Thursday, November 14, 2013

Jim Cramer Says, "Discipline Trumps Conviction"



How Much Is Enough?
I love how Cramer talks about going to movies to distract himself from the stock markets when his fund was up big going into the end of the year.  I can't say that is the approach I am taking, but currently I am very, very careful about putting new money into this market.  Not everyone has the luxury of sitting, watching the markets, and being able to day trade.  Still, with most price charts running up into the top right corner of the chart, it would seem to me to be a good time to shorten one's investing horizon. Why give up all, or even most of those hard earned gains?

Setting Targets
To me, this speaks to the importance of setting targets, then taking profits as those targets are achieved.  Fund managers are all in at this point, and pushing hard on the few stocks showing the most promise - not a good time to be in more speculative stocks.  The personal investor has the distinct advantage of being able to get in and out of the market very quickly.  Most personal investing goals for the year, if they were in any way reasonable, should already have been met.  Time to spend more time at the movies!

How is your portfolio doing?

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Tolerance - A Trader's Mindset

Truth
I am increasingly amazed by the quickness of people to condemn others.  Examples include road rage, comments on the internet, political parties, and yes, even participants in the stock market.  Somebody once said, "Just because we disagree, that does not mean we should be disagreeable".  Disagreeing is normal - attacking the person we disagree with is not.  It is almost as if proving the other point of view as wrong, automatically proves us to be right.  Worse yet, assassinating another's character proves that they deserve no say in the matter, even when the two are not even related. Often the truth lies somewhere in between various points of view.


Once And For All
What works for one, seldom works for all.  I have to laugh at the advertisements which suggest if we are not using their solution, or their product(s), that can only mean we are obviously doing it all wrong.  The fact they try to suggest that they know what is best for me, without even knowing me, is comical, if not misguided. But to attack me because of what I believe, is nothing but intolerance, plain and simple.  When did we become so intolerant of other points of view?  Maybe it just goes hand in hand with our intolerance of other people who don't look like us.

Buy and Hold
Can we really believe there is only one correct approach to the stock market?  Again, I laugh when "experts" look down their noses in disdain at anyone they believe is behaving contrary to their "buy and hold" approach.  It is as if traders are of the lowest class of people while (buy and hold) investors are what everyone should aspire to be.  Clearly, there is no such thing as timing the market, so not only is anyone attempting it, ignorant, they are probably really, really bad at managing their financial affairs, as well!  Not.

Trading Costs
One of the reasons many can't believe timing the market could ever work, despite evidence to the contrary, is the so-called high cost of trading.  Everyone knows, the more we trade, the less we earn.  I have just discovered an interesting concept which would help explain why that is not always the case.  Next time, I will go into more detail.

Mindset Matters
I did not start this blog post with the mindset that all traders are tolerant, and all investors are not.  Believe it or not, markets actually represent people of all viewpoints.  What one person wants to sell, is exactly what another wants to buy.  We don't (and shouldn't) judge the person on the other side of the trade.  The market is able to exploit any weaknesses we might possess, and makes us pay the price, no matter what our strategy.  Still, if there were only two choices, (which I don't believe is true),  I think I would rather be less wealthy and tolerant of others, than rich and falsely believing I was smarter (and hence, better) than everyone else.  Why? Because being able to let go of judgement, I believe, makes me a better person as well as a better trader.

What are your thoughts?

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Looking Ahead With Christine Hughes


Click Here To See The Video

Quantitative Easing
Christine Hughes, of Otterwood Capital Management says the driver of equity markets has been quantitative easing by the US Federal Reserve.  This approach is hugely beneficial to the banksters, and as a result, the financial markets, but does nothing for job creation.  Even with a new Fed. Chairperson, she expects more of the same next year, despite rumours of the Fed. withdrawing stimulus.

Japan
Not so for Japan.  She feels it is only a matter of time until Japan defaults on its huge government debt.  Because government bonds in Japan are owned mostly by the Japanese, she sees the affect of a default being even worse than would normally be the case.  In the case of a world-wide liquidity event (banksters unwilling to lend to other banksters) she says there will be no government bail-out next time.

