Tag: Stocks

  • 12 Stocks for 10 Years – July 2009 Update

    I originally setup the 10 stocks for 10 years portfolio in April of 2005. In order to track performance created a marketocracy portfolio but had to make some minor adjustments (and marketocracy doesn’t allow Tesco to be purchased, though it is easily available as an ADR to anyone in the USA to buy in real life – it is based in England). The current marketocracy calculated annualized rate or return (which excludes Tesco) is 3.5% (the S&P 500 annualized return for the period is -1.7%) – marketocracy subtracts the equivalent of 2% of assets annually to simulate management fees – as though the portfolio were a mutual fund – so without that the return is about 5.5%).

    The current stocks, in order of return:

    Stock Current Return % of sleep well portfolio now % of the portfolio if I were buying today
    Amazon – AMZN 136% 9% 9%
    Google – GOOG 105% 15% 13%
    Templeton Dragon Fund – TDF 80% 11% 11%
    PetroChina – PTR 78% 11% 10%
    Templeton Emerging Market Fund – EMF 28% 5% 6%
    Cisco – CSCO 15% 6% 8%
    Toyota – TM 7% 9% 11%
    Danaher – DHR -14% 6% 9%
    Tesco – TSCDY -14%* 0%* 10%
    Intel – INTC -15% 4% 6%
    Pfizer – PFE -38% 5% 7%
    Dell -60% 4% 0%

    The portfolio is beating the S&P 500 by 5.2% annually (which is actually quite good. Also it is a bit confused due to to Tesco not being included. View the current marketocracy Sleep Well portfolio page.

    Related: 12 Stocks for 10 Years Update – June 2008posts on stocksinvesting books
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  • GM and Citigroup Replaced by Cisco and Travelers in the Dow

    Starting next Monday GM and Citigroup will no longer be in the list of 30 companies making up the Dow Jones Industrial Average. I posted in 2005 that GM should be dropped from the DJIA. GE has lasted in the Dow for more than 100 years. 12 of the 30 stocks have been added since 1997. Cisco and Travelers are the companies that are joining the Dow on June 8th.

    The 30 stocks of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, as of June 8th, 2009:

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    Stock Market Capitalization Year Added
    Exxon (XOM)             $347 Billion     1928
    Walmart (WMT) 195     1997
    Microsoft 189     1999
    Proctor & Gamble (PG) 155     1932
    Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) 153     1997
    GE 147     1896
    AT&T (T) 145     1999
    IBM 143     1979
    JPMorgan Chase (JPM) 141     1991
    Chevron (CVX) 138     2008
    Coca-Cola (KO) 113     1987
    Cisco (CSCO) 112     2009
    Pfizer (PFE) 100     2004
    Intel (INTC)   91     1999
  • Bogle on the Retirement Crisis

    John Bogle was the founder of Vanguard Group and a well respected investment mind. He has written several good books including: The Little Book of Common Sense Investing, Common Sense on Mutual Funds and Bogle on Mutual Funds. This interview from 2006 discusses the state of the retirement system, before the credit crisis.

    John Bogle: The whole retirement system, in fact, in the country is in, I think, very poor shape, and it’s going to be the next big financial crisis in the country, I honestly believe. … The private pension plans are underfunded by an estimated $400 billion, and the state and local government plans are underfunded by an estimated $800 billion. That’s a $1.2 trillion shortfall between the assets the plans have and the liabilities they will have to the pensioners as they pay out their retirement checks over the rest of their lifetimes.

    Frontline: How do they get away with that? Don’t they have to fund them?

    John Bogle: No, they don’t, because a lot of it is based on assumptions. Our corporations are now assuming that future returns in their pension plan will be about 8.5 percent per year, and that’s not going to happen. The future returns in the bond market will be about 4.5 percent, and maybe if we’re lucky 7.5 percent on stocks. Call it a 6 percent return — before you deduct the cost of investing all that money, the turnover cost, the management fees. So maybe a 5 percent return is going to be possible, in my judgment, and they are estimating 8.5 percent.

    Why? Because when they do it that way, corporation earnings become greatly overstated, and all the executives get nice, big bonuses. They are using pension plan assumptions as a way to manage corporate earnings and meet the expectations of Wall Street.

    Frontline: So if a company overstates the value of its pension plan assets, it makes the company look better to Wall Street, so there’s an incentive to kind of exaggerate, if not cheat.

