Tag Archives: seeking-alpha

When Picking Stocks, It’s Good To Be Lucky.

Summary There are very few human endeavors that do not involve any element of luck. Investing is no exception luck plays a role. When judging the luck vs. skill ratio in a game an interesting test is to try to lose. The harder it is to intentionally lose, the less skill the game requires. The same test can be applied to investing. I suggest we give it a try. Have you ever played a game with a young child and tried to lose, only to find yourself having to cheat to allow the toddler to win? That’s because most games for very young children have a very low skill component. A few years later perhaps you’re teaching the child to play checkers or chess. Now it is very easy to lose intentionally. The more skill a game requires the easier it is to lose intentionally. (Being competitive I find it very difficult to lose intentionally to anyone over six – a sad but true commentary on my personality.) This can also be applied to stock picking. If stock picking is mostly based on skill, it should be easy to pick stocks that trail the market. I propose we put the theory to the test by having a contest to see who can pick a portfolio that will trail the market over the next year. Let’s start February 1st, to give everyone a chance to select their stocks and to give me a chance to find a place to post and share the portfolios. Before I give the rules of the contest I want to discuss skill and luck a little. First, let’s look at the definition of skill from Merriam-Webster: Skill: The ability to use one’s knowledge effectively and readily in the execution of performance. Skill is not based only on the outcome. The outcome can be the result of luck. I have known investors who have made a lot of money by making large bets on a small number of stocks and letting those bets ride. Was it skill? It’s hard to know. I do know that if enough investors participate in the market in that manner some of them will get rich even if no skill is involved. If we have a coin flipping contest and define flipping heads as winning: If you flip a coin 10 times the chances that you end up with 60% heads or greater are approximately: 38%. If you flip a coin 20 times the chances that you get 60% heads or greater is about 25%. If you flip the coin 100 times the chances of getting 60% heads or greater is approximately 3%. If at least part of investment returns are based on luck, an investor who does not make a lot of bets has a better chance of out performing the market by a large amount. An investor can limit his bets by only selecting a limited number of stocks. An investor can also limit his number of bets by investing only in a single industry, sector, market cap etc. Of course, making fewer bets also means you have a better chance of under performing the market by a large amount. Which is why my portfolio is diversified; it is not that important to me to have outsized gains, but it’s very important to me to avoid outsized losses. I will also note that the reason the market involves so much luck is actually because most of the participants are highly skilled. If you sit down at a poker table with a bunch of rubes your skill at poker will almost guarantee you win. If everyone at the table has the same skill level, skill evens out and luck becomes a much larger factor. Now back to our contest.. Each contestant should select a portfolio of twenty stocks from the S&P 500. The stock must be diversified with two stocks from each sector: Consumer Discretionary Consumer Staples Energy Financials Health Care Industrials Information Technology Materials Telecommunications Services Utilities Each stock gets equal weighting and the entire portfolio is invested in these equities – no bonds no cash. The portfolio is created in La-La land where there are no expenses and no taxes. The goal is to select a portfolio that will trail the S&P 500 in total return over the next year. Send me a message with your selections. I will post the selections somewhere where we can monitor our progress. I will post the location on an insta-blog. The contest will start Feb. 1 2015 and end Feb. 1 2016. Is this a perfectly formulated study? No, far from it. Even I, who am not a researcher can point out a lot of flaws, but I think it will be interesting and challenging, and in spite of its flaws, we may learn something. Conclusion It is difficult to tell luck from skill when judging investment returns. Portfolios that lack diversification have a better chance of either greatly outperforming or greatly underperforming the market. If we account for this, by forcing the selection of a diversified portfolio, a skilled stock picker should still be able to create a portfolio that will under perform the market. Let’s give it a try and see how we do.

