faster realized profits as the numbers move higher during
the next upward movement of the cycle. That's just the way it is. A reality you
can count on.
Surprisingly
few investors have the courage to take advantage of market corrections. Even
more surprising is how reluctant the most respected institutional walruses are
to suggest buying when prices are low. The instant gratification expectation of
investors combined with the infallibility expected of professionals, by both
the media and their employers, is the cause. Gurus are expected to know what,
when, and how much. Consequently, they prefer to manipulate their portfolios to
create an illusion of past brilliance, rather than taking the chance that they
may actually be in the right position a few quarters down the road. There is no
know in investing.
The
stock market yard sale is in full swing--- add to your retirement accounts, buy
more of IGVSI stocks at bargain prices, increase your dependable income and
increase current yields at the same time. Apply patience, and vote for economic
solutions to economic problems.
Perge'
Steve
Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.com
http://www.kiawahgolfinvestmentseminars.com
Professional
Portfolio Management since 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"