Too Much Cash?

Aug 8, 2009 10:34 pm

How many of you losers have way too much cash?    Thsi run from march lows has been a wonderful thing.   Just like 2003, they trained so many to rasie cash and sell the rallys.  You WILL NOT get me this time.  F you bears.   You have had your day.

People will be underinvested for YEARS.  Next decade will be way, way above norm returns. Climb this wonderful wall of worry.  Global economy.   THE REAL STORY.  How about the PERFECT trap endinh July 10?    Take her right down to support.  head and shoulders top blah blah blah.  bears so c***y.   so sure.   could not find a non-bear on TV.  none Then moon shot to 1000 on s and p's in a few days.  didnt even give them time to get in.   I love it. March 9th.....I give up.   Things are SO bad.  This IS a depression.  SELL ME OUT NOW.  i dont want to hear your long term crap.  sell.     This guy felt good for about 48 hours. how cool You bears still dug in....I know it.     you will have a million reasons to keep your cash. Goldmans target too LOW.   25% from here with no real pullbacks.  f you shorts.  eat it.   eat your losses MF's   You see those c^%k suc^&ers get buried in AIG?   
Aug 8, 2009 11:28 pm

B1tch much?

Aug 9, 2009 12:17 am

Wow…

Aug 9, 2009 12:29 am

This bear market may have scared many investors away for good.  Too bad.

Aug 9, 2009 12:37 am
iceco1d:

Dude,

WTF?  Can’t you see that we are in a ‘secular bear?’ I mean, it’s SO clear.  If you are a tard, you probably still believe in idiotic things like “asset allocation” and “Modern Portfolio Theory!” 

If you don’t start analyzing stocks and trends, you will be fawked!!!   Seriously…MPT is BROKEN, and asset allocation is BULLsht!  I mean seriously, when you have bond funds, taking on leverage, with 20 year average durations, and an average credit quality of junk, or unrated, and then they drop along with equities, you KNOW that the whole asset allocation mantra is BS! 

Seriously folks, wake up and smell the coffee!  You need to start utilizing sector rotation.  You need to bone up on your behavioral finance.  You need to recognize trade patterns! 

Seriously morons.  The old way of buying a diversified basket of quality equities for the long term, and buying high quality, short duration, laddered fixed income investments, along with a few years of cash for really tough years is SCREWED.  I mean seriously.  Moron. 

I mean, obviously, it’s a good thing to have leverage in your bond funds…and an average credit rating of Pamela Anderson’s cup size…and an average duration of, oh, say, the age of the average financial advisor…this is all SOUND INVESTING at its finest!

You know, because that’s why you are supposed to have fixed income exposure in your portfolio right?  Junk ratings, Ron Jeremy length durations…all the stuff the “stable” part of a portfolio needs, right?!

Seriously, just like loading up on one particular sector or another of equities.  I mean, this is really prudent stuff here.

These are the exact teachings of MPT, and asset allocation, and plain vanilla investing, right?  These are the concepts that blue up in everyone’s face, right?

Oh crap…that’s right, I’m wrong!  I’ve been busy selling leveraged crap and comparing past returns to the S&P, because it’s an appropriate benchmark for EVERYTHING!!!  So now, my leveraged equity, my junk fixed income, my leveraged hedge funds, overextended real estate bets, and the WHOLE 9 YARDS blew up in my f
cking face…so now, I’ll blame it on MPT!!!

Oh that’s right…my WORST 50 year old client is now down less than 10%, peak to trough, net of fees.  My 60+ year old clients are even, or positive, also net of fees.  And not a single one of them was forced to sell a depreciated asset for income!

Man, I’m a LOSER.  Plain vanilla LOSER.  I wish I could learn to be more tactical.  Maybe I should bone up on my MPT and AA and finance theory…maybe I could be legit someday. 

I should really bone up on my fundamental and technical analysis too.  I mean, maybe if Lil’ old me, here in bumblef*** USA started looking at fundy’s, I could do my clients right.  I mean, because it’s US, the retail end of the market that brings thing in and out of equalibrium…it’s not the CFAs, and the Ph.D’s on the institutional side.  It’s little old me, and my few $MM book of retail teachers and small business owners that determine prices!

sh*t, I need to stop posting, I have analysis to do and a trading algorithm to write…CLEARLY, at this stage of the game, AA, MPT, and EMH are WRONG. 

