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 wth more potential over the next 1-5 years.
I like technology names here, some utilities, and healthcare-related names, 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.
I?m looking for undervalued and stable industries.? Human resources ? sure, more part time workers.? Healthcare information?? A growing field, even with the new ?health bill.?? Same for Biotech, though I can never find companies that I can understand.
Even in a double dip, phone calls will still be made, and the internet will still be accessed.
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 more highly cyclical than I have seen in quite a while.? I will be very happy hanging out in dull stocks for a while.
That’s why I’m not digging through any red zone stocks this time.? I don’t see the value, especially if we have a slowdown globally, and/or in the US.? I don’t trust this economy.
This is a very interesting post, what is the ranking system for industries? Is it from IBD?
Hi David… could you share where you obtain your list of industries? Just wondering if it’s a particular standard you’re using. thanks…
Stefan, nrg, the industry list is from Value Line. It is a weighted average of several ways of measuring how hot or cold a given industry is.
David – I’ve been in Pipeline MLPs for ~8 yrs, and I wonder why you think they’re “cold” now – as I look at my list of 5, even after the last few day’s meltdown, 4 are within 10% of their yearly high (the other is ~15%) and all 5 as a portfolio are up over 150% in since I opened the positions (including distributions) – just asking
they are BGH (now BPL), EPD, KMP, OKS, PAA
Good point, fatbear. The reason is a quirk in the Value Line data series. The Pipeline/MLP group was only created half a year ago, over which performance has been somewhat soggy. But prior years look great — possibly why VL decided to create the group.
This is just a surmise, but I suspect that when Value Line creates a new group, they do it when they are relatively hot, and after that, they sag.
But, I can test that — maybe a future post.