WCM-Investing
Rules Of Engagement-The QDI
Crash!
The 2007 thru 2008 financial crisis halved 401(k), IRA, and Mutual Fund values
in a matter of months. For many, retirement dates had to be pushed back; for
others, new jobs had to be found. The tragic flaw? No income allocation in the
investment program. Market value builds egos; income pays the bills.
Few
employers cautioned Savings Plan participants that 401(k)s are just not defined
benefit programs. Few mutual fund distributors suggested to benefit departments
that their programs were missing something of critical importance.
Throughout
the meltdown, all investment securities fell in market value. But the vast
majority of income securities, including closed end income funds (CEFs), have
continued to pay interest and dividends. Market value builds over-confidence;
income pays the bills.
The
Working Capital Model (WCM) is a comprehensive system for investment management
that is based on uncompromising rules of engagement. The investor's focus must remain
centered on the development of dependable cash flow and the creation of an
expanding number of houses and hotels on his game board.
With a
reasonable amount of effort, and a lot of self-discipline, anyone can use it to
build a portfolio, slowly and sanely, benefiting from the cycles we all expect
to continue indefinitely. All cycles have two components; the WCM helps you
deal with each.
Every
portfolio holding must generate regular income of some kind and each must have
profit potential--- at least at the time of purchase. The planned balance
between income producers and growth providers (equities) must be maintained
throughout the process, even though there may be no immediate need for the
income. Have you learned that unrealized gains are not growth?
Year to
year, we want to see reasonable growth in both Working Capital (the total cost
basis of the cash and securities in the portfolio) and base income (interest
and dividend income produced by the securities in the portfolio). But more importantly,
we want to produce this growth in a lower-than-usual risk environment, made up
of properly diversified investment grade securities.
The
first steps in the investment process are Management Functions: Planning,
Organizing, Leading, and Controlling
Planning
involves the identification/definition of Investment Goals and Objectives. They
should be long-term but flexible over time. They should include parameters and
rules that are well thought out--- at the personal level. They should be reasonable
and realistic historically.
Goals
and objectives are essential, but they need to be laid-up on a foundation that
reduces the risk of loss at various stages in the life cycle of the investment
program. Asset allocation is a planning/organizing tool used to design the
portfolio in a way that will balance the need for growth in Working Capital
with the age-dependent risk tolerance of the investor.
Asset
allocation decisions should implement and support the Investment Plan. Under
normal circumstances, the securities in the income "bucket" of the
portfolio (bonds, government securities, mortgages, preferred stocks, REITs,
etc.) are all much safer than any of those in the equity "bucket".
An
asset allocation with 50% in each bucket is much more conservative than one
with 80% directed toward equities--- regardless of the quality ratings we
require for the equity securities. Asset allocation decisions must be made
using the cost basis of the securities in each bucket.
Beyond
asset allocation itself, organizing involves selecting actual securities that
fit into the two investment buckets in a properly diversified manner. It may
involve several separate portfolios, but must be easy to direct and control.
Diversification
rules (also based on security cost basis) will guide the portfolio into a
variety of issues and sectors.
Proper
diversification assures that the overall risk of loss is spread around
companies, countries, businesses, and geographical areas. Market capitalization
issues, and global representation are dealt with behind the scenes, in the
quality determination phase of the security selection process.
Leading,
most simply, is personal decision-making. You must direct the activities of
others (brokers/managers/accountants/etc.) who may be offering you investment
advice. The investment manager (you are the primary investment manager) must
create the quality, diversification, and income generation rules (the QDI) that
govern the day-to-day operations of all portfolios.
Why
would anyone accept a portfolio that was not designed for his or her own unique
situation and needs? Laziness, confusion, brainwashing, ignorance of the
markets--- all of the above?
The
Principles of Investing (the QDI) are superimposed in, on, and around the management
functions. They control the security selection process to help reduce portfolio
risk. They help set the targets for profit taking and provide mind-set controls
that enforce the rules. They assure that every security within the portfolio
contributes to base income.
It is
imperative that you lead your portfolio into strict guidelines for security
quality, cost-based diversification, income generation, and profit taking.
Rules for disposing of downgraded or weakening positions must also be codified.
Profit
taking is the most satisfying of all portfolio decision-making functions--- and
possibly the least popular! Most of the reasons are ego centered, until the WCM
shows clearly the opportunities that are available for the newly created
working capital.
Reasonable
targets must be set (between seven and ten percent dependent on the amount of
smart cash available), and triggers pulled insensitively when targets are
reached--- no hindsight at all can be tolerated. A monthly brokerage statement
with unrealized gains is a sign of poor management.
Controlling
involves realistic performance evaluation, and monitoring to assure that you
are following your own rules and guidelines. Comparing your annual change in
market value with the DJIA or S & P is not performance evaluation.
Steve
Selengut
http://www.kiawahgolfinvestmentseminars.com/
http://www.valuestockindex.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"
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WCM-Investing
Rules Of Engagement-The QDI
Crash!
The 2007 thru 2008 financial crisis halved 401(k), IRA, and Mutual Fund values
in a matter of months. For many, retirement dates had to be pushed back; for others,
new jobs had to be found. The tragic flaw? No income allocation in the
investment program. Market value builds egos; income pays the bills.
http://www.sancoservices.com/50CurrentInvestmentArticles.htm
http://www.sancoservices.com/WorkingCapitalModelInvesting-QDI.htm