Where Is The Market Going? Separating The Signal From The Noise

No one “knows” where the market will close tomorrow, let alone this year. That doesn’t stop gurus, seers, and writers from telling us which indicators will give us that inside edge. Read enough of them — or even two — and you realize you’re right back where you started. Instead, just concentrate on these important questions for your portfolio strategy. Journalists have to write x number of stories every week to fulfill their contracts. That doesn’t mean you have to read them and, if you still find amusement in so doing, it doesn’t mean you have to act on their advice. Thank heavens. Case in point. At 6:56 p.m. EST on January 6th, Mark Hulbert posted this piece on Marketwatch.com: “Opinion: A bear market in stocks just became more likely .” The gist of the article was summed up neatly in his first two sentences: “Bad news, investors: The Dow Industrials’ 300-plus-point drop Monday markedly increases the likelihood that the bull market has neared its end – if it hasn’t already. That’s because the stock market’s performance in the first two trading days of January has a surprisingly good record of forecasting the direction for the next 12 months.” Mr. Hulbert goes on to describe his pleasure at discovering this new tool, which is even better, he believes, than using the first five days of January as a tool to decide whether to consider investing for the year, and to note that the 1.8% decline in the first two trading days of 2015 were “even bigger than the 1.6% decline the Dow posted over the first two days of 2008, a fateful year that would later experience the worst bear market since the 1930s.” Give’s one pause, doesn’t it? Ah, but hot on the trail of this article comes one the very next day from Reuters titled, ” Here’s What Happened Those Other Times The S&P 500 Started the Year With 3 Down Days. ” The distinction is important, you see – this “indicator” uses the first three days of the new year, not merely the first two. Reuters’ Myles Udland reports on an e-mail sent by Jonathan Krinsky of MKM Partners that says, “During the eight years since 1928 that the S&P started with three-day losing streaks the index has returned 8.36% on average,” better than all years for the S&P since 1928. Well, there you have it. Since Mr. Hulbert’s data goes back to 1896 and Mr. Krinsky’s only until 1928, we are forced to draw one of two conclusions: There were a preponderance of less-than-pleasant market years prior to 1928 that began with 2 down days the first two trading days of the year, or It just doesn’t matter. I am firmly in the latter camp, call it the “Who Cares?” camp. What actionable offensive might an investor take armed with this information? I suppose if one were schizophrenic enough, they could have gone to cash after the second day and rushed back in the fourth day (after the “first 3 days” had passed.) But, really now, who makes their lifetime investing decisions like this? (I know, I know; more than I’d care to imagine.) Forget the First 2 Days / First 3 Days / First 5 Days Indicators and ask yourself this: Does the macro-economic and geopolitical environment favor the geographic and political regions in which you are investing? Are the sectors you favor undervalued or, if you anticipate superb results based on the first question, are they at least currently fairly valued? Do you currently have the appropriate mix of asset classes and individual funds, bonds and stocks to benefit from (or defend against) the market the first two questions lead you to invest in? Then, as the famous investment guru Aaron Rodgers recently said, “R-E-L-A-X.” Invest rationally. Read fewer articles written breathlessly about tea leaves, bones in a circle, or statistical correlation. There may be more kittens born in January than other months, too. Does that mean we should faithfully track the number of kittens born this month? Of course not; correlation does not mean causation. Sometimes it doesn’t mean anything at all… ________ As Registered Investment Advisors, we believe it is our responsibility to advise that we do not know your personal financial situation, so the information contained in this communiqué represents the opinions of the staff of Stanford Wealth Management, and should not be construed as personalized investment advice. Past performance is no guarantee of future results, rather an obvious statement but clearly too often unheeded judging by the number of investors who buy the current #1 mutual fund one year only to watch it plummet the following year. We encourage you to do your own due diligence on issues we discuss to see if they might be of value in your own investing. We take our responsibility to offer intelligent commentary seriously, but it should not be assumed that investing in any securities we are investing in will always be profitable. We do our best to get it right, and we “eat our own cooking,” but we could be wrong, hence our full disclosure as to whether we own or are buying the investments we write about.

Update: Paladin Energy Denies Accusation Of Environmental Damage In Malawi

Kayelekera mine targeted again by environmental activists. A storm has caused minor damage to the water management system, and small amounts of storm water have been released from the mine site. Our view of the company remains unchanged. Paladin Energy ( OTCPK:PALAF ) has issued two press releases regarding its Kayelekera mine in Malawi, which the company has put on care and maintenance as discussed in our most recent article on the Australian-listed uranium producer. The first press release comes in response to accusations and media reports regarding the alleged illegal discharge of contaminated sludge from the tailings dam into the water system. Paladin Energy strongly denies these allegations, and reasserts its intentions to begin discharge of purified surplus water in the upcoming wet season in early 2015. The company maintains that the water quality of this released surplus water will ” meet Malawi and internationally recognised discharge standards, including the World Health Organisation (WHO) drinking water guideline for uranium content. ” The second press release reports on minor storm damage at the Kayelekera mine caused by a severe downpour on January 5, 2015. The liner in one of the run-off tanks was ruptured due to the surge of rain water ” releasing up to 500m 3 of material to the bunded areas of the site .” The company reports approximately 50 liters of run-off water have over-topped the bunds. Protection and remediation action has been taken and a sampling programme to analyze water from within the local stream system has been initiated. The Kayelekera mine remains on care and maintenance and therefore does not provide much benefits for the host country at present. NGOs and individual activists have targeted this operation in the past, and the combination of the mentioned media reports with the storm damage does not exactly improve the company’s standing in the country. The described events do not change our view of Paladin Resources, but developments in Malawi need to be watched since this mine will provide important leverage once uranium prices pick up again. Editor’s Note: This article covers one or more stocks trading at less than $1 per share and/or with less than a $100 million market cap. Please be aware of the risks associated with these stocks. Now that you’ve read this, are you Bullish or Bearish on ? Bullish Bearish Sentiment on ( ) Thanks for sharing your thoughts. Why are you ? Submit & View Results Skip to results » Share this article with a colleague