Thursday, October 15, 2020

CRASH PROOF YOUR INVESTMENT–A GUIDE ON HOW TO KEEP YOUR PORTFOLIO SAFE.

Reading Crash Proof Your Investment will help you become a better stock market investor who protects his or her investment like a pro.

Crash Proof Your Investment Link: CRASH PROOF YOUR INVESTMENT–BOOK 1

We’ve all heard the saying, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

Crash Proof Your Investment is for both the stock market history enthusiast and the beginner and intermediate stock market investor.

Discover the mistakes made during the worst periods in stock market history through the story of the most disastrous and the most recent crashes in America.

No crash history would be complete without covering the 2010 flash crash, the 2008 financial crisis, the dot-com bubble, Black Monday of 1987, and the Wall Street crash of 1929. This historical context will shed light on the causes and lasting effects of these crashes.

The author shares the results of savvy stock market analysis in the chapter “The Nine Warning Signs of a Stock Market Crash Every Stock Investor Should Know,” which is a perfect guide for putting the investor in a better position to predict the next stock market crash.

The investment book is brimming with great investment ideas to help you protect your investment and explores seven strategies to protect your investment in a bear market or even in a full-blown meltdown.Protecting your portfolio during a stock market crash improves your return over the long run.

Topics in the context of protection, such as dividend stocks, stop-loss orders, options trading, and many more are discussed in detail. 

Although options strategies are considered advanced topics in investing, the essential concepts of options for investment protection are simplified so that the beginner investor will readily grasp the protection strategy.

The information covered will be useful for long investors who want to protect their portfolio investment and investors who have been burned one too many times in stock market declines. But it is also for the short investor who would like to profit off the upcoming meltdown.

Mastering the market cycle is essential to becoming a good investor. Too often, investors focus on the uptrend or accumulation period of a market cycle but lack a plan for the downtrend or distribution period of the cycle. 

Understanding a stock market crash is the knowledge that stock investors should gain if they want to play the stock market game effectively.  

You must have stock market investment strategies that protect your portfolio by not reacting inappropriately to stock manipulations.

Remember the countless investors who got burned in the 2010 flash crash because their stop-loss orders were triggered? The market recovered in minutes, leaving these traders with huge, unnecessary losses—in some cases up to 60 percent. To avoid this issue, in this book, you willlearn how to protect your investment without stop-loss orders if you so choose not to use them.

Content is tailored in this investment guide to your specific situation by offering four optional exercises to apply to your portfolio investment as tools to help you invest more strategically in the future.

Continually improving yourself as an investor will move you closer to meeting your investment goals. Investment books like this increase your odds of becoming that millionaire stock investor who vacations in exotic locations around the world as your investments cover your expenses. (Or just retiring without worry if that’s your goal.)

Whatever your investment goals are, this book can help you get there. If this sounds interesting to you follow the link below to learn more:

CRASH PROOF YOUR INVESTMENT–BOOK 1

Also, check the other books in the Financial Master Series,

THE BEGINNER’S GUIDE TO RENTAL PROPERTY INVESTING–BOOK 2

STOCK MARKET MASTERS–BOOK 3

THE FIRE SIDE JOB–BOOK 4

The post CRASH PROOF YOUR INVESTMENT--A GUIDE ON HOW TO KEEP YOUR PORTFOLIO SAFE. first appeared on drpaulkeller.



source https://drpaulkeller.com/stockmarketmastersbook-2-3/

Wednesday, September 23, 2020

The Simplest but Most Powerful Stock Analysis

Quite simply, I have figured out that there are only three types of stocks. It’s not Earth-shattering, and when I tell you what the types are, you might say—Duh!

Even though it is a simple concept, the trading strategies will be different for each type. If you are going to use a trading strategy that is most effective for one of the types, then it is essential to identify what type of stock it is.

Drum roll please.

The three types of stocks are……Trending up, Trending down, and sideways. Yep. But as simple as it is, how do we find stocks that belong in these three categories?

The answer is through the use of screeners. You would think that every screener could do this basic analysis, but not so. And controlling the time range for the analysis is very important since stocks work their way from one type to the other.

I couldn’t figure out how to screen for the different types with the Yahoo Finance screener. Maybe there is a way, but in any case, I resorted to the thinkorswim platform.

