The
Case for Value Stock Investing...What If?
Wall
Street Institutions pay billions of dollars annually to convince the investing
public that their Economists, Investment Managers, and Analysts can predict future
price movements in specific company shares and trends in the overall Stock
Market. Such predictions (often presented as “Wethinkisms” or Model Asset
Allocation adjustments) make self-deprecating investors everywhere scurry about
transacting with each new revelation. “Thou must heed the oracle of Wall
Street”… not to be confused with the one from Omaha, who really does know
something about investing. “These guys know this stuff so much better than we
do” is the rationale of the fools in the street, and on the hill (sic).
What if
its true, and these pinstriped super humans can actually predict the future,
why do you transact the way you do in response? Why would financial professionals of every shape and size holler
“sell” when prices move lower, and vice versa? Would this pitch work at the
mall? Of course not. Now lets bring this phenomenon into focus. Hmmm, not one
of these Institutional Gurus ever doubts the basic truth that both the Market
Indices and individual issue prices will continue to move up and down, forever.
So, if we were to slowly construct a diversified portfolio of value stocks (My
short definition: profitable, dividend paying, NYSE companies.) as they fall in
price, we would be able to take profits during the following upward cycle… also
forever. Hmmm.
Let's
pretend for a (foolish) moment that broad market movements are somewhat
predictable. Regardless of the direction, professional advice will always fuel
the perceived operative emotion: greed or fear! Wall Street's retail representatives
(stock brokers), and the new, internet expert, self-directors, rarely go
against the grain of the consensus opinion…particularly the one projected to
them by their immediate superior/spouse. You cannot obtain independent thinking
from a Wall Street salesperson; it just doesn't fill up the Beemer. Sorry, but
you have to be able to think for yourself to stay in balance while pedaling on
the Market Cycle. Here's some global advice that you will not hear on the
street of dreams (and don't get all huffy until you understand what to buy or
to sell as well as when to do so): Sell into rallies. Buy on bad news. Buy
slowly; sell quickly. Always sell too soon. Always buy too soon, incrementally.
Always have a plan. A plan without buying guidelines and selling targets is not
a plan.
Predicting
the performance of individual issues is a totally different ball game that
requires an even more powerful crystal ball and a whole array of semi-legal and
completely illegal relationships that are mostly self serving and useless to
average investors. But, again, let's pretend that a mega million-dollar salary
and industry recognition as a superstar creates Master-of-the-Universe-quality
prediction capabilities…I'm sorry. I just can't even pretend that it’s true!
The evidence against it is just too great, and the dangers of relying on
analytical opinions too real. No one can predict individual issue price
movements legally, consistently, or in a timely manner. Face up to this: the
risk of loss is real; it can be minimized but not eliminated.
Investing
in individual issues has to be done differently, with rules, guidelines, and
judgment. It has to be done unemotionally and rationally, monitored regularly,
and analyzed with performance evaluation tools that are portfolio specific and
without calendar time restrictions. This is not nearly as difficult as it
sounds, and if you are a “shopper” looking for bargains elsewhere in your life,
you should have no trouble understanding how it works. Not a rocket scientist?
Good, and if you are at all familiar with the retailing business, even better.
You don’t need any special education evidentiary acronyms or software programs
for stock market success… just common sense and emotion control.
Wall
Street sells products, and spins reality in whatever manner they feel will
produce the best results for those products. The direction of the market
doesn’t matter to them and it wouldn't to you either if you had a properly
constructed portfolio. If you learn how to deal unemotionally with Wall Street
events, and shun the herd mentality, you will find yourself in the proper
cyclical mode much more often: buying at lower prices and, as a result, taking
profits instead of losses. Just what if…
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"