A New Wall Street Line
Dance: Performance
It matters not what lines, numbers, indices, or
gurus you worship, you just can't know where the stock market is going or when
it will change direction. Too much investor time and analytical effort is
wasted trying to predict course corrections… even more is squandered comparing
portfolio Market Values with a handful of unrelated indices and averages. If we
reconcile in our minds that we can’t predict the future (or change the past),
we can move through the uncertainty more productively. Let's simplify portfolio
performance evaluation by using information that we don’t have to speculate
about, and which is related to our own personal investment programs.
Every December, with visions
of sugarplums dancing in their heads, investors begin to scrutinize their
performance, formulate coulda’s and shoulda’s, and determine what to try next
year. It’s an annual, masochistic, rite of passage. My year-end vision is
different. I see a bunch of Wall Street fat cats, ROTF and LOL, while investors
(and their alphabetically correct advisors) determine what to change, sell,
buy, re-allocate, or adjust to make the next twelve months behave better
financially than the last. What happened to that old fashioned emphasis on
long-term progress toward specific goals? The use of Issue Breadth and 52-week
High/Low statistics for navigation; and cyclical analysis (Peak to Peak, etc.)
and economic realities as performance expectation barometers makes a lot more
personal sense. And when did it become vogue to think of Investment Portfolios
as sprinters in a twelve-month race with a nebulous array of indices and
averages? Why are the masters of the universe rolling on the floor in laughter?
They can visualize your annual performance agitation ritual producing fee
generating transactions in all conceivable directions. An unhappy investor is
Wall Street’s best friend, and by emphasizing short-term results and creating a
superbowlesque environment, they guarantee that the vast majority of investors
will be unhappy about something, all of the time.
Your portfolio should be as
unique as you are, and I contend that a portfolio of individual securities
rather than a shopping cart full of one-size-fits-all consumer products is much
easier to understand and to manage. You just need to focus on two longer-range
objectives: (1) growing productive Working Capital, and (2) increasing Base
Income. Neither objective is directly related to the market averages, interest
rate movements, or the calendar year. Thus, they protect investors from
short-term, anxiety causing, events or trends while facilitating objective
based performance analysis that is less frantic, less competitive, and more
constructive than conventional methods. Briefly, Working Capital is the total
cost basis of the securities and cash in the portfolio, and Base Income is the
dividends and interest the portfolio produces. Deposits and withdrawals,
capital gains and losses, each directly impact the Working Capital number, and
indirectly affect Base Income growth. Securities become non-productive when
they fall below Investment Grade Quality (fundamentals only, please) and/or no
longer produce income. Good sense management can minimize these unpleasant
experiences.
Let’s develop an "all you
need to know" chart that will help you manage your way to investment
success (goal achievement) in a low failure rate, unemotional,
environment. The chart will have four data lines, and your portfolio
management objective will be to keep three of them moving upward through time.
Note that a separate record of deposits and withdrawals should be maintained.
If you are paying fees or commissions separately from your transactions,
consider them withdrawals of Working Capital. If you don’t have specific
selection criteria and profit taking guidelines, develop them.
Line One is labeled
“Working Capital”, and an average annual growth rate between 5% and 12% would
be a reasonable target, depending on Asset Allocation. [An average cannot be
determined until after the end of the second year, and a longer period is
recommended to allow for compounding.] This upward only line (Did you raise an
eyebrow?) is increased by dividends, interest, deposits, and “realized” capital
gains and decreased by withdrawals and “realized” capital losses. A new look at
some widely accepted year-end behaviors might be helpful at this point.
Offsetting capital gains with losses on good quality companies becomes suspect
because it always results in a larger deduction from Working Capital than the tax
payment itself. Similarly, avoiding securities that pay dividends is at about
the same level of absurdity as marching into your boss’s office and demanding a
pay cut. There are two basic truths at the bottom of this: (1) You just can’t
make too much money, and (2) there’s no such thing as a bad profit. Don’t pay
anyone who recommends loss taking on high quality securities. Tell them that
you are helping to reduce their tax burden.