To find positive trending stocks, set up a study in the thinkorswim platform in the following way:

I set the price change to 10 percent, so that the scanner looks for stocks that have exceeded 10 percent gain in price 125 bars ago. The bars term is a reserved word, which means, in this case, 125 trading days, which is about when the bottom of the Corona Crash happened for the time of this blog. The D on the right is what defines what the bar is. You can set it to months or as little as 1 minute.

Unfortunately, there are only 23 months of historical data that the study can use. The study feature in thinkorswim is very powerful, with many bells and whistles. You can customize it by adding more indicators, adjusting selection menus, or using the scripting language that comes with the tool.

To find Negative trending stocks, set up a study in the thinkorswim platform in the following way:

To find the sideways stocks set the study up like this:

The strategies for each category, in most cases, are different. The screener presented may need more refinement to be effective with a particular trading strategy. For example, if you are interested in investing in oscillator stocks, ones that are sideway stocks but oscillate from low to high often, then the screener would have to be modified to detect the number of crossings through a range.

For trend trading, you might add average indicators to the screener.

In any case, the screener mentioned is a start to finding which stocks belong to the trending up, down, and sideways categories. It is up to the reader to narrow down the list of stocks it provides to find a stock that meets the trading strategy.

I highly recommend TD Ameritrade and would like to refer you to them. To find out why I think they are so good click on the Ameritrade referral link.

Also, if you’re interested in learning about the differences and similarities in strategies of the best of the best traders, investors, and hedge fund managers check out my book Stock Market Masters.

See you in the next blog,

Dr. Paul Keller

#stocks #stockmarket #investment #investing #realestate #trading #dalio #minervini #warrenbuffett valueinvesting #author #financialmaster #habits #stockmarketcrash #rentalproperty

The Financial Master Series Books

Crash Proof Your Investment

The Beginner’s Guide to Rental Property Investing

Stock Market Masters




source https://drpaulkeller.com/trend-screener/

Tuesday, September 22, 2020

Purchasing Stocks is Gambling–Or is it?

Is Investing in the Stock Market Gambling?

A friend of mine, with the trading alias of the Lone Ranger, told me that her relative said investing in Penny Stocks is gambling.

By definition, Gambling is the activity or practice of playing a game of chance for money or other stakes.

The sentiment that investing in the stock market is gambling is often expressed by people who believe that making money by purchasing stocks is unlikely. The result for most people will be a loss.

The points above are reflected in the paper titled, “Who Gambles in the Stock Market?” by Alok Kumar.[1] In the paper, Kumar identifies lottery-type stocks by using lottery tickets as a reference. Lottery tickets have very low prices relative to a high potential payoff. They have a minuscule probability of a huge reward and a huge chance of a small loss.

To identify lottery-type stocks, Kumar organized stocks with low prices, high volatility, and investor sentiment skewness into the stocks with lottery-like features category. In other words, there may be high volatility of oil company security due to pipeline breaks. This may result in an adverse price move. Conversely, if a large oil field is discovered, this may cause a positive price move. The result is the high volatility of the stock price.

When these events happen for a particular company more than once, there may be a skewed perception of the company unrelated to the company’s fundamentals. People may invest in them thinking that the large moves will happen again, especially if it’s a low priced stock, AKA Penny Stock.

Kumar concludes that the characteristics of lottery-type stocks are that they have low market capitalization of 31 million or below,  low institutional ownership at 7.35% or below, and low liquidity. These stocks are young, have low analyst coverage, significantly higher volatility, skewness, and low price per share. 

Remember the sentiment we discussed earlier regarding the likelihood of losing money?

According to the Tradeciety website:

“Profitable day traders make up a small proportion of all traders – 1.6% in the average year.”[2]

That doesn’t sound encouraging, but my experience indicates that this may be a problem with trading frequently. Many famous investors have made money through the long term buy and hold investing, such as Warren Buffett, Jack Bogle, John Templeton, Peter Lynch, and Benjamin Graham.

I have found that the market has something going for it that favors long term investing. This may end someday, but historically the market goes up over time and always recovers from a crash. In my book Crash Proof Your Investment, I developed a historical histogram chart that shows its favoritism of a profitable return.

The graph shows that the market has positive returns more frequently because the bulk of the graph’s bars are above 0 percent annual return. The market is skewed! Five percent, ten percent, and fifteen percent annual returns are the most frequent. 