Next Year
It isn't all bad news, however.  At least for next year, she sees as much as a thirty percent return on US equity markets next year.  Just don't confuse that with the beginning of a long term bull market (no matter what those selling financial products are going to say).  My father always told me, "The bigger they are; the harder they fall!"

What do you think, much higher, or much lower from here?

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Wealth Of Habits

Habit
People who lack the wealth they desire, lack the habits that produce wealth.  There is much material on the habits of successful people, not the least of which is Stephen Covey's "Seven Habits of Highly Effective People".  This video is a high level review of that popular, and successful book.



Character
There are multiple takes by numerous people on which habits are important, and how many there are.  Let me make it simple.  From everything I have seen and read, wealthy, healthy and successful people have three character traits which allow them to maintain the appropriate habits.  They are: focus, discipline, and connection.

First Things First
Wealthy people focus on the things that are important to their goals (which they have written down) and accomplish those tasks before they become incredibly urgent.  They have the discipline to put first things first and to also make time for exercise, friends and family, and learning.

Common Good
Zig Ziglar has always maintained we can get everything in life we want, if we just help enough other people get what they want.  An understanding that we, collectively, are greater than the sum of the parts is often missing in all aspects of life, today.  Anything we do to undermine any of the parts (people) of that whole is detrimental, not only to them, but to our success, as well.  The common good, as well as our own, is best served through an attitude of humbleness, and gratitude.

While character is something that can take a life-time to build, habits, only take about 30 days.  Good habits build good character.  You too could be on your way to a healthy, and wealthy future, in just about 30 days.        

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

I'm Absolutely Positive

Too Critical?
I know I sound critical of the financial services industry.  I've worked in the industry, I've watched it for years.  I've been there, done that, and got the T-shirt.  It is my personal experiences with the financial services industry that prevents me from believing their propaganda and the many cheerleaders who endorse their message (and receive compensation for doing so).  While critical of the financial services industry, I'm also very positive about our own ability, with the available technology today, to better the results of the average fund manager.  Remember, very few of them beat the market averages over the long term.

Tactics
I know people have difficulty believing they deserve better.  After all, the professionals are the best at doing what they do and I'm not disputing that.  That means, either I can settle for the bread crumbs they throw my way, or I can look for something better.  If we are trying for a different result, why would we try to mimic the professionals with their millions and billions of dollars for which they earn outlandish fees?  You and I have so much less.  I remain convinced that our primary advantage over the big professional fund managers is our ability to out-run them. That means being very tactical.  The philosophy of fund managers has always been to buy and hold.  I have said in this blog, and I've said for years, that buy-and-hold is a marketing strategy, not an investing strategy.

Trends
So, if we want to outperform buy-and-hold and run rings around these professional fund managers then how do we do it?   Many would tell me they don't have all day, every day, to sit in front of their computer watching markets, and playing with the numbers while trying to do better, especially when they don't even believe that timing the market is possible.  And that's fine.  People who don't believe it is possible will never be able to make it happen, anyway.  Faith is funny that way.  To outperform the average fund manager, people don't have to write a blog, they don't have to surf the internet every day, they don't have to crunch the numbers all the time.  We simply need to monitor trends; long or short, up or down.  I get confused as to why that is so hard to understand.  Just me?  I don't know.  Like I said, I don't understand why.

Profit
I'm not even saying we need to identify the very beginning of a trend.  Once the market confirms there is, in fact, a trend, then we can take part, and get out again when either the trend seems to be faltering, or when our profits are sufficient that we should take our money off the table.  Even if we get it right only fifty percent of the time, but cut our losses short, we still come out ahead.  So what if we can't identify how long the trend will actually continue?  I guarantee, another new one will shortly follow.