PS - DFA, and the people that run it are a joke!  Losers.

    ... he mutters to himself as he climbs the tower overlooking the busy city square, rifle securely slung over his shoulder. "They won't listen to reason, maybe this will get their attention" he thinks, his bloodthirst reaching orgasmic levels.
Aug 9, 2009 12:47 am
Jebediah:

[quote=iceco1d]Dude,

WTF?  Can’t you see that we are in a ‘secular bear?’ I mean, it’s SO clear.  If you are a tard, you probably still believe in idiotic things like “asset allocation” and “Modern Portfolio Theory!” 

If you don’t start analyzing stocks and trends, you will be fawked!!!   Seriously…MPT is BROKEN, and asset allocation is BULLsht!  I mean seriously, when you have bond funds, taking on leverage, with 20 year average durations, and an average credit quality of junk, or unrated, and then they drop along with equities, you KNOW that the whole asset allocation mantra is BS! 

Seriously folks, wake up and smell the coffee!  You need to start utilizing sector rotation.  You need to bone up on your behavioral finance.  You need to recognize trade patterns! 

Seriously morons.  The old way of buying a diversified basket of quality equities for the long term, and buying high quality, short duration, laddered fixed income investments, along with a few years of cash for really tough years is SCREWED.  I mean seriously.  Moron. 

I mean, obviously, it’s a good thing to have leverage in your bond funds…and an average credit rating of Pamela Anderson’s cup size…and an average duration of, oh, say, the age of the average financial advisor…this is all SOUND INVESTING at its finest!

You know, because that’s why you are supposed to have fixed income exposure in your portfolio right?  Junk ratings, Ron Jeremy length durations…all the stuff the “stable” part of a portfolio needs, right?!

Seriously, just like loading up on one particular sector or another of equities.  I mean, this is really prudent stuff here.

These are the exact teachings of MPT, and asset allocation, and plain vanilla investing, right?  These are the concepts that blue up in everyone’s face, right?

Oh crap…that’s right, I’m wrong!  I’ve been busy selling leveraged crap and comparing past returns to the S&P, because it’s an appropriate benchmark for EVERYTHING!!!  So now, my leveraged equity, my junk fixed income, my leveraged hedge funds, overextended real estate bets, and the WHOLE 9 YARDS blew up in my f
cking face…so now, I’ll blame it on MPT!!!

Oh that’s right…my WORST 50 year old client is now down less than 10%, peak to trough, net of fees.  My 60+ year old clients are even, or positive, also net of fees.  And not a single one of them was forced to sell a depreciated asset for income!

Man, I’m a LOSER.  Plain vanilla LOSER.  I wish I could learn to be more tactical.  Maybe I should bone up on my MPT and AA and finance theory…maybe I could be legit someday. 

I should really bone up on my fundamental and technical analysis too.  I mean, maybe if Lil’ old me, here in bumblef*** USA started looking at fundy’s, I could do my clients right.  I mean, because it’s US, the retail end of the market that brings thing in and out of equalibrium…it’s not the CFAs, and the Ph.D’s on the institutional side.  It’s little old me, and my few $MM book of retail teachers and small business owners that determine prices!

sh*t, I need to stop posting, I have analysis to do and a trading algorithm to write…CLEARLY, at this stage of the game, AA, MPT, and EMH are WRONG. 

PS - DFA, and the people that run it are a joke!  Losers.

    ... he mutters to himself as he climbs the tower overlooking the busy city square, rifle securely slung over his shoulder. "They won't listen to reason, maybe this will get their attention" he thinks, his bloodthirst reaching orgasmic levels.[/quote]     It was later said that this episode could have been prevented and the 34 people that lost their lives could have been saved.  If only those that knew him had recognized the signs, had questioned the angry diatribes, had read a finance book, maybe August 8, 2009 would simply have been another Saturday in RR City.
Aug 9, 2009 3:14 am

Ice- I have some of the same questions. I am not on the boone’s farm though (prefer bud light and squidbillies on dvd, might be a redneck joke coming I am sure). I personally feel that a lot of Monday morning quarterback bullsht goes on in here. I would like to see some of these same guys you are referring to give an example and stop sounding like every other bullsht f***er on bloomberg, fox, etc. that says there is so much opportunity but will not give on example and why. I feel if you invest in something you can’t prove or rationalize then you might as well be guessing. I do believe in strategies that take into consideration of capitulations of the market, but even implementing that in a small manner is very time consuming. I just don’t understand how someone has the time to be an advisor and a money manager at the same time.