A more familiar chart is the one shown below:

The trend over 100 years is undoubtedly up. The most significant disturbance in the trend is the crash of 1929. It was the most disastrous crash in American history, accounting for its aftereffects—a 12-year Great Depression followed, which affected most of the world.

Despite the 89 percent decline, in the long run, the stock market recovered.

Finally, from the paper by Kumar, four-factor models for the stock market return are mentioned. Investopedia explains that the results of the Fama and French model:

“Fama and French highlighted that investors must be able to ride out the extra short-term volatility and periodic underperformance that could occur in a short time. Investors with a long-term time horizon of 15 years or more will be rewarded for losses suffered in the short term. Using thousands of random stock portfolios, Fama and French conducted studies to test their model and found that when size and value factors are combined with the beta factor, they could then explain as much as 95% of the return in a diversified stock portfolio.”[3]

So as you can see from the Investopedia article and the work of Fama and French (Nobel laureates), long term investing offsets short term losses that a day trader or short term trader might experience.

In the book Intelligent investor, which is one of the seeds of Warren Buffett’s massive fortune, there is commentary from Zweig’s section that says

“Like casino gambling or betting on the horses, speculating in the market can be exciting or even rewarding (if you happen to get really lucky). But it’s the worst imaginable way to build your wealth.  That’s because Wall Street, like Las Vegas or the racetrack, has calibrated the odds so that the house always prevails, in the end, against everyone who tries to beat the house at its own speculative game.

On the other hand, investing is a kind of a unique kind of casino—one where you cannot lose in the end, so long as you play only by the rules that put the odds squarely in your favor.  People who invest make money for themselves; people who speculate make money for their brokers. And that, in turn, is why Wall Street perennially downplays the durable virtues of investing and hypes the gaudy appeal of speculation.”[4]

In summary, purchasing particular securities resembles gambling. The stocks have lottery-type features and tend to be, but are not limited to, some penny stocks. On the other hand, the buy and hold investing strategy of non-lottery like stocks is likely to be profitable with historical evidence to back it up.

That’s all for now; good luck with your financial goals,

Dr. Paul Keller.

#stocks #stockmarket #investment #investing #realestate #trading #dalio #minervini #warrenbuffett valueinvesting #author #financialmaster #habits #stockmarketcrash #rentalproperty

The Financial Master Series Books

Crash Proof Your Investment

The Beginner’s Guide to Rental Property Investing

Stock Market Masters


Notes:

[1]Kumar, Alok. “Who Gambles in the Stock Market?” The Journal of Finance 64, no. 4 (2009): 1889-933. Accessed September 14, 2020. http://www.jstor.org/stable/27735154.

[2] https://www.tradeciety.com/24-statistics-why-most-traders-lose-money/

[3] https://www.investopedia.com/terms/f/famaandfrenchthreefactormodel.asp

[4] Benjamin Graham, Intelligent Investor.

Bibliography:

Graham, B., & Zweig, J. (2003). The intelligent investor: A book of practical counsel. NY, NY: HarperBusiness.

Hayes, A. (2020, March 05). Fama and French Three Factor Model Definition. Retrieved September 14, 2020, from https://www.investopedia.com/terms/f/famaandfrenchthreefactormodel.asp

Kumar, Alok. “Who Gambles in the Stock Market?” The Journal of Finance 64, no. 4 (2009): 1889-933. Accessed September 14, 2020. http://www.jstor.org/stable/27735154

Rolf, Witbooi, Mataruse, M., Sm, Anonymous, Burguet, M., & Ahmad. (2020, April 10). Why Most Traders Lose Money – 24 Surprising Statistics. Retrieved September 14, 2020, from https://www.tradeciety.com/24-statistics-why-most-traders-lose-money/



source https://drpaulkeller.com/stock-market-gambling/

The Penny Stock Millionaire: Post 3. Trading Platforms for Penny Stocks

Commission-free trades are the norm for trading platforms these days. But not all trading platforms are created equal. I like TD Ameritrade. It has the best tools, customer service, and I have been with them for 15 years and had no issues. If you are seeking the best tools and customer service for non-penny stock investing, then I recommend them and would like to refer you through the following link where we could both earn a small cash reward:

Ameritrade referral link (*)

But in the case of penny stocks, Ameritrade is not the best platform to use. They charge $6.95 for OTCBB (Over the Counter Bulletin Board) trades.

