Unlucky Seven

Ulli Uncategorized Contact

The market was working on its 7th straight day of gains, when a last hour sell-off pulled the indexes from achieving this feat.

Consecutive gains of more than 5 days in a row are rare indeed and are usually followed by at least one down day. Of course volume was low during this quiet Holiday shortened week so one cannot put too much meaning into the directional activity of the last three trading days of the year.

Economic reports were mixed as consumer confidence showed a slight improvement while a report on home prices was not as robust as hoped for.

I expect the market to meander for the next couple of days before this year comes to an end. While we have all sell stops in place, I don’t think any will be triggered during the remainder of 2009.

More On Dividends And Sell Stops

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Reader Trevor wants to clarify the adjustments that have to be made to the basis for calculating the sell stop when dividends are a being paid:

I am a bit confused about the treatment of dividends having read your recent posts.

I have set up a spreadsheet as you suggested using Yahoo and downloading each day – one column is the High which I amend manually if a new high is achieved since I bought.

If I understand right, it is from this number I deduct the dividend payment. So if the high was a 100.00 and the dividend payment 1.00 then the stop loss would be calculated as 7% off the post dividend high of 99.00. So far so good.

What happens if the market keeps rising (as it seems to be at the moment) and a new high of 101 is achieved? Here I assume that the stop loss now moves to 7% off 101 so negating the impact of the dividend payment?

You are absolutely right. Distributions from dividends and/or capital gains and market activity are two separate things.

In your example, the high price of $100 was correctly reduced by the amount of the dividend of $1 making the new high price $99, from which you now calculate your 7% sell stop. If market activity pushed prices higher, then the highest closing price above $99 becomes your new basis for calculating your stop.

As you pointed out, if prices make a high of $101, then that number serves as the new high point from which you calculate the 7% level, which in this case would be $94 (rounded off).

Distribution Time

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It’s this time of the year when mutual funds and ETFs declare their year-end distributions. If you use any of the online services like Yahoo, MarketWatch, etc. to track your gains and losses, you have to make adjustments when dividends or distributions become effective.

Otherwise, you may be surprised to see that a fund you are tracking is showing sharply reduced gains or even losses when the NAV is reduced by the amount of the distribution.

More importantly, if you track your trailing sell stops, you need to reduce your “high price” by the distribution as I talked about in Honing In On Bond Funds And Sell Stops. If you don’t, you may get a sell signal when in fact none has occurred.

I have also noticed that some of the historical data providers like YahooFinance have been slow in posting year end distributions. To overcome that problem, be sure to check other resources as well. I did that this weekend and found that Morningstar was far more up to date than Yahoo.

Sunday Musings: Great Expectations

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MarketWatch looked at Morningstar’s “best funds” recommendations in Stupid Investment of the Week. Here are some highlights:

Morningstar Mutual Funds started listing the best funds for the year ahead six years ago. Typically, most funds that have made the list are “analyst picks” at the firm — meaning the favorites of Morningstar’s analytical crew — with established managers and investment styles.

The list itself seems to run contrary to Morningstar’s own institutional thinking. The firm has always been focused on the long haul, with virtually every analyst I have ever talked to far more concerned with what a fund will do over the next five years than the next 12 months.

From the start, the editors of the newsletter have hedged their bets a bit, suggesting the selections were for the next year “and beyond.” This year, Karen Anderson, taking her first shot at the list as editor of Morningstar Mutual Funds, makes no bones about the idea that “whether you’re constructing your portfolio for the first time or looking to make some upgrades, I’ve compiled a list of offerings that investors should consider for the long haul.”

But when you say you are producing a list of “the best funds” for the coming year, you create an expectation that the issues you pick will actually be good performers in the year ahead. There, Morningstar hasn’t done so well.

Over the first five years of this endeavor, 71 funds were named to the list (in about one-seventh of those picks, a fund actually made the list for a second or third year). Using year-to-date data for 2009, nearly two-thirds of the funds picked landed in the top half of their peer group during the year for which they were expected to be “best.”

“Morningstar has a lot of smart people who are trying their best, and who are smart statisticians,” said Mark Hulbert of the Hulbert Financial Digest, which ranks the performance of investment newsletters and is a service of MarketWatch, the publisher of this report.

“What they are revealing with these lists,” he added, “is just how difficult it is for any of us to identify top performers, to say ‘This is what’s going to be the next great investment.’ Even among funds with absolutely fabulous track records, picking next year’s winners is tough.”

