Timothy Clontz
11-28-2013, 12:31 PM
Sector Model XLB 0.67%
Large Portfolio Date Return Days
ABX 4/11/2013 -32.03% 231
QCOM 9/3/2013 10.98% 86
NEM 9/30/2013 -12.01% 59
BCR 10/4/2013 21.35% 55
ED 10/18/2013 -1.71% 41
ISRG 10/21/2013 0.40% 38
EW 10/28/2013 -15.26% 31
ARLP 11/11/2013 -2.46% 17
JOY 11/18/2013 -1.90% 10
OXY 11/27/2013 -2.49% 1
(Since 5/31/2011)
S&P Annualized 12.55%
Sector Model Annualized 23.70%
Large Portfolio Annualized 29.55%
From: http://market-mousetrap.blogspot.com/2013/11/11282013-you-dont-need-to-know-future.html
Yesterday, before the close, I noted that the sector model would be selling its position in XLK and buying XLB.
The full model has had a rough month, falling behind even as the S&P made new highs. This is a natural consequence of the pre-rally pullback in small value stocks. Since they typically outperform in December-January, they also typically underperform in November.
Value Investors, then, tend to have a boring November. In crashes they fare well, and in booms they lag behind. Momentum investors have had an easy time lately.
Technical traders are more concerned to know when they will outperform.
Fundamental investors never quite know when, but they do have confidence that they will outperform at some point in time.
The difference between the two kinds of investors is in the valuation metric. Technicians judge returns against the dollar, and fundamentalists judge returns against earnings and debt. Is the price movement making sense to you? Then you are a technician. Is the price making sense to the business? Then you are a fundamentalist.
If the price moves against you, a technician will sell and a fundamentalist will buy more.
The presence of both kinds of investors makes the market work. Neither is “better” or “worse” than the other, per se. A good technician can do better than a bad fundamentalist. A good fundamentalist can do better than a bad technician. The important thing is to know what you are and trade accordingly.
Buffett made his billions by compounding 20% returns over decades. 20% is doable. 60% isn’t – at least not for a human being. You might do that for a year or even five out of sheer luck, but beyond that you’ll fall back to the mean.
Know your goal. Know your style. Stick with it.
And enjoy the time with your family.
Happy Thanksgiving.
Tim
Large Portfolio Date Return Days
ABX 4/11/2013 -32.03% 231
QCOM 9/3/2013 10.98% 86
NEM 9/30/2013 -12.01% 59
BCR 10/4/2013 21.35% 55
ED 10/18/2013 -1.71% 41
ISRG 10/21/2013 0.40% 38
EW 10/28/2013 -15.26% 31
ARLP 11/11/2013 -2.46% 17
JOY 11/18/2013 -1.90% 10
OXY 11/27/2013 -2.49% 1
(Since 5/31/2011)
S&P Annualized 12.55%
Sector Model Annualized 23.70%
Large Portfolio Annualized 29.55%
From: http://market-mousetrap.blogspot.com/2013/11/11282013-you-dont-need-to-know-future.html
Yesterday, before the close, I noted that the sector model would be selling its position in XLK and buying XLB.
The full model has had a rough month, falling behind even as the S&P made new highs. This is a natural consequence of the pre-rally pullback in small value stocks. Since they typically outperform in December-January, they also typically underperform in November.
Value Investors, then, tend to have a boring November. In crashes they fare well, and in booms they lag behind. Momentum investors have had an easy time lately.
Technical traders are more concerned to know when they will outperform.
Fundamental investors never quite know when, but they do have confidence that they will outperform at some point in time.
The difference between the two kinds of investors is in the valuation metric. Technicians judge returns against the dollar, and fundamentalists judge returns against earnings and debt. Is the price movement making sense to you? Then you are a technician. Is the price making sense to the business? Then you are a fundamentalist.
If the price moves against you, a technician will sell and a fundamentalist will buy more.
The presence of both kinds of investors makes the market work. Neither is “better” or “worse” than the other, per se. A good technician can do better than a bad fundamentalist. A good fundamentalist can do better than a bad technician. The important thing is to know what you are and trade accordingly.
Buffett made his billions by compounding 20% returns over decades. 20% is doable. 60% isn’t – at least not for a human being. You might do that for a year or even five out of sheer luck, but beyond that you’ll fall back to the mean.
Know your goal. Know your style. Stick with it.
And enjoy the time with your family.
Happy Thanksgiving.
Tim