Aug 9, 2009 3:59 am
iceco1d:

Dude,

WTF?  Can’t you see that we are in a ‘secular bear?’ I mean, it’s SO clear.  If you are a tard, you probably still believe in idiotic things like “asset allocation” and “Modern Portfolio Theory!” 

If you don’t start analyzing stocks and trends, you will be fawked!!!   Seriously…MPT is BROKEN, and asset allocation is BULLsht!  I mean seriously, when you have bond funds, taking on leverage, with 20 year average durations, and an average credit quality of junk, or unrated, and then they drop along with equities, you KNOW that the whole asset allocation mantra is BS! 

Seriously folks, wake up and smell the coffee!  You need to start utilizing sector rotation.  You need to bone up on your behavioral finance.  You need to recognize trade patterns! 

Seriously morons.  The old way of buying a diversified basket of quality equities for the long term, and buying high quality, short duration, laddered fixed income investments, along with a few years of cash for really tough years is SCREWED.  I mean seriously.  Moron. 

I mean, obviously, it’s a good thing to have leverage in your bond funds…and an average credit rating of Pamela Anderson’s cup size…and an average duration of, oh, say, the age of the average financial advisor…this is all SOUND INVESTING at its finest!

You know, because that’s why you are supposed to have fixed income exposure in your portfolio right?  Junk ratings, Ron Jeremy length durations…all the stuff the “stable” part of a portfolio needs, right?!

Seriously, just like loading up on one particular sector or another of equities.  I mean, this is really prudent stuff here.

These are the exact teachings of MPT, and asset allocation, and plain vanilla investing, right?  These are the concepts that blue up in everyone’s face, right?

Oh crap…that’s right, I’m wrong!  I’ve been busy selling leveraged crap and comparing past returns to the S&P, because it’s an appropriate benchmark for EVERYTHING!!!  So now, my leveraged equity, my junk fixed income, my leveraged hedge funds, overextended real estate bets, and the WHOLE 9 YARDS blew up in my f
cking face…so now, I’ll blame it on MPT!!!

Oh that’s right…my WORST 50 year old client is now down less than 10%, peak to trough, net of fees.  My 60+ year old clients are even, or positive, also net of fees.  And not a single one of them was forced to sell a depreciated asset for income!

Man, I’m a LOSER.  Plain vanilla LOSER.  I wish I could learn to be more tactical.  Maybe I should bone up on my MPT and AA and finance theory…maybe I could be legit someday. 

I should really bone up on my fundamental and technical analysis too.  I mean, maybe if Lil’ old me, here in bumblef*** USA started looking at fundy’s, I could do my clients right.  I mean, because it’s US, the retail end of the market that brings thing in and out of equalibrium…it’s not the CFAs, and the Ph.D’s on the institutional side.  It’s little old me, and my few $MM book of retail teachers and small business owners that determine prices!

sh*t, I need to stop posting, I have analysis to do and a trading algorithm to write…CLEARLY, at this stage of the game, AA, MPT, and EMH are WRONG. 

PS - DFA, and the people that run it are a joke!  Losers.

  It is totally Monday Morning QB with these guru's. Look at my topic about 200k in new money a few months back. Dow was at 7k and not a single one of these guru's would go 100% equities. They have given up on asset allocation, rebalancing, diversification, and the power of equities. They are chanting their death mantra, "This time is different." !!!!
Aug 9, 2009 3:33 pm
iceco1d:

Dude,

WTF?  Can’t you see that we are in a ‘secular bear?’ I mean, it’s SO clear.  If you are a tard, you probably still believe in idiotic things like “asset allocation” and “Modern Portfolio Theory!” 