Line Two reflects "Base
Income", and it too will always move upward if you are managing your Asset
Allocation properly. The only exception would be a 100% Equity Allocation,
where the emphasis is on a more variable source of Base Income… the dividends
on a constantly changing stock portfolio. Line Three reflects historical
trading results and is labeled “Net Realized Capital Gains”. This total
is most important during the early years of portfolio building and it will
directly reflect both the security selection criteria you use, and the profit
taking rules you employ. If you build a portfolio of Investment Grade
securities, and apply a 5% diversification rule (always use cost basis), you
will rarely have a downturn in this monitor of both your selection criteria and
your profit taking discipline. 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. Three 8% singles will
produce a larger number than one 25% home run, and which is easier to obtain?
Obviously, the growth in Line Three should accelerate in rising markets
(measured by issue breadth numbers). The Base Income just keeps growing because
Asset Allocation is also based on the cost basis of each security class! [Note
that an unrealized gain or loss is as meaningless as the quarter-to-quarter
movement of a market index. This 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, tea
leaves, 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. This brings us to Line Four, a
reflection of the change in "Total Portfolio Market Value" over the
course of time. This line will follow an erratic path, constantly staying below
"Working Capital" (Line One). If you observe the chart after a market
cycle or two, you will see that lines One through Three move steadily upward
regardless of what line Four is doing! BUT, you will also notice that the
"lows" of Line Four begin to occur above earlier highs. It’s a nice
feeling since Market Value movements are not, themselves, controllable.
Line Four will rarely be
above Line One, but when it begins to close the cap, a greater movement upward
in Line Three (Net Realized Capital Gains) should be expected. In 100% income
portfolios, it is possible for Market Value to exceed Working Capital by a
slight margin, but it is more likely that you have allowed some greed into the
portfolio and that profit taking opportunities are being ignored. Don’t ever let
this happen. Studies show rather clearly that the vast majority of unrealized
gains are brought to the Schedule D as realized losses… and this includes
potential profits on income securities. And, when your portfolio hits a new
high watermark, look around for a security that has fallen from grace with the
S & P rating system and bite that bullet.
What’s different about this
approach, and why isn’t it more high tech? There is no mention of an index, an
average, or a comparison with anything at all, and that’s the way it should be.
This method of looking at things will get you where you want to be without the
hype that Wall Street uses to create unproductive transactions, foolish
speculations, and incurable dissatisfaction. It provides a valid use for
portfolio Market Value, but far from the judgmental nature Wall Street would
like. It’s use in this model, as both an expectation clarifier and an action
indicator for the portfolio manager, on a personal level, should illuminate
your light bulb. Most investors will focus on Line Four out of habit, or
because they have been brainwashed by Wall Street into thinking that a lower
Market Value is always bad and a higher one always good. You need to get
outside of the “Market Value vs. Anything” box if you hope to achieve your
goals. Cycles rarely fit the January to December mold, and are only visible in
rear view mirrors anyway… but their impact on your new Line Dance is totally
your tune to name.
The Market Value Line is a
valuable tool. If it rises above working capital, you are missing profit
opportunities. If it falls, start looking for buying opportunities. If Base
Income falls, so has: (1) the quality of your holdings, or (2) you have changed
your asset allocation for some (possibly inappropriate) reason, etc. So
Virginia, it really is OK if your Market Value falls in a weak stock market or
in the face of higher interest rates. The important thing is to understand why
it happened. If it’s a surprise, then you don't really understand what is in
your portfolio. You will also have to find a better way to gauge what is going
on in the market. Neither the CNBC "talking heads" nor the
"popular averages" are the answer. The best method of all is to track
"Market Stats", i.e. Breadth Statistics, New Highs and New Lows. . If
you need a "drug", this is a better one than the ones you've grown up
with.
Change is good!
Steve Selengut
sanserve@aol.com
800-245-0494
http://www.sancoservices.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"