    John Bogle: That is precisely correct. And let me clear on the cheating: It’s legal cheating; it’s not illegal cheating. In other words, you can change any reasonable set of numbers — and corporations have done this, have raised the pension assumption from 7 percent to 8.5 percent — and all of a sudden that corporation will report an earnings gain for the year rather than an earnings loss that they would otherwise have. Simple, legal.

    The entire PBS series (from 2006) on 401(k)s (including interviews with Elizabeth Warren, David Wray and Alicia Munnell) is worth reading.

    In February of 2009 he spoke to the House of Representatives committee exploring retirement security.
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  • Indian Stock Market up 17% Today

    The Indian stock market surged 17% today on the election results that gave the Congress party an unexpectedly decisive victory. The market was closed early due to the huge spike in prices. The Indian stock market was up 26% this year, before the move today.

    Landslide in India Vote Reshapes Landscape

    Students of Indian politics pointed to several factors. First, under Mrs. Gandhi’s leadership, the Congress-led coalition homed in on the rural poor. During its first term, buoyed by robust economic growth, it used record government revenues to increase social spending, not just raising health and education budgets, but also starting an ambitious public works program in the countryside and a costly loan repayment waiver for farmers.

    Even with a free hand, the Congress-led government will face formidable challenges. India needs to swiftly build roads, highways and power plants; improve public schools and build universities for a swelling young population; and hire nurses and doctors for its feeble public health system. Most of all, it needs to address its abiding poverty. Despite over a decade of high economic growth in India, 300 million people remain below the poverty line.

    Driving India’s Economic Reforms

    The problem is that revenue growth is now collapsing in the wake of the economic slowdown, while well-entrenched government spending is increasing. India’s fiscal deficit has ballooned to more than 10% of GDP this year and the debt-to-GDP ratio is at 80% — the highest for any major developing country.

    India has great potential and great problems. India has poor physical infrastructure and crippling bureaucracy; India ranked the 122nd easiest country for doing business. The election results are giving investors hope the government will be able to make progress to improve the business climate, which will improve economic performance.

    Related: Emerging-market MultinationalsWhy Investing is Safer Overseas (Jun 2007)World’s Wealthiest PeopleTop 12 Manufacturing Countries in 2007

  • Beware of the Sucker’s Rally

    Beware of the sucker’s rally

    The Bull Market Express may really be pulling out of the station, but Wall Street’s trains have a nasty tendency to derail just as passengers jostle for seats. Most recently, the S&P 500 soared 24 per cent over seven weeks ending in early January, only to plunge to a new low. It was a fairly typical sucker’s rally and bear markets often need more than one to create sufficient disillusionment for a definitive bottom.

    The 2000–2002 bear market had three, with average gains of 21 per cent in the Dow Jones Industrials over 45 days.

    The granddaddy of all bear markets, 1929 –1932, had six false alarms with an average gain of 47 per cent. And Japan’s ongoing bear saw the Nikkei rise by at least a third four times in its first four years with 10 more false dawns since then.

    Bear markets typically end with a whimper rather than a bang, casting doubt on the latest recovery according to Hussman Econometrics, which analysed numerous US market bottoms and bear market rallies. With the exception of the 1987 crash, the month before the lowest point of a downturn saw a gradual descent.

    I don’t put much money on the line trying to time the stock market. I thought the decline was overdone and I have found some things to buy. I am not convinced the current assent of the USA market especially means the bear market is over. If I had to sell stocks, I would be much happier to do it now than 3 months ago. That said, I am not selling anything or reducing my planned buying (401k buying).

    Related: Financial Markets Continue Panicky Behavior (Oct 2008)Trying to Beat the MarketAdd to Your 401(k) and IRAsee my investing portfolio results

  • Jubak Looks at 5 Technology Stocks

    Jim Jubak’s articles not only provide specific stock picks but also offer a good view on how to analyze stocks. Reading his columns is something I would recommend for anyone interested in investing in individual stocks (in addition to reading excellent books on investing). His latest column is 5 tech stocks full of promise

    After that research, you could spend some time thinking about how Cisco fits into the post-recession, slow-growth paradigm that I laid out in my previous column. You’d likely conclude that Cisco would actually gain an edge from that kind of economy, because many of its products — from Internet protocol telephony to Web conferencing to its recent entry into the market for blade servers for data centers — offer customers a way to cut costs while retaining or improving functionality. That’s a solid value proposition in an economy where lots of customers will be looking for value.

