The Portfolio Rules Work Together

Here are the eight rules with links to my recent pieces:

  1. Industries are under-analyzed, relative to the market on the whole, and relative to individual companies. Spend time trying to find good companies with strong balance sheets in industries with lousy pricing power, and cheap companies in good industries, where the trends are not fully discounted.
  2. Purchase equities that are cheap relative to other names in the industry. Depending on the industry, this can mean low P/E, low P/B, low P/S, low P/CFO, low P/FCF, or low EV/EBITDA.
  3. Stick with higher quality companies for a given industry.
  4. Purchase companies appropriately sized to serve their market niches.
  5. Analyze financial statements to avoid companies that misuse generally accepted accounting principles and overstate earnings.
  6. Analyze the use of cash flow by management, to avoid companies that invest or buy back their stock when it dilutes value, and purchase those that enhance value through intelligent buybacks and investment.
  7. Rebalance the portfolio whenever a stock gets more than 20% away from its target weight. Run a largely equal-weighted portfolio because it is genuinely difficult to tell what idea is the best. Keep about 30-40 names for diversification purposes.
  8. Make changes to the portfolio 3-4 times per year. Evaluate the replacement candidates as a group against the current portfolio. New additions must be better than the median idea currently in the portfolio. Companies leaving the portfolio must be below the median idea currently in the portfolio.

For the most part these are rules that would only serve a value investor.  They focus on the first principle of value investing, which is “margin of safety (rule 3),” and after that on the less important principle of buying them cheap (rule 2).

I would add the concept “sell them relatively dear,” which  rules 7 and 8 spell out.  The sell discipline gets short shrift in much of value investing, and I think I have a very good sell discipline.

But value traps do in many value investors.  Value traps are companies that are cheap, but cheap for a reason.  How do you avoid value traps?

  • Try to have industry factors working for you (Rule 1)
  • Look for companies that still have some room to grow (Rule 4)
  • Avoid companies that are aggressive in their reporting of income (Rule 5)
  • Look for managements that use their free cash flow wisely (Rule 6)

I have my failures, but I don’t trip into many value traps, relative to the average value investor.

That is how my rules work together.  They are meant to cover the basic areas of value investing, while attempting to avoid the traps that harm value investing.

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This is the end of the “Portfolio Rules” series.  From these articles, I hope you get a good idea of how I invest, whether you invest like me, or invest with me.






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Accounting, Industry Rotation, Portfolio Management, Stocks, Value Investing | RSS 2.0 |

5 Responses to The Portfolio Rules Work Together

  1. jeffpartlow says:

    David,
    Have you considered a Spoke Fund for your investment service?
    http://www.spokefunds.com/about/

    • No, I would rather do it more conventionally, as would most investors. Existing methods work well; there is no need to change them. People need to be more price conscious, though, and refuse expensive means of securing portfolio management.

  2. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by BertromavichEdenburg, seriouslystocks. seriouslystocks said: The Portfolio Rules Work Together: Here are the eight rules with links to my recent pieces: Industri… http://bit.ly/9IDhJ3 #stocks #bonds [...]

  3. [...] David Merkel Full list of portfolio rules. [...]

  4. [...] – David Merkel’s eight portfolio rules. [...]

Disclaimer


David Merkel is an investment professional, and like every investment professional, he makes mistakes. David encourages you to do your own independent "due diligence" on any idea that he talks about, because he could be wrong. Nothing written here, at RealMoney, Wall Street All-Stars, or anywhere else David may write is an invitation to buy or sell any particular security; at most, David is handing out educated guesses as to what the markets may do. David is fond of saying, "The markets always find a new way to make a fool out of you," and so he encourages caution in investing. Risk control wins the game in the long run, not bold moves. Even the best strategies of the past fail, sometimes spectacularly, when you least expect it. David is not immune to that, so please understand that any past success of his will be probably be followed by failures.


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