If you don’t start analyzing stocks and trends, you will be fawked!!!   Seriously…MPT is BROKEN, and asset allocation is BULLsht!  I mean seriously, when you have bond funds, taking on leverage, with 20 year average durations, and an average credit quality of junk, or unrated, and then they drop along with equities, you KNOW that the whole asset allocation mantra is BS! 

Seriously folks, wake up and smell the coffee!  You need to start utilizing sector rotation.  You need to bone up on your behavioral finance.  You need to recognize trade patterns! 

Seriously morons.  The old way of buying a diversified basket of quality equities for the long term, and buying high quality, short duration, laddered fixed income investments, along with a few years of cash for really tough years is SCREWED.  I mean seriously.  Moron. 

I mean, obviously, it’s a good thing to have leverage in your bond funds…and an average credit rating of Pamela Anderson’s cup size…and an average duration of, oh, say, the age of the average financial advisor…this is all SOUND INVESTING at its finest!

You know, because that’s why you are supposed to have fixed income exposure in your portfolio right?  Junk ratings, Ron Jeremy length durations…all the stuff the “stable” part of a portfolio needs, right?!

Seriously, just like loading up on one particular sector or another of equities.  I mean, this is really prudent stuff here.

These are the exact teachings of MPT, and asset allocation, and plain vanilla investing, right?  These are the concepts that blue up in everyone’s face, right?

Oh crap…that’s right, I’m wrong!  I’ve been busy selling leveraged crap and comparing past returns to the S&P, because it’s an appropriate benchmark for EVERYTHING!!!  So now, my leveraged equity, my junk fixed income, my leveraged hedge funds, overextended real estate bets, and the WHOLE 9 YARDS blew up in my f
cking face…so now, I’ll blame it on MPT!!!

Oh that’s right…my WORST 50 year old client is now down less than 10%, peak to trough, net of fees.  My 60+ year old clients are even, or positive, also net of fees.  And not a single one of them was forced to sell a depreciated asset for income!

Man, I’m a LOSER.  Plain vanilla LOSER.  I wish I could learn to be more tactical.  Maybe I should bone up on my MPT and AA and finance theory…maybe I could be legit someday. 

I should really bone up on my fundamental and technical analysis too.  I mean, maybe if Lil’ old me, here in bumblef*** USA started looking at fundy’s, I could do my clients right.  I mean, because it’s US, the retail end of the market that brings thing in and out of equalibrium…it’s not the CFAs, and the Ph.D’s on the institutional side.  It’s little old me, and my few $MM book of retail teachers and small business owners that determine prices!

sh*t, I need to stop posting, I have analysis to do and a trading algorithm to write…CLEARLY, at this stage of the game, AA, MPT, and EMH are WRONG. 

PS - DFA, and the people that run it are a joke!  Losers.

  All in all I would have to say this is more the case than not and in general I think you hit the nail on the head. The strategy I use allows cash to be a producing asset class.
Aug 9, 2009 3:55 pm
Ron 14:

It is totally Monday Morning QB with these guru’s. Look at my topic about 200k in new money a few months back. Dow was at 7k and not a single one of these guru’s would go 100% equities. They have given up on asset allocation, rebalancing, diversification, and the power of equities. They are chanting their death mantra, “This time is different.” !!!

  When you say "these guru's" are you speaking of people who don't build their entire book on asset allocation via mutual funds or some specific forum members?
Aug 9, 2009 5:46 pm
Gaddock:

[quote=Ron 14]blah blah blah, words words words blah buy words hold blah rebalance words diversify blah lucky words market timer blah impossible words unrepeatable blah blah blah !!!

