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Calculating Your Investment IQ
by
Steve Selengut
Stocks, bonds, index funds; averages, recessions, market rallies and
corrections; mutual funds, technical analysis, financial statements;
commissions, taxes, and discount brokers. Just how much do you know
about investing, or perhaps a better question: is there any "know" in
the investment vocabulary? So many terms, ideas, and strategies; so
little time and money! Here's a list of thirty mostly-true or
mostly-false comments for you to kick around with your friends and
fellow investment bloggers:
1. Every Properly Diversified Portfolio will have up to 5% of its market
value in each of these areas: miscellaneous speculative opportunities,
gold or other commodities, small cap stocks, and global index funds.
2. Financial Professionals are well trained in all aspects of investing,
investment portfolio design, and management. Consequently, a significant
portion of their compensation is tied directly to how well they help
their clients develop high quality, properly diversified, and goal
directed portfolios.
3. Buy-and-Hold continues to be the proper investment strategy for most
individual investors, especially if automatic reinvestment of income is
part of the package.
4. It's a better Investment-Income Strategy to buy shorter duration
corporate and municipal bonds (rather than higher yielding long-term
debt) because the market value doesn't fluctuate as much with
anticipated changes in the direction of interest rates, and that is the
most important concern with income investing.
5. If an investor can learn to control his own Greed and Fear, he will
have a much better chance of investing successfully.
6. Asset Allocation is a strategy used by investors to move assets from
weak market sectors to strong ones in order to improve the growth of the
Investment Portfolio's bottom line.
7. No Load Mutual Funds are particularly good for investors because the
mutual fund company does not charge anything for its services.
8. In the long run, investing in the stock market will assure you of
keeping up with Inflation.
9. The proper gauge of your total Investment Portfolio Performance is
the change in market value over the course of a calendar year, compared
with the change in one of the more respected stock market averages
during the same period of time.
10. Quality, Diversification, and Income are considered by many
investors to be the three basic principles of investing.
11. Mutual Funds have always been a safer route to long-term investment
success than trying to create your own portfolio of individual
securities.
12. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is comprised solely of investment
grade companies, and generally gives a clear indication of what is going
on in the stock market.
13. Smart Cash is an integral part of any asset allocation formula
because it allows investors to time the market successfully.
Professional market timers know precisely when to move into or out of
cash in anticipation of the next major directional change in the market.
14. It is a well-known fact that there are certain Core Portfolio
Securities that belong in all investment portfolios if long-term success
is to be expected.
15. There is no such thing as a freebie on Wall Street.
16. Closed End Mutual Funds (CEFs) are not popular with Wall Street
professionals because they are inherently more risky than normal mutual
funds.
17. Packaged Investment Products are designed with a sincere concern for
the financial well being of the average investor, and are good for
everyone.
18. Zero Coupon Bonds are an important part of the fixed income portion
of the investment portfolio, especially when retirement is contemplated
within five years or so.
19. The second step in every stock purchase should be the establishment
of a Stop Loss Order. Such an order assures you that your losses will be
limited to a specific percentage of your purchase price.
20. The IGVSI tracks the market value of a small but elite group of New
York Stock Exchange equities.
21. The Four Most Important Investment Ideas include: buying only high
quality securities, diversifying properly, using discount brokers
exclusively, and establishing reasonable profit-taking targets.
22. Profit Takers and Traders hurt the average investor.
23. Investment Grade Value Stocks will be the next red-hot market
sector.
24. "Sell your losers and let you profits run" is the essence of sound
Investment Management thinking.
25. The November Syndrome is the partial result of the interaction of
Wall Street institutional window dressing and the Infernal Revenue Code.
26. It is important that you take your Tax Losses regularly,
particularly if you have held the losing position for less than one
year.
27. Annuities, particularly Variable Annuities, are perfect investments
at retirement both for people of limited resources and for the wealthy.
28. Technical Analysts can predict the future movements of the economy,
individual securities, and the stock market with a very high degree of
accuracy.
29. Index funds will always beat the market, or market sector, that they
are designed to track.
30. The keys to successful investing are Asset Allocation using only two
investment buckets: Equity and Income, and the development of realistic
expectations about their market value performance.
Investing is as fascinating as it is frantic, as scary as it is
exciting, and as intimidating as it is satisfying. But perhaps the most
interesting thing about it is how educationally unprepared most
individual investors are for the adventure! Books have been written,
graduate degrees awarded, and doctoral dissertations presented in most
of the topical areas touched upon so glibly above. Most of you will give
your seal of approval to too many of the statements. Contact the author
to determine your IIQ.
Steve Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.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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Last modified:
April 05, 2008
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