Tag Archives: stocks

The One Thing You Must Do When The Market Tanks

By Tim Maverick It’s a scenario that repeats itself during every stock market downturn: At the first sign of distress, mom and pop investors head for the hills. And the year 2015 is no exception. During July and August, investors withdrew money from both stock and bond mutual funds. According to Credit Suisse, this is the first time withdrawals have occurred in both categories in consecutive months since 2008. That was, of course, during the last financial crisis. I believe Yogi Berra said it best: “It’s like déjà vu all over again.” Here’s What You Need to Do I’ve been in the investment business since the 1980s and have been through every market selloff since 1987. Even though I’m no longer a professionally licensed advisor, I do have a few thoughts on investor behavior during selloffs. First of all, if you’re in your 20s, 30s, or 40s, don’t worry. The stock market’s long-term track record is undeniable. For those of you in your 50s or 60s, I would’ve, at one point in time, warned about bear markets possibly lasting as long as a decade. But with the Federal Reserve reacting to every market sniffle with lots of money, the dynamics have changed. Look at last week’s turbulence. Already, prominent voices like Bridgewater Associates Founder Ray Dalio have said that further turmoil would encourage more quantitative easing (QE). Thus, for regular investors, the only real danger point – as I’ve described in a previous article – is shortly before and shortly after your retirement . And if you’re in such a time frame, your stock allocation should’ve already been lowered. Thus, the one thing investors should do during this current downturn is take a serious look at their portfolios and make sure everything is allocated properly. Most likely, a rebalancing is in order. Rebalancing Really Works Rebalancing a portfolio between stocks, bonds, and cash is important – and it can actually improve your returns. In 2012, Columbia Business School professor Andrew Ang conducted a study. He looked at returns from January 1926 through December 1940, a period that includes the Great Depression. Here’s what he found: A portfolio of 100% stocks returned 81% with dividends reinvested. A portfolio of 100% government bonds returned 108%. But a portfolio of 60% stocks and 40% bonds, rebalanced quarterly, returned 146%! Now, I don’t think rebalancing quarterly is necessary. And you definitely shouldn’t rebalance in the midst of market volatility. Instead, get your game plan in order now, and put it in place after the dust has settled. That will likely be in a few months. After all, we’re in that nasty seven-year cycle period (1987, 1994, 2001, 2008, 2015) when bad things tend to happen to the stock market. One final point: If you do rebalance in a taxable account, there will be tax consequences. How to Reallocate What do I mean by reallocating or rebalancing your assets? Well, I use the words of legendary investor Sir John Templeton as a guide. He recommended “to buy when others are despondently selling and to sell when others are greedily buying.” This translates to a counter-intuitive action: Sell a portion of your winners and add those funds to lagging categories. But only do so if your percentages are seriously out of whack. Here’s a hypothetical, simplified example: A year ago, in the stock portion of your portfolio, you had 20% in technology and biotechnology stocks, and 20% in energy and emerging market stocks. But now, with tech and biotech red-hot, these stocks represent 30% of your portfolio. Meanwhile, ice-cold energy and emerging markets stocks are down to 10% of your holdings. You should sell where the greed is – where analysts are saying the “trees will grow to the sky” – and buy where investors are fleeing en masse. In other words, bring them back into balance at 20% each. This strategy will still keep you exposed to the current winning sectors while also boosting your exposure to tomorrow’s winners. Take a look at this data from Franklin Templeton on emerging markets. It shows that the bull phases are longer and stronger than the bear phases in these markets: Thus, you want to be positioned to take advantage of such situations. You also don’t want to be highly exposed to a hot sector if it crashes, a la tech stocks in 2000-01. John Wooden on Investing To summarize, I’d like to quote legendary basketball coach John Wooden: “If you’re too engrossed and involved and concerned in regard to things over which you have no control, it will adversely affect the things over which you have control.” That’s a great philosophy for life – and it applies to investing, as well. Don’t worry about the stock market. You can’t control it. On the other hand, you can control how you put your money to work for you. Original Post

Investing In The Investors

Summary This far into a bull market, U.S. investors traditionally have to make do with paltry yields in the 1-2% range. Unless they’re looking at a REIT or the commodities & energy sector, where an enormous question mark hangs over the medium-term outlook for oil and metals. However, there is another sector that is offering some eye-popping yields: the private equity industry. By Steven Carroll The private equity industry, where stalwarts such as The Blackstone Group LP (NYSE: BX ) offer an F12M dividend yield of 8.6% and KKR & Co. LP (NYSE: KKR ) an equally appealing 8.8%. So what’s going on? Source: Thomson Reuters Eikon The story unfolds Clearly the market’s growth expectations look undemanding (KKR -7.9% 5-year EPS CAGR, BX -8.3%), yet the StarMine Smart Estimate is forecast to rise gradually over the next three years in both cases. Why the disconnect? One suggestion is that markets see a large rise in volatility and assume exits from previous investments will be delayed. Another is that funding terms may be less favorable to the companies and/or that achieved prices on exit will be lower as investor appetites wane in line with falling stock market values. Certainly, it seems unlikely there’ll be a large amount of activity this quarter, but the share price is implying years of such volatility, or that the high of the cycle has come and gone (certainly possible, but a somewhat pessimistic base case). Source: Thomson Reuters Eikon Blackstone’s chapter When Blackstone first listed, there were many commentators that called the top of the market, and sure enough the $35 share price plummeted in line with the rest of the market, bottoming in mid-2008 at a stomach-churning $5. Since then, the share price has reached new highs, with the company’s all-time (and 52-week) high being $44.43. The stock has since fallen back just over 25% in the last 3 months, so it’s fair to say this isn’t a low beta stock. Quant indicators certainly appear in your favour – with a smorgasbord of high scores from StarMine’s various factor models. Source: Thomson Reuters Eikon Testing the wind The “alts,” or alternative asset managers, are often viewed as a levered play on capital markets. BX, KKR and their peers require stable markets in order to fund their acquisitions and ultimately be able to unload them back into the marketplace. The performance of BX seems to validate that, with eye popping outperformance (210% over five years) and, as mentioned, massive declines during the crisis period. So really this is a binary choice – for those who believe the markets are going through a normal period of bull market angst (three months ago it was Greece, today, China) this seems like an interesting stock with a huge carry. For those who believe this is the start of the great unwind, with the Chinese economy creating an inverted version of the super cycle – obviously BX and KKR still could have a lot of air to be removed from the tires. If you think commodities, oil and emerging markets are all going to plummet (from here) in the face of falling growth expectations in the world’s second largest economy – the sidelines might be a safe place. For the bull – with an 8.6% yield and a deeply pessimistic valuation – even just a stablilization of markets at current levels would probably be enough to earn some reasonable capital gains. The perma bears will no doubt have an alternative view but it seems an interesting opportunity. For the nervous retail investor – perhaps just sit on that fence for a while and add BX and KKR to the watch list. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.