RELAX, A Volatile Stock Market Is Your
Dearest Friend
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Most people never forget their first love.
I'll never forget my first trading profit! But the $600 (1970 dollars) I
pocketed on Royal Dutch Petroleum was not nearly as significant as the
conceptual realization it signaled! I was amazed that someone would pay me that
much more for my stock than the newspaper said it was worth just a few weeks
earlier! What had changed? What had happened to make the stock go up, and why
had it been down in the first place? Without ever needing to know the answers,
I've been trading RD for thirty-six years!
Looking at scores of similarly profitable,
high quality companies in this manner, you would find that: (1) most move up
and down regularly (if not predictably) with an upward long-term bias, and (2)
that there is little if any similarity in the timing of the movements between
the stocks themselves. This is the "Volatility" that most people fear
and that Wall Street loves them to fear. It can be narrowly confined to certain
sectors, or much broader, encompassing practically everything. The broader it
becomes, the more likely it is to be categorized as either a rally or a
correction. Most years will feature one or two of each. This is the natural
condition of things in the stock market, Mother Nature, Inc. if you will. Don't
take her for granted when she gets high, and never ignore her when she feels
low. Embrace her volatile moods, work with them in whatever direction they
travel, and she will become your love as well!
Ironically, it is this natural volatility
(caused by hundreds of variables human, economic, political, natural, etc.)
that is the only real "certainty" existent in the financial markets.
And, as absurd as this may sound until you experience the reality of it all, it
is this one and only certainty that makes Mutual Funds in general (and Index
Funds in particular) totally unsuitable as investment vehicles for anyone
within seven to ten years of retirement! How many Mutual Fund investors have
retired recently with more liquid financial assets than they had seven years
ago, way back in 1999? There will always be rallies and corrections. In fact,
it is worthwhile to "go back to the future" to establish a realistic
Investment Strategy. In the last forty years, there have been no less than ten
20% or greater corrections followed by rallies that brought the market to
significantly higher levels. The DJIA peaked at 2700 before its record 40%
crash in 1987. But at 1700, it was still 70% above the 1000 barrier that it danced
around with for decades before... always a higher high, rarely a lower low. The
'87 debacle was followed by several slightly less exciting corrections, but the
case was being made for a more flexible, and realistic, Investment Strategy.
Mutual Funds were spawned by a Buy and Hold Mentality; Mother Nature, Inc is a
much more complicated enterprise.
Call it foresight, or hindsight if you
want to be argumentative, but a long-term view of the Investment Process
eliminates the guesswork and points pretty clearly toward a trading mentality
that keys on the natural volatility of hundreds of Investment Grade Equities.
During corrections, consider these simple truths: 1) although there are more
sellers than buyers, the buyers intend to make money on their purchases, 2) so
long as everything is down, don't worry so much about the price of individual
holdings, 3) fast and steep corrections are better than the slow attrition
variety, 4) always accept even half your normal profit target while buying
opportunities are plentiful, 5) don't be in a rush to fill your portfolio, but
if cash dries up before it's over, you are doing it "correctly".
Most of the problems with Mutual Funds and
much of the increased opportunity in Individual Stock trading are functions of
growing non-professional Equity ownership. Everyone is in the stock market
these days whether they like it or not, and when the media fans the emotions of
the masses, the masses create volatility that rarely under-reacts to market
conditions! Rarely will unit owners take profits, particularly if they have to
pay withdrawal penalties or taxes. Even more unusual are expert advisors who
encourage investors to move into the markets when prices are falling.
A volatile market creates opportunities
with every gyration, but you have to be willing to transact to reap the
benefits. A necessary first step is to recognize that both "up" and
"down" markets are forces of nature with abundant potential. The
proper attitude toward the latter, will make you much more appreciative of the
former. Most investment strategies require answers to unanswerable questions,
in an effort to be in the right place at the right time. Indecisiveness doesn't
cut it with Mamma... in or out too soon is not an issue with her. But wasting
the opportunities she provides really ticks her off! Successful investment
strategies require an understanding of the forces of nature, and disciplined
rules of portfolio management. If you can transition back to individual
securities, you will do better at moving toward your goals, most of the time,
because the opportunities are out there... all of the time.
So let's adopt some new rules for this
investment game and learn to live with them for a few cycles: Let's buy good stocks
new and old at lower prices during corrections. Let's take reasonable profits
on those that go up in price, whenever they are kind enough to do so. Let's
examine our performance based on the results of these trading transactions
alone and at market cycle examination points for a smiley faced change of pace.
And one other thing...
Let's drink a toast to Mother Nature, her
uncertainty, her volatility, and, of course, to our first loves.
Steve
Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.com
http://www.valuestockbuylistprogram.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"