  When you say "these guru's" are you speaking of people who don't build their entire book on asset allocation via mutual funds or some specific forum members?[/quote]     Is it MMQB when you actually moved people at the correct time?  Oh wait it's not, that was luck.  Sorry I forgot.
Aug 9, 2009 9:11 pm

[quote=iceco1d]

Let me tone it down a bit. Someone, please kindly explain to me how this strategy has led to the destruction of MPT, AA, EMH, etc.I’m near retirement. I’m putting 40 - 60% of my reitirement assets in a low cost basket of diversified equities. If I’m ultra conservative, or thinking I’m taking a bit too much risk than prudent (but too greedy to avoid it), I systematically buy puts on that basket.Great, this strategy sucked a fatty last year. It’s recovered reasonably thus far. It doesn’t matter BECAUSEwith another 40 - 60% of my money, I’ve invested in…A diversified mix of high quality corporate bonds, government securities, and maybe even some munis. I’ve stuck to high end investment grade stuff, and prudently laddered out my fixed income investments. I haven’t tried to squeeze out extra yield buying junk, or stretching out my maturities (or average durations). I’ve maintained my discipline, and I’ve used the fixed income piece of my portfolio for exactly what it’s intended for…stability. I’ve also kept between 5 and 15% of my portfolio in “cash” and equivilants. CDs. Money markets. Commercial paper. Maybe even some fixed and/or EIAs. In this situation, assuming you’re being “tactical” with your withdrawals for a retireee, you shouldn’t have had to touch a depreciated asset. In fact, at 4% withdrawals, you’d still be years away from taking income from an asset that’s in the red. This doesn’t even consider if you have pensions, social security, purchased a SPIA, or are utilizing living benefits for a piece of your retirement. Nor does it consider if I’ve dedicated a piece of my portfolio (maybe 10%?) to the non-traditional asset classes (futures, real estate, currency, commodities, hedge funds, leveraged ETFs, whatever trips your trigger).So, my question remains…how did this investment strategy end in apolcalypse? Just asking for an explaination from one of the tactical gurus on this site. Or elsewhere, for that matter. I’ve been watching you guys gang up on Ron for a week or two now. I think he & I invest in a similar fashion (although, I’m not sure). I’ve got a bottle of wine, a season of Boston Legal, a laptop, and TIME. Please, edumacate me.

[/quote]



Good post. The “this time is different” will be a forgotten fad 10 years

from now. MPT and AA still and always will make sense.

Aug 9, 2009 11:40 pm

Explain how MPT makes sense - always. Please educate me, as ice said.



First of all - it is a theory.



Second, most assets become correlated during a down market.



Third, why has there been so much historic deviation from the mean? Normally, these are outliers, but when it happens as often as it has - it’s part of the normal distribution, which destroys the basis of the theory.



I don’t think “this time it’s different”. I think “every time it’s different”.



There are a myriad of investment theories and philosophies. MPT and AA are used by us in the investment world so that we can tell clients that because we understand the science of investing, they need us.



Let me tell you a story of a doorknock of an incredibly wealthy prospect when I was a newbie. The guy had about eight million dollars. I got an appointment with him and sat down with him. He proceeded to explain to me how he had acquired eight million dollars.



He used the money he made as a musician (think opera not Windy’s band) to trade during the late nineties.   He even gave me his investment strategy. He asked me what I was going to do to help him manage his money. I told him, “well, that’s great how you got that money. But you know, you really need to buy and hold and diversify. Right now, your money is concentrated in five individual stocks and a TON of cash. Really, you should sell those and let PROFESSIONALS manage your money. Let me take these statements with me and I’ll come up with a plan for you.” His response, "No thank you. I learned everything I needed about how you manage money."



Now, I was a rookie, but I was confident. But this guy had created his wealth by using simple, disciplined investment strategies that had nothing to do with MPT. He was also sixty years old, so he had been around for a little while.



MPT and AA will likely never end in Apocalypse. If it did, all theories would end. MPT is good for one thing - telling people that it’s ok to lose money.



It is extremely difficult to grow wealth by investing using AA and MPT. It just is. The people that have done it have “added more” from the money they generate from their JOB, not their INVESTMENTS.



Wealthy people own individual stocks. Those people also became wealthy because they owned individual stocks.



I think all theories are valid. They just have different functions.

Aug 10, 2009 12:27 am

Uh oh.

Aug 10, 2009 7:45 pm

[quote=iceco1d]

[quote=Moraen]Explain how MPT makes sense - always. Please educate me, as ice said.



First of all - it is a theory.

Indeed it is. And it is a theory that needs to be adapted when being implemented in the “real world.”



