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Income Investing - Why Isn't This Easy?
by
Steve Selengut
Most people (including myself) would insist that Equity Investing is
the most difficult to master. After all, that is the venue for:
erratic price fluctuations caused by an endless supply of social,
economic, and political variables; the standard Wall Street
misinformation, corporate malfeasance, self- serving financial
gurus, and product sales persons; a myriad of popular and market
moving speculations from IPOs to Option and Margin strategies;
thousands of media talk shows and their financial markets' experts.
When you think you understand the stock market brother, you are in
serious trouble.
But more devastating than everything that has been done to turn
Equity Investing into a product shopping mall of some kind, is the
bottom-line/market- value brainwashing that has taken the calm,
secure, and smiley-faced world of Income Investing and turned it
upside down. I get more phone calls and e-mails from confused Income
Investors than I ever receive from a simple plunge in Equity prices.
Admittedly, very few Equity investors get to that special place,
shouting "Eureka!" as they first realize that corrections in the
"Shock" Market are every bit as lovable as rallies. But not
recognizing that slowly rising interest rates is as much a boon for
both fixed and variable Income Investors as it could possibly be a
temporary set back for a struggling economy... well, that's just
another example of irresponsible investor counter-education from our
much too respected enemies in the financial institutions.
Income Investors must learn to hold these truths to be self evident:
(1) More interest on your invested dollars is just plain better for
you than less income on your invested dollars, and the amount you
have allocated to Income Investing should never change because of
market factors. (2) A change in the Market Value of the Fixed Income
Securities you already own has absolutely no bearing on any
assumptions that could possibly be made about the credit worthiness
of the issuers of the securities themselves, most of the time. (3) A
change in the Market Value of your Fixed Income holdings will rarely
have a negative impact on the regular recurring income that you
receive and, after all, you bought these securities for the income
in the first place. (4) Buying fixed income securities in a rising
interest rate environment has a positive, compounding effect on
portfolio yields and, at the same time, plants the seeds for future
capital gains as interest rates recede. (5) Many fixed and variable
income securities can be added to as interest rates rise both to
increase the average yield AND to decrease the average cost of the
securities.
Why is this not easy?
It's not easy because financial professionals and
pseudo-professionals alike won't let it be. If you have a properly
designed Investment Portfolio, you must view each segment separately
and with an understanding of the purpose of each. Avoid advisors who
consider the bottom line market value of such a portfolio as
anything other than an "expectation corroborator" (and your just
going to have to call me if you don't know what that is). Your
portfolio market value should never be a surprise and, more
importantly, it should never be looked at as something to be
particularly concerned about... at least not immediately. For
example, you had to be living in a cave somewhere and smoking
something really special to think that your Interest Rate Sensitive
(or Investment Grade equity) portfolio would be up in market value
from June of 2007 through mid-February of 2008.
You really have to learn to love the simplicity of Income Investing.
Interest rate sensitivity is a given (and, by the way, interest rate
expectations themselves are sensitive to inflation expectations).
Price movements are both predictable and meaningless. We actually
have an investment condition that approaches certainty. This is an
investment nirvana, people! Don't let those guys in the pinstripes
get you confused. Don't panic, don't switch, and don't cry in your
beer. Look at the income number on your statement and go "hmmmm"
when you see no meaningful change in either direction. (Actually, if
you're doing this properly, the year over year Base Income figure
should have increased.)
So the recent bad news (all of it) is really good news for investors
and yes, just as higher interest rates are actually better than
lower ones to a certain extent, so should lower stock prices be
welcomed with more smiles than tears. Only those speculators who
haven't taken their rally profits are unhappy with corrections...
and that is true in both Equity and Income Securities Markets.
Dealing with both events at the same time can make your bottom
(line) a bit uncomfortable, but only until you recognize that
smaller numbers are better for buying and that their larger cousins
are best appreciated with sell orders.
During all types of corrections, some investment professionals will
play to your fears, encouraging you to cut your losses, and to
switch to something else... generally something that is cycling
upwards. You don't have losses UNLESS you fall for this switching
advice. Don't be pushed into such decisions no matter how smart the
arguments seem. All fixed income investments (with the exception of
open end Mutual Funds) are created equally and switching just
doesn't work. An unhappy investor is Wall Street's best friend; so
don't allow interest rate movements in either direction to affect
your investment mood...
Steve Selengut
sanserve@aol.com
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"
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Last modified:
April 05, 2008
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