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The Dow, Your Portfolio, and Aliens
by
Steve Selengut
There are two extremely good reasons why your portfolio may not be
"performing" (whatever that means) either as well as you would like
or as well as your buddies say that they have been doing... since
last May anyway. But let's define our terms before digging any
deeper. Most of the time, investors are content to observe the
steady growth of their portfolio capital, as income and trading
gains add to their asset base, while the ebb and flow of the markets
remains in a relatively boring "trading range". They can see the
steady progress being made toward the goals that they established
for their portfolios. And most investment portfolios do have both a
set of reasonable goals and a plan for moving in their direction.
Performance is a measure of this movement toward our objectives and
it is generally considered a long-term, personal proposition. Income
securities are expected only to produce dependable income, and
equities are expected to produce growth in the form of realized
capital gains. Unfortunately, Wall Street has created its own
definition of performance, one that has nothing to do with the
structure and design of your portfolio.
The second definition concerns the design of an investment
portfolio, as opposed to an investment account containing any number
of unrelated speculations. Investment portfolios (by my definition)
are comprised of both Equity (stock market) investments and Income
Producing investments. Both have their separate purposes within the
portfolio (growth and Income, respectively) and each can react
differently to the same economic, political, and market stimuli. So
don't get all worked up about some short-term divergence between the
experiences of a portfolio based on quality, diversification, and
income vs. one that is fueled by greed, speculation, and
derivatives. (For nearly a year, value investors experienced
upward-only account statements... that after a long-term positive
run that had extended for nearly seven years, with Market Value
growth four to five times greater than the DJIA in the same period.)
Instead, spend some time trying to understand the nature of the
alien speculations that are tempting you to consider a return to the
dark side. The dot.coms have been replaced with Index ETFs, precious
metals, and currency futures.
And then there's the Investment Plan, and it can't safely be: "I'm
going to jump in at the end of every new trend, gimmick, product,
and hot number so that I won't ever miss out on anything." Wait a
minute, that's what wiped out your 401(k) the last time around! No,
of course you don't know that it's the end of the run up. But it's
sure not the beginning and its probably expensive to make the
change. Now here's a plan that has worked for decades: "I'm going to
buy high quality, profitable, dividend-paying companies when they
are down in price, especially in unpopular groups of stocks that
have fallen from grace with the gurus. I'm going to diversify,
though, at the 5% cost basis level and take profits whenever I can.
I'm also going to buy good diversified income producers, add to them
when prices fall and take profits when they rise. All this with a
dash of patience."
When investors start to question why their Municipal Bond portfolios
are trailing the gain in the Dow, or when retirees start to buy gold
bullion instead of groceries, something is wrong. And it's the same
ole stuff that produces the greed and fear that lead to
investment-program-destroying mistakes every time! So lets look at
the performance of the Dow, to gain some perspective. The Dow is
comprised of just 30 stocks, no bonds, no CEFs or ETFs, gold,
currencies, or foreign companies. Those 30 stocks are not quite as
special as you have been led to believe: (1) Only eight are A+
rated, or real Blue Chips, and two of those are down more than 20%
from there 52 week highs, while four others are down 10%. (2) 60% of
the Dow stocks are rated A - or lower, and nearly 10% of those are
not even considered investment grade. (3) While the Dow sits near
its highest level in seven years more than 100 Investment Grade
stocks are down 15% or more from their 52 week highs. So what's
actually up within the Dow?
The DJIA has gained only 2.6% per year since its last Peak, about
seven years ago. (The S & P 500, in case you are curious, has not
done nearly as well, gaining only .3% per year during the same
period.) And during the dot.com bubble, you ask? While both averages
were escalating, there were significantly more stocks going down
than up, and many more striking new 52-week lows than 52-week highs!
Yet you are mesmerized by this mystical illusion of portfolio
analytical capability. This no longer prescient average is still
worshipped as the Numero Uno Blue Chip Indicator, the pre-eminent
gauge or benchmark for assessing the performance of any portfolio...
irrespective of content, purpose, and cash flow, whatever. The Wall
Street brainwashing machine is an amazing thing to behold, with its
alien brain-control powers.
The second obvious force that has impacted Market Value Growth over
the past few months is the credit crunch in the financial markets
and the serious rise in interest rates that preceded it. The Market
Values of rate sensitive securities have suffered accordingly, and
the Wall Street/Media mis-information machine has scared you to
death about the viability of just about everything. But the fancy
restaurants remain full, the roads jammed, and weekend public golf
course walk-ons unattainable. Relax, buy bonds at lower prices, and
don't sell them to lose money. There have been no defaults, and no
dividend cuts. It's a perceptual problem for certain, it is part of
the income investing playing field that you just have to become more
comfortable with.
And then there is the greed food emanating from Wall Street,
designed to make you uncomfortable with what you own and desirous of
the new stuff that's ever so tasty... not to mention over-priced and
more speculative with every up-tick. Index funds propel some stocks
to higher valuations while others wind up begging for attention.
This is the same spiel people, which propelled the no value "sector"
to prominence in the late 90's. Index funds will crash just as every
other fad has in the past. What will survive? Value stocks will
survive. Municipal Securities will survive. REITs and CEFs will
survive. When will it happen? Does it really matter?
May the force be with you!
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Copyright 1995 /2008 Investment Reference
Last modified:
April 05, 2008
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