Agree. But the “real world” that we live in is populated by irrational people. MPT is like most economic theories - it assumes people are rational.



Second, most assets become correlated during a down market.

I do not believe this to be true, and I do not believe there is much evidence to support this either.Although my rant was a bit “under the influence,” I still believe most of what I said to be true. I think some of the points I touched on in my rant, are points that don’t get considered by most FAs. You have to consider the environment that most fund managers operate in; they have goals, benchmarks, targets, etc., to determine how much money they make, and even IF they keep their job. You have a lot of funds doing things are really not that prudent, just so they can tout their numbers during the good years. I don’t understand, how anyone can look at the assets that completely blew up last year, and find a way to blame it on MPT.



We’ll have to disagree on this then. You can’t blame MPT for assets themselves getting blown up, but you can blame it for why it was how people’s portfolios blew up. Agree about fund managers. Definitely is not their fault. They usually have to follow prospectuses. I believe there is plenty of evidence to support that most assets become MORE closely correlated - not perfectly correlated for sure. My bad.



Third, why has there been so much historic deviation from the mean? Normally, these are outliers, but when it happens as often as it has - it’s part of the normal distribution, which destroys the basis of the theory.

You’re going to have to elaborate on this for me. How often is “often?” Maybe I’m arguing a different point here. I’m talking the whole ball of wax. The whole idea of conventional thinking about “diversify, allocate assets, back off of equities as you get older, etc.” and the allegation that it’s a bogus strategy.



Statistically speaking, outliers happen almost never. The S &P 500, according to MPT, should never have lost more than 12.7% in one month, EVER. However, it has happened either eleven or twelve times (I can’t remember which). This puts it on the normal distribution curve, which invalidates the theory.



I don’t think “this time it’s different”. I think “every time it’s different”.



I agree. There are a myriad of investment theories and philosophies. MPT and AA are used by us in the investment world so that we can tell clients that because we understand the science of investing, they need us.



I will agree to the extent that many FAs tout “MPT” for various reasons, and have no clue what it’s really all about…nor do a lot of FAs have any idea what they are selling, or why. Most FAs get their investment strategies from other salesmen - either fellow FAs, or wholesalers. All the same.Let me tell you a story of a doorknock of an incredibly wealthy prospect when I was a newbie. The guy had about eight million dollars. I got an appointment with him and sat down with him. He proceeded to explain to me how he had acquired eight million dollars.



He used the money he made as a musician (think opera not Windy’s band) to trade during the late nineties.   He even gave me his investment strategy. He asked me what I was going to do to help him manage his money. I told him, “well, that’s great how you got that money. But you know, you really need to buy and hold and diversify. Right now, your money is concentrated in five individual stocks and a TON of cash. Really, you should sell those and let PROFESSIONALS manage your money. Let me take these statements with me and I’ll come up with a plan for you.” His response, "No thank you. I learned everything I needed about how you manage money."



Now, I was a rookie, but I was confident. But this guy had created his wealth by using simple, disciplined investment strategies that had nothing to do with MPT. He was also sixty years old, so he had been around for a little while.



I believe that 100%. Lets shift gears here for a second, and focus on the Efficient Markets Hypothesis, and how that may have applied to this particular client. 15 years ago, 25 years ago, etc., investing was a whole different ball game. You could “pick stocks.” You could “identify trends.” You could do lots of things, because the flow of info, and the “market” reacted to such info at a much slower pace. It had to. The technology didn’t exist to uncover, or disseminate that information at the pace that it can today. There was also the consideration that the shear number of people participating in the market actively, was much MUCH lower. This is a trend that is going to continue. The more and more efficient markets become, the less and less effective ANY type of active management will be, and the MORE resources it will take to uncover and exploit inefficiencies.Your 60 year old prospect, made sht-tons of money in the stock market during a time when it was simply easier to do. Your prospect probably also had some luck on his side.MPT and AA will likely never end in Apocalypse. If it did, all theories would end. MPT is good for one thing - telling people that it’s ok to lose money.