Besides Ameritrade, I considered four other platforms. They are TradeStation, Robinhood, Bank of America’s Merrill, and Charles Schwab. For me, the winner is Charles Schwab. But let’s discuss the drawbacks I saw for the others before we discuss Charles Schwab.

To start, TradeStation is considered one of the best brokers for penny stocks in a few online articles. But I had issues when signing up for an account. First, the way to fund the investment account has changed for most stockbroker sites. Most brokers will present the customer with a pop up where you enter your bank account password to put money in your investing account. The problem is I’m uncomfortable with putting my bank password in other websites. It feels like a security issue. On TradeStation, the pop up came up, and in the address bar, it still said the browser was on the TradeStation website. I typed in the password, “you must be joking.” It’s not a real password, and I can’t fund my account with it. In any case, there is the traditional ACH option through a pdf form you fill out, and email in.

The trading tool is limited compared to the thinkorswim trading tool on Ameritrade and doesn’t hold a candle to it. If you look at the BBB rating for the company, it is perfect, but 1-star reviews detail the issues of the TradeStation platform. There is not much-supporting information on the website to help with stock investment research, either. Trades are free up to 10,000 shares, $0.005 per share for each share above 10,000. Only limit orders are allowed for OTC markets. Finally, the COVID-19 pandemic has made contacting them difficult and slow.

Robinhood has a neat referral program where an account holder can give their link to a friend, and if they sign up, the account holder gets one share of a random stock. Very cool! However, my friend referred me, and he never got his one share. Maybe there are account requirements that I don’t meet. I never funded the account, so I don’t blame Robinhood for not giving my friend a share. In any case, COVID-19 again interferes with communication, but I emailed them and got a quick response. The funding option is through a password requesting pop up. There is a trick for not using that. Type in Sherwood Forrest for the bank (a fake bank name), and an option to link the bank will come up manually. This takes you to an online ACH method.

The trading tool looks very basic, and I don’t see much in terms of help for stock investment research. Penny Stock trades are commission-free, however.

Merrill is a possibility with its commission-free trades. They, too, presented me with pop up requesting a password to my bank account. But I was able to get the form for ACH, which could be emailed. Merrill requires that penny stock trades are limit orders. If the volume is high enough, a trader may want to use a market order. So this limitation ruled them out. I also remember having difficulty determining which stocks I could invest in and which I could not on Merrill, as some are not available through them. I remember putting in a lot of time researching a stock only to find out it was not available for trading through their trading tool. There may be a way to tell what is available to invest in, but the rep I talked to didn’t know what it was. At least they were willing to speak to me on the phone despite the COVID-19 shortages.

And finally, we come to Charles Schwab. Charles Schwab has commission-free penny stock trades. They do present the customer with the pop-up window asking for the bank account password, but they have an online ACH method that is evident and easy to find. Finally, I could chat online with a knowledgeable rep at a moment’s notice during the weekend. The responses were quick.

The trading platform seems fine, and they have a lot of information and tools to help research stocks. I also like their referral program. If I refer you and you deposit at least $1000, you get a $100 reward.

Based on my platform considerations above, I selected Charles Schwab for penny stock trading and am referring my readers to Schwab through the following link:

http://www.schwab.com/public/schwab/nn/refer-prospect.html?refrid={REFID}

I hope this helps with your platform selection process.

Good luck with your financial goals,

Dr. Paul Keller

The Financial Master Series Books

Crash Proof Your Investment

The Beginner’s Guide to Rental Property Investing

Stock Market Masters



source https://drpaulkeller.com/penny-stock-millionaire-3/

Monday, September 21, 2020

The Penny Stock Millionaire: Post 2. Speed up Equity Selection with a Screener

In my last blog, Is Investing in the Stock Market Gambling? I found that some penny stocks have lottery features, and purchasing them may be considered gambling. The characteristics of a lottery-type stock were identified, and one of the features is low liquidity, or low buy/sell volume which is a red flag that purchasing the equity may be gambling.

Does the fact that a penny stock has lottery-type features mean that you should not purchase them? I think it depends on the investor and his or her goals. But, understanding if a penny stock has lottery-type features or not is essential to becoming in tune with the reality of the situation.