    Then you’d probably spend some time looking at the price trends in the market. If you did, you’d notice that technology stocks were showing relative strength by hanging above their January highs (in contrast to sectors that are fighting to get back to January highs). You’d also see from your study of the charts that Cisco shares were near resistance levels set by their 200-day moving average and their April high of about $18.50.

    None of that tells you whether the stock is reasonably priced. To figure that out, you might look at the average P/E ratio of the past five years. Because the average was 21.6, you could conclude that Cisco, at 14.1, was undervalued, since the price in the future will climb until Cisco trades again at something like 21.6 times earnings. Or you could conclude that the lower P/E ratio was a logical reaction by investors to the company’s falling earnings. Wall Street analysts now think Cisco’s earnings will fall 23.2% in fiscal 2009 and 6.3% in fiscal 2010.

    Setting a target price isn’t a science. Where your target winds up is a result of the assumptions you make going in. I like to check the range of price targets for a stock and compare that with its current price. For Cisco, the range for a 12-month target price now seems to fall between $16 and $31 a share. At a recent $18.50 or so, Cisco has been trading above the most pessimistic target, but not by a great deal. Depending on your read for the market as a whole, that means Cisco is toward the cheap end of reasonable but not a compelling buy if you think, as I do, that this rally will yield to a correction in the next month or six weeks.

    Related: 12 Stocks for 10 Years (March 2009 Update)10 Stocks for Income InvestorsDollar Cost AveragingDoes a Declining Stock Market Worry You?

  • Tax Considerations with Mutual Fund Investments

    One problem with investing in mutual funds is potential tax bills. If the fund has invested well and say bought Google at $150 and then Google was at $700 (a few years ago) there is the potential tax liability of the $550 gain per share. So if funds have been successful (which is one reason you may want to invest in them) they often have had a large potential tax liability.

    With an open end mutual fund the price is calculated each day based on the net asset value, which is fair but really the true value if there is a large potential tax liability is less than if there was none. So in reality you had to believe the management would outperform enough to make up for the extra taxes that would be owed.

    Well, the drastic stock market decline over the last few years has turned this upside down and many mutual funds actual have tax losses that they have realized (which can be used to offset future capital gains). Say the fund had realized capital losses of $30,000,000 last year. Then if they have capital gains of $20,000,000 next year they can use the losses from last year and will not report any taxable capital gains. And the next year the first $10,000,000 in capital gains would be not table either. Business Week, had an article on this recently – Big Losers Can Be Big Tax Shelters

    Take Dodge & Cox International. It has a -80% capital-gains exposure, meaning it has a capital loss that covers 80% of assets. So it could have several years of tax-free gains.

    Yet it is Miller’s newer charge, Legg Mason Opportunity, which holds stocks of all sizes and can take short positions, that will prove to be the real tax haven. Morningstar pegs its losses at 285% of its $1.2 billion in assets.

    There are other funds with returns so ugly and losses so large that it may not matter what their trading style is for many years: Fidelity Select Electronics (FSELX), -539%; MFS Core Equity A, -369%; Janus Worldwide (JAWWX), -304%; Vanguard U.S. Growth (VWUSX), -227%.

    How does a fund have over 100% tax losses? The way I can think of is if they have a great deal of redemptions. If the fund shrinks in size from a $3 billion fund to a $300 million fund they could have a 50% realized capital loss (down to $750 million) but then another $450 million in redemptions). Now the $300 million has a $750 million capital loss or 250%.

    Related: Shorting Using Inverse FundsLazy Portfolio ResultsDoes a Declining Stock Market Worry You?Asset Allocations Make A Big Difference

  • Add to Your 401(k) and IRA

    The recent performance of investments can be discouraging. However, the most damaging reaction to your financial future is to reduce your contributions to retirement savings. IRAs and 401(k)s are great ways to save for retirement. In fact the recent performance has convinced me to increase my contributions. This is for two reasons.

    First, I had been somewhat optimistic in my guesses about investment returns. The current decline means that investments in the S&P 500 have returned about 0% over the last 10 years. That is a horrible performance and it will take many years to even bring that up to a bad performance. So if you reduce your long term investment performance expectations you need to add more while you are working (or reduce your retirement expectations – or work longer).

