Industry Ranks December 2011

I?m working on my quarterly reshaping ? where I choose new companies to enter my portfolio.? The first part of this is industry analysis.

My main industry model is illustrated in the graphic.? Green industries are cold.? Red industries are hot.? If you like to play momentum, look at the red zone, and ask the question, ?Where are trends under-discounted??? Price momentum tends to persist, but look for areas where it might be even better in the near term.

If you are a value player, look at the green zone, and ask where trends are over-discounted.? Yes, things are bad, but are they all that bad?? Perhaps the is room for mean reversion.

My candidates from both categories are in the column labeled ?Dig through.?

If you use any of this, choose what you use off of your own trading style.? If you trade frequently, stay in the red zone.? Trading infrequently, play in the green zone ? don?t look for momentum, look for mean reversion.

Whatever you do, be consistent in your methods regarding momentum/mean-reversion, and only change methods if your current method is working well.

Huh?? Why change if things are working well?? I?m not saying to change if things are working well.? I?m saying don?t change if things are working badly.? Price momentum and mean-reversion are cyclical, and we tend to make changes at the worst possible moments, just before the pattern changes.? Maximum pain drives changes for most people, which is why average investors don?t make much money.

Maximum pleasure when things are going right leaves investors fat, dumb, and happy ? no one thinks of changing then.? This is why a disciplined approach that forces changes on a portfolio is useful, as I do 3-4 times a year.? It forces me to be bloodless and sell stocks with less potential for those with more potential over the next 1-5 years.

I like some technology names here, some energy some healthcare-related names, P&C Insurance and to a lesser extent Reinsurance, particularly those that are strongly capitalized.? I?m not concerned about the healthcare bill; necessary services will be delivered, and healthcare companies will get paid.

A word on banks and REITs: the credit cycle has not been repealed, and there are still issues unresolved from the last cycle ? I am not interested there even at present levels.? The modest unwind currently happening in the credit markets, if it expands, would imply significant issues for banks and their ?regulators.?

I?m looking for undervalued and stable industries.? I?m not saying that there is always a bull market out there, and I will find it for you.? But there are places that are relatively better, and I have done relatively well in finding them.

At present, I am trying to be defensive.? I don?t have a lot of faith in the market as a whole, so I am biased toward the green zone, looking for mean-reversion, rather than momentum persisting.? The red zone is pretty cyclical at present.? I will be very happy hanging out in dull stocks for a while.

P&C Insurers Look Cheap

After the heavy disaster year of 2011, P&C insurers and reinsurers look cheap.? Many trade below tangible book, and at single-digit P/Es, which has always been a strong area for me, if the companies are well-capitalized, which they are.

I already own a spread of well-run, inexpensive P&C insurers & reinsurers.? Would I increase the overweight here?? Yes, I might, because I view the group as absolutely cheap; it could make me money even in a down market.? Now, I would do my series of analyses such that I would be happy with the reserving and the investing policies of each insurer, but after that, I would be willing to add to my holdings.

Do your own due diligence on this, because I am often wrong.? One more note, I am still not tempted by banks or real estate related stocks.? I am beginning to wonder when the right time to buy them as a sector is.? As for that, I am open to advice.

3 thoughts on “Industry Ranks December 2011

  1. In part this addresses a question I just asked about your entry “Improve the Position”. It looks like you are making changes on a time dependent basis (making changes 3-4 times per year), rather than price events or position sizes getting out of a range. Perhaps you are combining elements of all, and are willing to bend “rules” (adding to an over-weighted sector) on other grounds (absolute cheapness). Still, I would be very interested in hearing more of your thoughts on the question I raised there.

    As for banks and REITS, I have been tempted enough to buy. (Note: I am not a professional). Eddy Elfenbein thinks financials are a good buy (see http://www.crossingwallstreet.com/archives/2011/12/a-turnaround-for-financials.html). However, like you and everyone else, he might also be often wrong.

    My performance on the financials and REITS (and do you mean mREITS, real-estate REITS, or all?) has been mixed, but it is too early to tell. I think I will know in 3-5 years if any were good buys. I might know much sooner than that if they are bad buys. Unfortunately, I don’t have any advice, or at least no advice worth acting on (repeat Note about not being a professional, and adding that amateurs are also often wrong, more and less often than various professionals).

    When you ask about buying as a sector though, do you mean purchasing ETFs like XLF (and so reducing risk through diversification)? I know you don’t buy index funds, but sector funds are ok?

    Thank you,
    Randolph

  2. Mo-mo’s have been getting pasted, so much for relative strength recently.
    ECommerce venture capital has doubled from last year, might supplant retail investors. HHH is a bet on AMZN so I would not venture their.
    WFM possible in P & C.
    Regionals probably a better chance than big money centers but I would avoid them as well. Curious move last month into home builders/airlines may be short term and not a quarterly rotation.
    How else do you correlate your picks across sectors through fundamental analysis?

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