In my book Stock Market Masters, I point out that phenomenal investors such as Warren Buffett are in tune with the reality of an investing situation and acknowledge it. The great investor’s reaction to the truth is what sets them apart from the average investor. Their trading or investing moves are based on their accurate understanding of reality which makes them incredible amounts of money and puts them in the legend category.

If you find that a penny stock has lottery-type features, what will your move be? I can think of ways to make money, whether it does or does not have lottery-type features. There are ways to exploit the reality to your advantage. It is up to the reader to figure out what those are.

This blog will focus on using a screener to find penny stocks that have low and high liquidity. The screener I will use is the free Yahoo Finance screener. But remember that the equities found in the screener may not be available on the trading platform you use. For example, in my discussion with a Meryl Lynch representative, I discovered that not all penny stocks are available. Because of the liquidity issue with some Penny Stocks being low, Meryl Lynch requires that all orders be limit orders for Penny Stocks. A limit order guarantees a trade at a specific price; otherwise, the trade is not executed and protects the buy and sell order from achieving an unrealistic price.

A ridiculous price for a transaction may happen if someone wants to unload 1000 shares of penny stocks purchased at 2 dollars per share with a market order, and there is low buy sell volume. If there are few buyers, then the price of the sale could be very low. Maybe 5 cents per share. If the transaction occurs, then the $2000 purchase becomes a $50 sale. Ouch!

Low volume burned many people who had stop-loss orders in the Flash Crash of 2010. I write about the Flash Crash and the issues with stop-loss orders in my book Crash Proof Your Investment.

To find the penny stocks that have low volume go to the Yahoo Finance screener at the following link:

https://finance.yahoo.com/screener

Next click the create screener button and set up the filters as shown in the figure below:

The filters are

Region = United States,

Average Volume for 3 Months is less than 1000,

Price is less than $5,

Sector is Technology

Market Cap is less than 31 Million dollars

Clicking the find stock button yields 52 equities to consider. From the list, I looked up the company Duo World Inc with ticker symbol DUUO. The wide bid-ask spread indicates the low liquidity of the stock.

A buyer is willing to buy 100 for $2, and a seller is willing to pay $28 for 100. The spread is 1300 percent of the lower stock price. [ (($28-$2)/$2)*100 percent ]. This illustrates why limit orders that guarantee a specific sale price are important to use in this case.

To find the penny stocks that have high volume, set the screener up as shown below:

The filters are

Region = United States,

Average Volume for 3 Months is greater than 1000000,

Price is less than $5,

Sector is Technology

Market Cap is less than 31 Million dollars

Clicking the find stock button yields 52 equities to consider. From the list, I looked up the company Cemtrex Inc with a ticker symbol CETX. The wide bid-ask spread indicates the low liquidity of the stock.

A buyer is willing to buy 100 for $102, and a seller is willing to pay $105 for 100. The spread is 3 percent of the lower stock price. [ (($105-$102)/$102)*100 percent ]. In this case, using the market order is less likely to end up with a price for the transaction that is unfair.

In summary, I presented the Yahoo Finance screener to look for penny stocks with high and low buy/sell volume. Understanding the reality of your equities is very important, so you can react well to the reality and increase your odds for success.

Good luck with your financial goals,

Dr. Paul Keller.

The Financial Master Series Books

Crash Proof Your Investment

The Beginner’s Guide to Rental Property Investing

Stock Market Masters



source https://drpaulkeller.com/penny-stock-millionaire-2/

Monday, September 14, 2020

Is Investing in the Stock Market Gambling?

Now and then, I hear someone say that stock market investing is gambling. Is this true or false?

A good friend of mine, with the stock trading alias of the Lone Ranger, told me that her relative said investing in Penny Stocks is gambling.

Gambling is, by definition, the activity or practice of playing a game of chance for money or other stakes.

Let’s take a step back, this implication, that investing in the stock market is gambling, is often a sentiment expressed by people who believe that making money is not likely. The result for most people will be a loss. Furthermore, there may be little basis for a sound investment in some stocks, such as penny stocks, since investing theory indicates that a company’s financials may not be in line with a sound business model.

The points above are somewhat reflected in the paper titled, “Who Gambles in the Stock Market?” by Alok Kumar.[1]

In the paper, Kumar identifies lottery-type stocks by using lottery tickets (the most common form of gambling) as a reference. Lottery tickets have very low prices relative to a high potential payoff. They have low negative expected returns, and the prize distribution has exceptionally high variance.  Most importantly, they have a minuscule probability of a huge reward and a huge chance of a small loss.