Charts
It doesn't take a huge amount of skill to read a chart.  People do it all the time.  We look at charts of the outdoor temperature, performance charts, health charts, progress charts, budgets, forecasts, to name a few.   Yes, it takes a little practice, it takes knowing what to look for and what to watch out for. In the end, anybody can do it, anybody who wants to, and has a little desire to spend a bit of time monitoring their investments in return for a greater than average payoff.  Again, I have to admit I don't know why more people don't take this approach.  I do know it's partly because people think it's too hard, and that it is a waste of time, especially since we are always told by the professionals we couldn't do it even if we tried, anyway.

Full Time Returns; Part Time Effort
As for me, I'm not giving up.  I will continue to blog.  I will continue to talk about the methods in which people can take control of their own destiny through just a little bit of time and a little bit of effort in order to make more money working part-time than any other part-time job would ever pay them, and even more than some full-time jobs.  It takes practice.  I'll grant the critics that, but it's neither too difficult, nor too time-consuming - let alone impossible - that most people shouldn't, at least, try.

What is your single biggest reason for not trying?  Care to share it?

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Bernanke, The Face of Modern Day Capitalism


"I Don't Think So"
When asked if it were fair to say that Wall Street had benefited more than Main Street from the Federal Reserves' stimulus, Mr. Bernanke's response was "I don't think so".  It goes to show even Central Banksters are as much politician as they are bankster.

Survey Says...
C'mon.  The Federal Reserve has more than enough data at its disposal which should clearly show that the main benefactor in all of this is, in fact, Wall Street.  Stock market prices are racing to all-time highs while employment rates and the numbers for full time employment remain stuck in the mud.  Is Mr. Bernanke asking me to believe he is not aware of what those numbers really mean?

Lies, Damn Lies...
To me, the big problem in looking right at the camera and lying because they think that everyone else is too stupid to know any different, is it destroys the credibility of their whole argument.  They may not think we can prove they are lying, but we don't need degrees from Harvard University to know when they are, and where the money is ending up.  If they are lying about these things, then what else are they lying to us about?

Practice Makes Perfect
I was never a fan of the ideas that government's borrowing of more money is the solution to government's borrowing of too much money, or that banksters should be rewarded for gambling away the wealth of nations by giving them more money to practice with.

The Morale of The Story
In the end, Mr. Bernanke will be long gone and away from the scene when the problem chickens begin to come home to roost.  Again, the average working slob will be left picking up the pieces of yet another failed experiment - failed in the sense that it did not help anybody but the immediate benefactors.  Clearly, Mr. Bernanke and his ilk will have accomplished their mandate if they can suspend judgement just long enough that the perpetrators have enough time to laugh all the way to the bank before people wake up to the fact that new regulations are required that hold politicians, CEO's, and banksters, including Central Banksters to account.

Do you reckon they might end up wrecking the joint before that can happen?

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Fight Back - Ellen Roseman


Click Here To See The Video

What To Buy
Ellen Roseman is the author of "Fight Back".  I have not read the book, but wanted to highlight some of the things said in this interview.  Ellen makes the point we need to invest only in the things we understand.  We should not buy products we don't understand especially since financial advisors get paid for selling us product, whether we understand what we are buying, or not.  Know how the advisor is compensated - it determines what they sell and what they don't.  Also, we are told to get references every time we hire a professional - why not for our financial advisor?  Don't stop there, either, search online.  Employers do it all the time now, we should as well for the people we want to hire.

Start Small
There is no other hobby, or part-time job that can make us the amount of income that investing can.  Why more people don't learn how, is beyond me.  Ellen suggests starting small and increasing the percentage of one's self-managed portfolio over time.  Avoid getting overwhelmed - start with the advice of the bank you already deal with.  As for international diversification, she recommends it.  To me, that is out-dated advice.  Inverse Exchange Traded Funds allow us to make money when the market is falling, not just when it is rising.      In my humble opinion, most people don't know enough about foreign markets to invest in them.  Paper trading is the best way to start to learn the mechanics of investing.  Investopedia has one such free account to start the learning process.

Have you ever used an inverse ETF, or started by paper-trading?