    Second, I think now is a very good time (long term) to be investing. I think the declines in the markets (both the stock market and real estate market) now provide good investment opportunities. Of course I could be wrong but I am willing to make investments based on this believe. And I believe there are plenty of place real estate prices may still be too high, but I believe there are also good buys.

    A third reason worth considering is the damage done to the economy over the last 10 years and the costs of dealing with that today. Those costs are going to have long term impacts. Likely the economy will be stressed paying for the over-indulgences of the past for quite a long time. That means the risks to those in that economy will increase. And therefore having larger reserves is a wise course of action to survive the rough times ahead. Those rough times include a substantial risk of inflation. Investing to protect against that risk is important.

    I would recommend starting with at least a 200 basis point increase in retirement contributions. For example, if you were saving 10% for retirement, increase that to 12%. If you have not added to your IRA for 2008, do so now (you have until April 15th to do so). In fact, if you haven’t added to your IRA for 2009, do so now.

    Related: How Much Will I Need to Save for Retirement?Nearly half of all workers have less than $25,000 in retirement savingsInvesting – What I am Doing Now

  • China A-Share Premium

    World-Beating China Rally Doomed by PetroChina’s Hong Kong Gap

    Shares in the yuan-denominated CSI 300 Index traded at 16.2 times earnings this month, compared with 8.6 times for 43 mainland companies in Hong Kong. PetroChina Co., the country’s biggest company, fetches twice the valuation in China as in Hong Kong.

    Restrictions on foreign and local investment that prevent arbitrage with H shares helped make mainland equities more expensive.

    It is pretty odd that there is such a large premium that local Chinese investors must pay to own stocks in the same companies available to foreign investors. There has been a discount on the Hong Kong shares (H-shares), of maybe 20-30%, for years. But it seems that either the H-shares are cheap or the Chinese shares are too expensive (or maybe a little of both). I am positive on the outlook for China both in the short and long term. Though investments there do have substantial risks (as they do anywhere). I would imagine this premium for Chinese (A-shares) should also largely disappear over the next decade as the market is allowed to become one (and at least allow arbitrage between to the two markets to reduce the premium).

    Related: Capitalism in ChinaEasiest Countries for Doing Business 2008China and USA Exports and Imports Drop Sharply

  • 12 Stocks for 10 Years – March 2009 Update

    I originally setup the 10 stocks for 10 years portfolio in April of 2005. The stock market has declined quite a bit since that time. Four of the 12 stocks currently have positive returns and 8 have losses (the market is down 8% annually). I still feel very happy with the makeup of this portfolio overall. The current stocks, in order of return:

    Stock Current Return % of sleep well portfolio now % of the portfolio if I were buying today
    Amazon – AMZN 91% 10% 8%
    Google – GOOG 49% 15% 12%
    Templeton Dragon Fund – TDF 40% 10% 10%
    PetroChina – PTR 11% 10% 10%
    Cisco – CSCO -17% 6% 8%
    Toyota – TM -21% 9% 11%
    Templeton Emerging Market Fund – EMF -25% 4% 5%
    Danaher – DHR -28% 6% 9%
    Intel – INTC -35% 5% 7%
    Tesco – TSCDY -38% 0% 10%
    Pfizer – PFE -45% 6% 6%
    Dell -73% 4% 4%

    At this point I am most positive on Google, Toyota and Templeton Dragon Fund. I am still wary of Dell; it has fallen 73%. I have not sold any Dell, still the percentage of the actual portfolio invested in Dell has dropped to 4%, I have also reduced the amount I would invest now to 4% (and I am leaning to selling it). I am satisfied with Pfizer, at this price and yield. (and also like having some exposure to health care).

    In order to track performance I setup a marketocracy portfolio but had to make some minor adjustments. The current marketocracy calculated annualized rate or return (which excludes Tesco) is -4.2% (the S&P 500 annualized return for the period is -8.3%) – marketocracy subtracts the equivalent of 2% of assets annually to simulate management fees – as though the portfolio were a mutual fund – so without that the return is about -2.2%). The portfolio is beating the S&P 500 by 4.1% annually (which is actually quite good, though still that means just losing less than the S&P 500. Also it is a bit confused due to to Tesco not being included. View the current marketocracy Sleep Well portfolio page.

    Related: 12 Stocks for 10 Years Update – June 200812 Stocks for 10 Years Update (Feb 2008)posts on stocksinvesting books
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