Dealing With Market Corrections: Ten Do’s and Don'ts
By Steve Selengut
Professional Investment Portfolio Manager since 1979
BA Business, Gettysburg College; MBA Professional Management
Sanserve[at]aol.com
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A correction is a beautiful thing, simply the flip side of a rally,
big or small. Theoretically, even technically I'm told, corrections
adjust equity prices to their actual value or “support levels”.
In reality, it’s much easier than that. Prices go down because of
speculator reactions to expectations of news, speculator reactions
to actual news, and investor profit taking. The two former "becauses"
are more potent than ever before because there is more "self
directed" money out there than ever before. And therein lies
the core of correctional beauty! Mutual Fund unit holders rarely
take profits but often take losses. Opportunities abound! Here’s
a list of ten things to do and/or to think about doing during corrections
of any magnitude:
- Your present Asset Allocation should have been tuned in to
your goals and objectives. Resist the urge to decrease your Equity
allocation because you expect a further fall in stock prices.
That would be an attempt to time the market, which is (rather
obviously) impossible. Proper Asset Allocation has nothing to
do with market expectations.
- Take a look at the past. There has never been a correction
that has not proven to be a buying opportunity, so start collecting
a diverse group of high quality, dividend paying, NYSE companies
as they move lower in price. I start shopping at 20% below the
52-week high water mark, and the shelves are full.
- Don’t hoard that “smart cash” you accumulated during the last
rally, and don’t look back and get yourself agitated because you
might buy some issues too soon. There are no crystal balls, and
no place for hindsight in an investment strategy.
- Take a look at the future. Nope, you can’t tell when the rally
will come or how long it will last. If you are buying quality
equities now (as you certainly could be) you will be able to love
the rally even more than you did the last time… as you take yet
another round of profits. Smiles broaden with each new realized
gain, especially when most folk are still head scratchin’.
- As (or if) the correction continues, buy more slowly as opposed
to more quickly, and establish new positions incompletely. Hope
for a short and steep decline, but prepare for a long one. There’s
more to Shop at The Gap than meets the eye.
- Your understanding and use of the Smart Cash concept has proven
the wisdom of The Investor’s Creed. You should be out of cash
while the market is still correcting. [It gets less and less scary
each time.] As long your cash flow continues unabated, the change
in market value is merely a perceptual issue.
- Note that your Working Capital is still growing, in spite of
falling prices, and examine your holdings for opportunities to
average down on cost per share or to increase yield (on fixed
income securities). Examine both fundamentals and price, lean
hard on your experience, and don’t force the issue.
- Identify new buying opportunities using a consistent set of
rules, rally or correction. That way you will always know which
of the two you are dealing with in spite of what the Wall Street
propaganda mill spits out. Focus on value stocks; it’s just easier,
as well as being less risky, and better for your peace of mind.
Just think where you would be today had you heeded this advice
years ago…
- Examine your portfolio’s performance: with your asset allocation
and investment objectives clearly in focus; in terms of market
and interest rate cycles as opposed to calendar Quarters (never
do that) and Years; and only with the use of the Working Capital
Model, because it allows for your personal asset allocation. Remember,
there is really no single index number to use for comparison purposes
with a properly designed value portfolio.
- Finally, ask your broker/advisor why your portfolio has not
yet surpassed the levels it boasted five years ago. If it has,
say thank you and continue with what you’ve been doing. This one
is like golf, if you claim a better score than the reality, you’ll
eventually lose money.
- One more thought to consider. So long as everything is down,
there is nothing to worry about.
Corrections (of all types) will vary in depth and duration, and
both characteristics are clearly visible only in institutional grade
rear view mirrors. The short and deep ones are most lovable (kind
of like men, I'm told); the long and slow ones are more difficult
to deal with. Most corrections are "45s" (August and September,
'05), and difficult to take advantage of with Mutual Funds. But
amid all of this uncertainty, there is one indisputable fact: there
has never been a correction that has not succumbed to the next rally...
its more popular flip side. So smile through the hum drum Everydays
of the correction, you just might meet Peggy Sue tomorrow.
Steve
Selengut http://www.sancoservices.com
Professional Investment Portfolio Manager since 1979 BA Business,
Gettysburg College; MBA Professional Management, Pace U. Author
of: "The
Brainwashing of the American Investor: The Book that Wall Street
Does Not Want YOU to Read”, and “A Millionaire’s Secret Investment
Strategy”
Published - November 2005
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