To identify lottery-type stocks, Kumar characterizes stocks with low prices, high volatility, and investor sentiment skewness. The author has more precise terms that many people have never seen before. 

For example, he uses the term idiosyncratic volatility where Investopedia defines idiosyncratic risk in the following way:

“Idiosyncratic risk refers to the inherent factors that can negatively impact individual securities or a very specific group of assets. The opposite of Idiosyncratic risk is a systematic risk, which refers to broader trends that impact the overall financial system or a very broad market.”[2]

In other words, there may be high volatility of oil company security due to pipeline breaks. This may result in an adverse price move. Conversely, if a large oil field is discovered, this may cause a positive price move. The result is the high volatility of the stock price. When these events happen for a particular company more than once, there may be a skewed perception of the company unrelated to the company’s fundamentals. People may invest in them thinking that the large moves will happen again, especially if it’s a low priced stock, AKA Penny Stock.

Interestingly enough, Kumar’s paper does have a table that characterizes lottery-type stocks. Table 2, titled Basic Characteristics Of Lottery-Type Stocks, reports that there are 1500 lottery-type stocks, 1500 non-lottery-type stocks, and 9000 stocks in the middle.

So what are the characteristics of a lottery-type stock? 

The table reports that the firm size average is very low with an average market capitalization of 31 million,  low institutional ownership at 7.35%, a relatively high book to market ratio 0.681, and lower liquidity. These stocks are also younger, with a mean age of about six years. They have low analyst coverage, most don’t have dividends, they have significantly higher volatility, higher skewness, and lower prices. 

The author goes on to report that lottery-type stocks are concentrated heavily in the energy, mining, financial services, biotechnology, and technology sectors and the lowest concentration of lottery stocks is in the utilities, consumer goods, and restaurant sectors.

Given the fact that there are lottery-type stocks and non-lottery-type stocks, how likely, in general, is a trader or investor to make money in the Stock market? Remember the sentiment we discussed earlier, that most people lose money in the stock market, which is similar to the feature of lottery tickets with their negative expected return.

According to the Tradeciety:

“Profitable day traders make up a small proportion of all traders – 1.6% in the average year. However, these day traders are very active – accounting for 12% of all day trading activity.”[3]

That doesn’t sound encouraging, but this may be a problem with trading frequently.

What about the long term, buy and hold investing as Warren Buffett does? His favorite holding period is forever.[4]

I made the most money in the stock market in paper gains when I picked outstanding diversified funds, ignored them when the market was misbehaving, and held them long term. Many famous investors have made money through the buy and hold strategy, such as Warren Buffett, Jack Bogle, John Templeton, Peter Lynch, and Benjamin Graham.

In my opinion, market fluctuations are unpredictable most of the time. Sometimes you can see the writing on the wall; for example, the Corona crash seemed evident in my opinion. The virus itself was a surprise, though, and so was the financial crash of 2008.

The market has something going for it that favors long term investing. This may end someday, but historically the market goes up over time and always recovers from a crash. (We are almost out of the Corona Crash with the S&P and NASDAQ making new highs. We are waiting on the DOW which is close).  In my book Crash Proof Your Investment, I developed a historical histogram chart that shows this favoritism.

The vertical axis may look confusing. What does it mean? 

I calculated the rolling annualized returns by using one year of data.  But the annual return is calculated for each market day, so the one year of data slides like a window to collect a new day and dispense of an old one. There were 251 trading days in 2018, which means there are 251 annual return values.  

Over 105 years, there are about 26,355 (251 x 105 = 26,355) annual return values. 

The horizontal axis depicts the annual percentage gain. By looking at the 0 percent annual bar, you can see that 0 percent annual return happened a little less than 3,000 times in 105 years.

Disappointing returns for the long investor!

More importantly, the graph shows that the market has positive returns more frequently because the bulk of the bars in the graph are above 0 percent annual return. 

The market is skewed! Five percent, ten percent, and fifteen percent annual returns are the most frequent. 

There are even some outliers at a 70 percent annual return and above.

To put these numbers in perspective, let’s answer the question: How long will it take an investment to double in the market?

