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Published: May 24, 2010
The Dow Jones Industrial Average has
notched another loss this morning, a triple-digit decline as I
write this, with some wondering if the blue-chip index can
remain above the 10,000 mark.
All sectors are in the red.
What should an investor do?
My advice?
Take a deep breath and think things through. Act, but don't
react.
Why? Because it's always a mistake to confuse "action" with
"execution."
Action is simply doing something. Jumping up in the air is an
action, but it doesn't get you anywhere.
Execution, however, is something more. It is taking a
constructive step toward advancing a goal.
Does a series of losses on Wall Street's indexes change your
investment goals? It sure doesn't change mine. Not one iota. A
broad-based decline probably affects the value of both of our
portfolios, but it should in no way affect the fundamental
reasons we bought any of the equities we own.
In other words, why should temporary pricing fluctuations have
any effect on the management of one's portfolio? If anything
they should be viewed as a potential opportunity to buy, not to
sell. If you sell when everyone is selling and buy when everyone
is buying, then the best you can possibly hope for is the same
return the rest of the herd is getting.
That's not good enough and you don't have to settle for it.
Sometimes doing nothing -- choosing to refrain from knee-jerk
reaction -- is the most intelligent course of action. Call it
"active passivity" if it makes you feel better. But put it on
your list of things to do today. Let this slide ride.
Unemployment is high. We knew that. Europe's debt worries aren't
going to cast us back into the abyss. The BP (NYSE: BP)
spill will be capped. It's not time to worry yet.
Take a minute. Think. How will selling today help you achieve
your goals? If you sell at a loss, all that means is your have
more ground to make up. And if this drop proves temporary, as it
likely will, then you'll have to commit more resources to buying
back the equities you sold in a panic.
Now, if you decide to take selling out off your agenda for the
day, here's something to consider while you wait for the market
to regain its head. Distinguish what's happening to the Dow from
what is happening to your specific investments. The fact is
there is likely little or no long-term correlation to what
happens in the overall market to what happens to your stocks. If
you think there is, then either you don't know enough about your
investments or you have invested in the wrong things.
If the Dow drops below 10,000 today, and it might, what
legitimate, material impact is that going to have on the
businesses of which you are a part owner?
Most probable correct answer: None at all.
Third point: As you hear economic data -- be it unemployment
numbers, consumer confidence or any of the scores of indicators
Wall Street follows -- keep one thing in mind: Trades based on
those reports are reactive and emotional and they belie existing
sentiment.
Would you sell shares based on the weekly
jobs numbers? If so, then you're trading based on guesses.
You're part of a good of people that are looking for short-term
swings and not the creation of long-term value. Most individual
investors fail miserable at this endeavor. In 99 cases out of
100, an S&P
index fund would offer a better long-term return.
Now, look, there's nothing wrong with trading. Speculators or
technical traders or whatever you want to call them serve a
valuable role in the economy. And a few investors -- armed with
good information and who trade with discipline -- can do well.
But that is the exception. Most "investors" aspire or should
aspire to be just that: Owners of businesses who seek to use
that ownership to build wealth. Everyone else is just renting
pieces of paper.
When the markets lose their head, you must not lose yours. Wise
investors can ride out a storm, most often by doing nothing, or
doing something else, until the market regains its footing.
So who do I like today? Where are the opportunities that would
gel with my investment goals? Well, first I need to make sure I
have properly enumerated those goals. I'm interested in
long-term growth, and I'm willing to withstand some price swings
as I search for it. I want to invest in companies with an
outstanding product or service that I can buy at a reasonable
price with the possibility for significant gains.
With that in mind, I see a lot of potential with Apple (Nasdaq:
AAPL), which has dropped to 20 times earnings, Dyadic
International (OTC: DYAI), an outstanding enzyme maker in
the biofuel space that has dropped to less than $2.40 but which
would be a steal at $5.00 a share, and certainly offshore
driller Transocean (NYSE: RIG) which has plummeted in the
month since its Deepwater Horizon rig began leaking oil into the
Gulf of Mexico.
So, with that in mind, if you feel as though now is a good time
to exit a position, perhaps to protect recent gains, then you
might consider either Georgia Power Company 8.2% Senior Notes
(NYSE: GAT) or the Western Asset/Claymore
Inflation-Linked Income Fund (NYSE: WIA), a
closed-end fund that’s built to weather stormy markets.
These safe-haven securities are recommended by my colleague
Carla Pasternak, editor of
High-Yield Investing. While these picks are
unlikely to deliver standout gains, they tend to be resilient in
downturns and also provide a revenue stream from their
above-average dividends.
-- Andy Obermueller
Chief Investment Strategist
Government-Driven Investing
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