Streetwise
Lauren Rudd
Sunday, November 21,
2010
It Is Called the End of the Year Game
They call the conclusion of a chess match the end game and it
takes special skills to master that part of the contest. In the stock market, we
have the end-of-the-year-game. What makes this time of the year so unique is the
tax-loss selling and profit-taking that occurs as both individual investors, as
well as professional money managers, tune up their portfolios ahead of the
rapidly approaching New Year.
As a general rule, the period between mid-November and
year-end can provide some of the best stock buying opportunities of the entire
year. At the same time, no one would argue that the recent market history has
diverged considerably from a so-called normal. In retrospect, even the past
couple of weeks have been scary on Wall Street. Nonetheless, this is no time to
put money under the mattress or in a certificate of deposit, which are virtually
equivalent.
Now is an excellent time to consider rebalancing and
rejuvenating your portfolio to match the economic outlook for the coming year.
Specifically, you want to remove those holdings that when viewed in the harsh
light of reality are not going anywhere and replace them with companies that are
likely to have a brighter future going forward. Moreover, you do not want to let
extraneous “noise” negate your taking advantage of investment opportunities.
End-of-the-year bottom fishing is quite simple. You are
looking for companies whose shares have been beaten down because they are either
being sold for a tax loss, or have succumbed to the understandable but over-done
Wall Street selloffs we see all too often. Or maybe a company has simply been
the victim of the malaise that seems to periodically wash over Wall Street.
Regardless, there are numerous unloved and undervalued companies whose shares
are looking for a munificent buyer.
Do not dwell on the negative. You should view the problem
from the perspective that both the economy and the stock market are in a
recovery mode, albeit a slow one. Regardless of whether a stock has posted a
gain or loss over the past year, you cannot judge the efficacy of company solely
on the performance of its share price.
Utilizing parameters such as discounted cash flows and
intrinsic value, your investment objective should be to create a return that at
a minimum exceeds the sum of what a 30-year treasury bond would pay, combined
with up what you will lose through taxes and inflation.
To simplify the equation consider that the guideline for my
students is a minimum compounded annual growth rate over 3-5 years of 10 to 15
percent. However, it is foolhardy to believe that you can always pick winners.
Swinging from the rafters is a game for monkeys, not investors.
A prudent stock selection process, combined with a reasonable
asset allocation and risk profile will likely enable you to meet that objective
without breaking a sweat
And while it may not make you the life of the party this
holiday season, when someone asks if you have invested in the latest “hot” stock
or commodity, simply tell them that you prefer to be the tortoise and not the
hare.
Therefore, you are looking for are those companies that have
been able to weather the economic downturn and are now following the economic
revival as it unfolds. To find those stocks you are going to need an edge. If
you want to become a market-trouncing master strategist, your knowledge of a
given company must be superior to that of the great unwashed. So where do you
begin?
Each year about this time I offer up 12 investment ideas, the
performance of which I then review a year later. The list is not intended to be
an instant portfolio where you simply add water and stir. On the contrary, they
are merely suggestions that are designed to be a catalyst to stimulate ideas and
thinking on your part about possible sectors and companies you might want to
investigate.
So start now with your own research and after the Thanksgiving holiday we will
see how my picks of last year did. At the same time, I will offer up another
list of 12 companies for your investing pleasure.