The average return was 9 percent? If we assume that is the fixed rate of return for every year that the investment is in the market, then we can use the Rule of 72 to answer the question.

The Rule of 72 is an equation that provides you with the length of time an investment will take to double. In our case we would divide 72 by our fixed rate of 9.

Our answer shows us it will double every eight years. Impressive!

If the graph is still confusing, there is still hope. Check out the excellent article on Investopedia called “Rolling Return.”[5]

A more familiar chart is the one shown below:

The trend is undoubtedly up. So this indicates that there may be something to buy and hold for the long term.

Finally, from the paper by Kumar, four-factor models for the stock market return are mentioned. A somewhat simplified explanation of this model is in the Investopedia article titled, Fama and French Three-Factor Model[6]. The article states that:

“Nobel Laureate Eugene Fama and researcher Kenneth French, former professors at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, attempted to better measure market returns and, through research, found that value stocks outperform growth stocks. Similarly, small-cap stocks tend to outperform large-cap stocks. As an evaluation tool, the performance of portfolios with a large number of small-cap or value stocks would be lower than the CAPM result, as the Three-Factor Model adjusts downward for observed small-cap and value stock out-performance.”[7]

Later on the article reports:

“Fama and French highlighted that investors must be able to ride out the extra short-term volatility and periodic underperformance that could occur in a short time. Investors with a long-term time horizon of 15 years or more will be rewarded for losses suffered in the short term. Using thousands of random stock portfolios, Fama and French conducted studies to test their model and found that when size and value factors are combined with the beta factor, they could then explain as much as 95% of the return in a diversified stock portfolio.”[8]

So as you can see from the Investopedia article and the work of Fama and French, long term investing offsets short term losses that a day trader or short term trader might experience.

In the book Intelligent investor, which is one of the seeds of Warren Buffett’s massive fortune, there is commentary from Zweig’s section that says

“Like casino gambling or betting on the horses, speculating in the market can be exciting or even rewarding (if you happen to get really lucky). But it’s the worst imaginable way to build your wealth.  That’s because Wall Street, like Las Vegas or the racetrack, has calibrated the odds so that the house always prevails, in the end, against everyone who tries to beat the house at its own speculative game.

On the other hand, investing is a kind of a unique kind of casino—one where you cannot lose in the end, so long as you play only by the rules that put the odds squarely in your favor.  People who invest make money for themselves; people who speculate make money for their brokers. And that, in turn, is why Wall Street perennially downplays the durable virtues of investing and hypes the gaudy appeal of speculation.”[9]

In summary, we have discovered that there are lottery-type stocks that resemble gambling in the stock market and there are investing strategies where the outcome is more likely to be profitable. So investing in the stock market is not gambling—keyword investing. But there are plenty of opportunities to gamble with securities in the stock market. These tend to be, but are not limited to, penny stocks.

That’s all for now; good luck with your financial goals,

Dr. Paul Keller.

The Financial Master Series Books

Crash Proof Your Investment

The Beginner’s Guide to Rental Property Investing

Stock Market Masters


Notes:

[1]Kumar, Alok. “Who Gambles in the Stock Market?” The Journal of Finance 64, no. 4 (2009): 1889-933. Accessed September 14, 2020. http://www.jstor.org/stable/27735154.

[2] https://www.investopedia.com/terms/i/idiosyncraticrisk.asp

[3] https://www.tradeciety.com/24-statistics-why-most-traders-lose-money/

[4] https://www.montycampbell.com/article/what-warren-buffett-really-means-when-he-says-his-favorite-holding-period-is-forever/

[5] Chen, J. (2020, January 29). Rolling Returns Definition. Retrieved from https://www.investopedia.com/terms/r/rollingreturns.asp.

[6] https://www.investopedia.com/terms/f/famaandfrenchthreefactormodel.asp

[7] https://www.investopedia.com/terms/f/famaandfrenchthreefactormodel.asp

[8] https://www.investopedia.com/terms/f/famaandfrenchthreefactormodel.asp

[9] Benjamin Graham, Intelligent Investor.

