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Predicting
Stock Market Movements
Steve
Selengut
I've been
thinking about starting a stock market prediction business.
Clearly, there is a huge market for timely and accurate information
of this type, and just as clearly, predicting the future is
much easier than dealing with the realities of whatever is actually
happening at the moment. If investors could know what's going
to happen next, they could develop a plan to deal with it in
the present. Maybe Wall Street could help me get this new business
up and running!
What's that?
Wall Street institutions already spend billions predicting future
price movements of the stock market, individual issues &
indices, commodities, and hemlines. Really? Is that right also?
Economists have been analyzing and charting world economies
for decades, showing clearly the repetitive cyclical changes
and their upward bias. Funny then, or strange would be more
accurate, that the advice generated by the oracles of Wall Street
seems to assume that the current environment, good or bad, will
be everlasting. Isn't it this kind of thinking and advising
that prolongs the downturns and "bubbles" the advances---in
all markets?
If it were
true that our favorite pinstriped product pushers can actually
predict the future, why would investors do what they do in response
to the predictions? Why would financial professionals of every
shape and size holler: "sell" at lower prices, and
"buy at any price" when market valuations surge upward?
Shouldn't lower prices be the call to the mall? Most Wall Street
soothsaying has a short-term focus that dwells upon today's
market conditions; most Wall Street glossies emphasize the long-term
nature of investment programs, and encourage investors to apply
patience to the program they decide to use for goal achievement.
Why is the advice so out of sinc?
The reason
for the emphasis confusion is simple: it's easier to play to
the emotion of the moment than it is to look beyond--- even
though we all know that a directional change will be along eventually.
Regardless of the direction, Wall Street advice will always
fuel the operative emotion: greed or fear! Wall Street's retail
representatives never go against the grain of the consensus
opinion--- particularly the one projected to them by their superiors.
You cannot obtain independent thinking from a Wall Street salesperson;
it doesn't fill up the "Beemer".
Here's some
global advice that you will not hear on the street of dreams:
Sell into rallies. Buy on bad news. Buy slowly; sell quickly.
Always sell too soon. Always buy too soon. And by the way, who
do you think is buying and selling the securities you have been
told to dump or to hoard?
No self
respecting guru would ever refute the basic truths that the
market indices, individual issue prices, the economy, and interest
rates will continue to move in both directions, unpredictably,
forever. Hmmm, this is where you need to focus your attention
if you want to get through the investment process with your
sanity. You need to expect and plan for directional changes
and learn to use them to your advantage. Tranquilizers may be
necessary to get you through the first few cycles, but if you
have minimized your risk properly, you can actually thrive on
the long-term predictability of the markets.
The risk
of loss cannot be eliminated. A simple change in a security's
market value is not a loss of principal just as certainly as
a change in the market value of your home is not evidence of
termite damage. Markets are complicated; emotions about one's
assets are even more so. Cyclical changes in all markets are
just as predictable conceptually as knowing approximately where
you are within a cycle is knowable actually. The key is to understand
what your securities are expected to do within the cyclical
framework. Now there's a knowledge business with no Wall Street
practitioners!
Predicting
individual stock prices is a totally different ball game that
requires a more powerful crystal ball and an array of semi legal
and illegal relationships that are unavailable to most investors.
There are just too many variables. Prediction is impossible,
but probability assessment has enormous potential. Investing
in individual issues has to be done differently, with rules,
guidelines, and judgment. It has to be done unemotionally and
rationally, monitored regularly, and analyzed with performance
evaluation tools that are portfolio specific.
This is
not nearly as difficult as it sounds, and if you are a shopper,
looking for bargains elsewhere in your life, you should have
no trouble understanding the workings of the stock market. There
are only three decision-making scenarios that investors need
to master if they want to predict long-term success for their
portfolios.
The "Buy"
decision has two important steps: Step one allocates the available
investment assets, by purpose, between Equity and Income securities,
based on the goals of the investment program. It is done best
using The Working Capital Model. Step two establishes strict
selection quality measures and diversifies properly within each
security class. Investment Grade Value Stocks are the low-risk
equity champions; long-term, non-gimmick, managed CEFs produce
the best income/diversification mix available in readily tradeable
form.
The "Sell"
decision involves setting reasonable targets for profit taking
for all securities in the portfolio. Loss taking decisions must
not be undertaken out of fear, and must be avoided during severe
market downturns. Understanding the forces causing market value
shrinkage is important and a highly disciplined hand at the
emotion control button is essential. There is no such thing
as a good loss of capital.
The "Hold"
decision is most common, and it regulates and moderates the
process, keeping it less than frantic. Continue to hold onto
fundamentally strong equities and income securities that are
providing their normal cash flow. Hold weaker positions until
the appropriate cycle (market, interest, economy) changes direction,
and then consider whether to sell or to buy more.
Wall Street
spins reality in whatever manner it can to make most investors
unhappy, thus increasing new product sales. Your confusion,
fear, greed, impatience, and need for a quick panacea fuels
their profit engines, not yours. Learn how to deal unemotionally
with Wall Street events and shun the herd mentality... that'll
fix 'em.
Steve Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.com
http://www.valuestockindex.com
Professional
Portfolio Management since 1979
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"
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