If you consider that every Morningstar editor creating this annual list has suggested that the funds they picked would be good long-term performers, then the one calendar year that now has a five-year history — the picks for 2005 — should have all been long-term winners. That didn’t happen. While 20% of the picks from that year rank in the top 10% of their peer group, roughly half of the “best funds for 2005” fall below their category average over the last half decade.

It’s not just the performance that is the problem with this list. If you tried to use it to build a portfolio, there would be significant overlap. Each year’s list is published without reflection on the previous year, or any mention of what someone might do if they bought those other funds. Moving from one annual list to the next would generate tremendous turnover.

Instead, the “best funds for 2010” is more like a gimmick — fun to read and to chat about, but not in keeping with the long-term thinking that investors (and Morningstar analysts) typically use.

Said Dan Wiener, editor of the Independent Advisor for Vanguard Investors: “This is good marketing for Morningstar. What it’s not is good investing.”

Personally, I have never thought much of the Morningstar ranking scheme or their forecasting abilities. It’s nothing more than a bunch of statisticians making wild guesses and never admitting that there is a flaw in the entire approach.

Morningstar is the ultimate buy-and-hold supporter, and they have not learned or chose to ignore that bear markets exist along with the devastating effects that they have on a portfolio. To continue to release the “best funds for 20xx” without giving any consideration to the possibility of a market collapse (and what to do if it happens) is simply being ignorant and out touch with reality.

Sure, if their fund list appeals to you, you can certainly use it as a guide and incorporate their recommendations with the trend tracking rules. If the trends stay up in 2010, great, you may have some winners here; if we have a return into bear market territory, use my recommended trailing sell stop discipline to get back on the sidelines.

That way, you can incorporate the best of both worlds: Be ‘possibly’ in the “best funds,” yet have a safety net in place should the bears become the rulers of 2010.

Be A Control Freak

Ulli Uncategorized Contact

Reader Don is looking to generate income and had this to say:

Do you think Master Limited Partnerships have a place in a retiree’s portfolio, looking for income? Thanks for your weekly musings on the market.

I don’t know anything about the partnerships you are considering, so let me comment in general based on my experiences. Most partnerships require you to tie up the invested amount, meaning that they may pay you a monthly rate of interest, but you can’t get access to your principal for a number of years.

If that is the case, the questions you need to ask yourself are the following:

1. Can you live with the fact that your assets are tied up for a certain period of time?

2. If the partnership runs into cash flow problems can you live without the promised monthly income?

3. Partnerships have been known to fail. What if this happens and you lose a portion or your entire principal? Can you live with that outcome?

If your answer is yes to all questions, by all means, do your due diligence and go ahead. If the answer is no to any or all of them, you better look for other opportunities.

To me, investing in an illiquid partnership (or any other entity for that matter) means you are giving up control. And lack of control with its unintended consequences can lead to more bad investments than a poor choice of stocks, bonds or mutual funds.

That applies to the selection of an investment advisor as well. Several clients of mine reported that they had their accounts with advisory firms in 2008 and watched their portfolios getting clobbered. The advisors refused to sell and, to add insult to injury, the clients had given up any rights to override the advisors’ decisions. Unbelievable, but true!

If you work with an advisor, be sure that you retain the option to correct any decisions he makes. You may never want to or need to use that prerogative, but make sure you have it.

If you invest in anything, make sure there is a liquid market place that allows you to get out at a moment’s notice. We are living in an era where some of the biggest hedge funds have failed (Bear Stearns) and you never know where the next Bernie Madoff may lurk.

You may very well live your life in a casual, relaxed, non-controlling and unassuming manner. However, when it comes to your investments, you need to turn into a control freak— and don’t let anybody sweet talk you out of it.

No Load Fund/ETF Tracker updated through 12/24/2009

Ulli Uncategorized Contact

My latest No Load Fund/ETF Tracker has been posted at:

http://www.successful-investment.com/newsletter-archive.php

A Santa Claus rally pushed the major indexes to their highs for the year.

Our Trend Tracking Index (TTI) for domestic funds/ETFs has now crossed its trend line (red) to the upside by +6.36% keeping the current buy signal intact. The effective date was June 3, 2009.



The international index has now broken above its long-term trend line by +9.27%. A Buy signal was triggered effective May 11, 2009. We are holding our positions subject to a trailing stop loss.

[Click on charts to enlarge]
For more details, and the latest market commentary, as well as the updated No load Fund/ETF StatSheet, please see the above link.