October 1, 2013 in 3rd Guide - Portfolio Building
Growth protects investing profits
Growth protects investing profits urges letting profit producing winners run rather than being sold to rebalance. Scheduled rebalancing can hurt portfolio performance by selling winners to buy more losers.
Wealth Building Portfolio Management, lesson 8, covers a superior investor strategy of letting profits run rather than selling high performing winners. Links at the end guide you to related content if you want to learn more.
What’s in this lesson for me?
This lesson urges caution when considering portfolio rebalancing to prevent selling winners to buy more losers. Scheduled rebalancing without thought can shrink winning positions to increase losing positions. Turing that thinking on its head adds more bottom line to an investing portfolio.Let profits grow
Rather than rebalancing without thought, buy more winners, sell losers to grow wealth! Rebalancing by selling winners to buy losers kills returns. Think of growing profit producers for wealth building and not to be sold in an unthinking portfolio protection strategy!
Profits are for growing not for protection! You invest to profit. Don’t kill your performance by selling winners and buying losers. Use this as part of your core portfolio growing strategy to get rich.
Investors must manage their portfolios to grow their wealth and achieve financial security and independence. Actions taken to protect gains can kill the possibility of dramatic portfolio growth. Don’t move to protect a gain too soon. Let profits run.
Rebalancing to win, lose or hide
The prices of stocks in your portfolio rise, fall or move sideways over time. In classic portfolio management, rebalancing means buying or selling to adjust the holdings in an account.
This simple idea can be very badly used.
Some advisors sell the winners or a portion of them. They do this for no other reason than the stock has risen in price. This selling of your winners locks in any gains. The rationalization that “you never go broke taking profits”can limit your growth.
The rebalancing approach means that funds raised by selling winners are used by buy more of the positions that declined in price. Buying more of these losers brings them into “balance”.
Selling your winners to buy losers is not smart
Can you imagine a company becoming a winner by firing great performing employees to hire inferior workers? Would you be a fan of the professional sports club that sat out their best players to routinely play the worst?
Investing focuses on making money work. Growth protects investing profits. We do this to grow value or why bother? Our portfolio management job is to make our money work for us. Any portfolio move that hinders that performance must be considered wrong. Our job must be to drive performance. Do not stop a producing stock from making money.
When you can, always buy the winners and leaders. Sell losers and the also-rans in any sector or industry. Winners keep winning. Own them. In fact doing the opposite as the action taken in the traditional rebalancing approach can double your results.
For example, a properly and technically balanced account can open with 5% of the funds evenly invested in each of 20 stocks. Through time stock prices change. Some rise, some fall and others stay close to the original purchase price.
Following the price changes the account may be considered unbalanced. This suggests buying and selling to get it back into balance.
To explore this further, we will look at two scenarios. They are very much simplified to make the big point. Do not use them as an absolute guide to investing. There is still much more to learn.
Scenario One
In scenario one we regularly rebalance to evenly distribute our funds among the 20 holdings. In both scenarios we give ourselves a market that rises 10% annually.
In our imaginary world we use a simple limited example. We say that each year, 5 stocks rise 30%, 5 stocks rise by 20%, 5 stocks stayed at the same price and the value of the final 5 falls by 10%.
Crunching the numbers shows an overall portfolio performance of 10% growth. We have 10 winners, the 5 that rose by 30% and the 5 that rose by 20%. Another 5 did nothing and the final 5 lost 10% of the original value.
A disciple of rebalancing will sell off part or all of the winners and buy more losers to align the account. Then in our simple example we move forward year by year and go through the same process. The rebalanced portfolio shows an annual growth rate of 10%, same as the market.
Scenario Two
Scenario two does the opposite. We sell the losers and buy more winners. Now consider what happens. The losing positions go to zero as we do not want to own any losers. The resulting funds are redeployed to buy more shares in the winners.
Crunch the numbers and the annual rate of return rockets to 20.45%! That puts these powerful profit producers in a position to rapidly drive your wealth up. Do it for a third year and results compound in your favor. Before the fourth year is out you have doubled your account!
The solid 10% annual return can compound to double in 7 years. The 20+% growth rate gets you there in under 4 years!
This actually works. Keeping this approach going can turn a modest 5 figures into 7 in a few years. I know, that is what I did.
Naturally there is more to it then doing this one simple thing. The point here is to get you to seek winners and ride them rather than reining in winners to lock in and protect profits. Don’t limit profits; grow them.
Profits are for growing not for protection! Make that core to your investment thinking. It will put you far ahead of the market and help make you rich.
Why this lesson matters
Using caution when considering portfolio rebalancing prevents selling winners or buying more losers. That prevents shrinking winners to increase losers in scheduled rebalancing without thought. Turing rebalancing thinking on its head adds bottom line to investing portfolios.Key take away points from lesson 8, Growth protects investing profits:
Letting profit producing winners run rather than being sold to rebalance protects profits and avoids adding losers. Any scheduled rebalancing must be done with thought to avoid selling winners to buy more losers.
- Letting profits grow adds wealth to your portfolio.
- Rebalancing can harm portfolio performance.
- Selling winners to buy losers harms portfolio performance.
- Selling losers to buy more winners accelerates portfolio performance.
Share: Growth protects investing profits
Buttons at the bottom of the page let you send this lesson to family and friends! Subscribe free and get White Top Investor lessons in your inbox! Make money work for you by knowing how investors think, feel and act. Learn here The Investor Mind. White Top Investor lessons, website layout and organization: click here.You may also like these other lessons related to: Growth protects investing profits
Know the trend for market direction
3 Distinct approaches to investing
Investing buy high sell low true or false?
Weeding your investment portfolio
It’s Complicated! Speculating!
3 Approaches all about making money
Comments and questions welcome
Email me at WhiteTop@WhiteTopInvestor.com.Make money work for you
Use White Top Investor lessons to learn investing. By doing that you can grow into a knowledgeable, comfortable and confident investor. To learn how, you can learn investing one small step at a time at your own pace. Do that and become the master of your financial security and independence. White top Investor never sells or shares our email list. Learn more.Wealth Building Portfolio Management lessons:
Introduction to portfolio management Lesson 1
Pyramid portfolio wealth building Lesson 2
How investors buy dips Lesson 3
Distracted investing misses profits Lesson 4
Investors never average down Lesson 5
Market patterns repeat repeat repeat Lesson 6
Research confirms investment counts matter Lesson 7
Portfolio measurements to size positions Lesson 8
Growth protects investing profits Lesson 9
Winston Churchill said crisis = opportunity Lesson 10
Weeding your investment portfolio Lesson 11
Next lesson 10: Winston Churchill said crisis = opportunity
Have a prosperous investor day! Bryan White Top Investor whitetop@WhiteTopInvestor.com WhiteTopInvestor.com Let’s connect, follow me; Twitter LinkedIn Facebook Image courtesy FreeDigitalPhotos.netCopyright © 2013-19 Bryan Kelly WhiteTopInvestor.com