Bibliography:

Campbell, M. (2018, February 03). What Warren Buffett Really Means When He Says His Favorite Holding Period Is “Forever”! Retrieved September 14, 2020, from https://www.montycampbell.com/article/what-warren-buffett-really-means-when-he-says-his-favorite-holding-period-is-forever/

Chen, J. (2020, April 23). Idiosyncratic Risk: Why a Specific Stock Is Risky Right Now. Retrieved September 14, 2020, from https://www.investopedia.com/terms/i/idiosyncraticrisk.asp

Graham, B., & Zweig, J. (2003). The intelligent investor: A book of practical counsel. NY, NY: HarperBusiness.

Hayes, A. (2020, March 05). Fama and French Three Factor Model Definition. Retrieved September 14, 2020, from https://www.investopedia.com/terms/f/famaandfrenchthreefactormodel.asp

Hayes, A. (2020, March 05). Fama and French Three Factor Model Definition. Retrieved September 14, 2020, from https://www.investopedia.com/terms/f/famaandfrenchthreefactormodel.asp

Hayes, A. (2020, March 05). Fama and French Three Factor Model Definition. Retrieved September 14, 2020, from https://www.investopedia.com/terms/f/famaandfrenchthreefactormodel.asp

Kumar, Alok. “Who Gambles in the Stock Market?” The Journal of Finance 64, no. 4 (2009): 1889-933. Accessed September 14, 2020. http://www.jstor.org/stable/27735154

Rolf, Witbooi, Mataruse, M., Sm, Anonymous, Burguet, M., & Ahmad. (2020, April 10). Why Most Traders Lose Money – 24 Surprising Statistics. Retrieved September 14, 2020, from https://www.tradeciety.com/24-statistics-why-most-traders-lose-money

#stocks #stockmarket #investment #investing #realestate #trading #dalio #minervini #warrenbuffett #valueinvesting #author #financialmaster #habits #stockmarketcrash #rentalproperty



source https://drpaulkeller.com/gambling-stocks/

Sunday, September 13, 2020

Too Many Things to Juggle? Try These Tips to Gain Control of Your Life.

Well, I’ve found myself with too much to do once again. I have a habit of doing that. Many things look fun and exciting to me, and not long after I think about them, I find myself spending time on them. What to do?

I have read the book, The 7 Habits Of Highly Effective People, and it mentions getting rid of all things that are time wasters that don’t contribute to your goals. This is habit 3 from the book, put first things first. The book separates your activities into four quadrants, which are categorized below with an example activity:[1]

Quadrants of the Time Management Matrix

Important and urgent

Deadline driven projects

Important and not urgent

Planning and Recreation

Not important but urgent

Interruptions and some calls

Not important and not urgent

Trivia and busywork

Highly effective people spend more time in the important and not urgent quadrant as it is proactive and keeps them out of crisis mode.

Here is a link, if you’re interested in finding out more about this book: The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People Book

Indeed, the quadrant analysis helps.

Another way to tackle the problem is in the famous story regarding Warren Buffett’s pilot Mike Flint. In the story, Warren asks the pilot the following question. What are your top 25 career goals? And Warren Buffett suggests he write them down on a piece of paper.[2]

After doing so, Mike Flint was to circle the top five. Mike then said he would concentrate on the top five but work on the others intermittently since they were reasonable goals. But Warren Buffett said, “No. You’ve got it wrong, Mike. Everything you didn’t circle just became your Avoid-At-All-Cost list. No matter what, these things get no attention from you until you’ve succeeded with your top 5.”

And so there you have it straight from one of the world’s most successful investors. Work on your top five goals. You can, of course, use Stephen Covey’s quadrants to help you understand how important and urgent these goals are, and that may move the goal up or down in your top 25 goal list.

In Stock Market Masters, my book about the habits of phenomenal investors, I call this habit Laser Focus on your investment goals, and all three of the great investors mentioned in the book are passionate about this habit.

In any case, I hope that helps with your busy life,

Happy Investing,

Dr. Paul Keller

The Financial Master Series Books

Crash Proof Your Investment

The Beginner’s Guide to Rental Property Investing

Stock Market Masters

References


[1] Stephen Covey, The 7 habits of highly effective people infographic version, page 206

[2] https://www.inc.com/jory-mackay/warren-buffetts-personal-pilot-reveals-billionaires-brilliant-method-for-prioritizing.htm

#stocks #stockmarket #investment #investing #realestate #trading #dalio #minervini #warrenbuffett #valueinvesting #author #financialmaster #habits #stockmarketcrash #rentalproperty



source https://drpaulkeller.com/time-management/

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