If you want to be an investor, you have to be OK with losing money on occassion. Investments are for the long term. Not just securities investments, ANY investment. When you invest in a new office, you are expecting it to be a long term payoff.I have a friend that did some auditting for MER during the BofA merger. He said it was unreal how cluttered and ambiguous their books were. He said it was basically an impossible task to audit them. Now, you’ve made mention SEVERAL times that you do your own fundamental analysis on individual securities…if you have major accounting firms that can’t make heads or tails of MER’s books, how on Earth do you have any chance? I mean, YOU can only work with numbers that someone ELSE is giving you anyway. How many times have we seen books cooked, ridiculous errors, etc.? How can you be effective using numbers like that? Heck, look at Bear Stearns? They went into the damn weekend telling the WORLD they were fine. What info could you have used to contradict that statement? How about Enron?There are people as smart as, or smarter than, you and I that do nothing but look at these firms books all day long, and STILL manage to get caught with their pants down.I want to know, what information, what algorithms, what ANYTHING are you, and your 60 year old UHNW prospect using these days?It is extremely difficult to grow wealth by investing using AA and MPT. It just is. The people that have done it have “added more” from the money they generate from their JOB, not their INVESTMENTS.

I strongly disagree with this. By following a disciplined investment strategy, using MPT and AA, you can indeed grow your wealth very effectively. Here is the difference: your prospect INTENDED to trade himself to ONE of TWO places - RICH or BROKE. It just so happens that he ended up rich. There are just as many people like him, if not MORE, that ended up BROKE. That was HIS objective.To Joe Smith, with a wife, and a 401K, and a Roth IRA, and a regular old job, they CAN’T ACCEPT BROKE. They need to grow their wealth over time. They want to retire someday. They want to leave something for their kids. They don’t want to trade themselves either rich or broke - they’d like rich, but can’t afford to risk being broke chasing it.Yes, diversification effectively kills your chances of becoming instantly wealthy a la “I put my entire savings account in Cisco in 1990 and sold it in 1999!!!” But for most people, that’s OK…because they want to avoid "I quit my job to be a trader…but I got burned in Enron, Puma Technologies, eToys.com, Bear Stearns, yada yada yada, and now I’ve lost my house!"

Wealthy people own individual stocks. Those people also became wealthy because they owned individual stocks.

Total bullsht (pardon my french). Wealthy people own stocks, yes. But they also own ETFs, UITs, individual munis, real estate, etc. Some of them even own mutual funds and annuities. HOWEVER - MOST wealthy people didn’t become wealthy because they “bought individual stocks” - most wealthy people became wealthy because they have a great job, or they started a great business, or they inherited a sht-ton of money, or they had a house in Ocean City on the boardwalk before it became a tourist haven. Most wealthy people got that way completely independent of the stock market. Besides, the number 1 goal of a HWN person is simply to STAY A HNW PERSON. They don’t NEED equities, because they don’t need that much growth. They need to keep pace with, and slightly stay ahead of, inflation, and they need to do it in a TAX-EFFICIENT MANNER.Wealthy people don’t buy as many “packaged products” (like mutual funds) because they aren’t cost efficient for the amount of money they are investing. They don’t NEED to pay Vanguard 15 bps a year to assemble an S&P 500 index fund - if they want exposure to the S&P, they can just BUY THE STOCKS for less cost on a commission basis. It’s about cost for the UHNW people (with the packaged products). Mutual funds were invented because Joe Blow can’t get exposure to what he needs $50 at a clip. It’s different when you have $5MM. I think all theories are valid. They just have different functions. [/quote]Really though, Ron makes a few good points. Where was everyone when the Dow was @ 6.6K? Why weren’t all of the quasi-analysts saying GET IN NOW!!! Why not @ 7.5K? Or 8K? Why weren’t they on here telling us @ Dow 14 or 13K to GET THE FCK OUT!More importantly, as has been stated before…if you are THAT SURE, why do you have clients? If you were that good, and that consistently good, with the volatility we’ve had this year, u hopefully made yourself a few million dollars, at least.There just seems to be a complete lack of perspective with these discussions. Perspective of what our clients need us to do for them, and what our capabilities are. I’d like to post more, but I’m out of here for the week (will probably be on briefly a few times, but that’s it). Really though, all of these theories, like any theory, don’t apply PERFECTLY to the real world, but they do indeed apply if you understand them. There is too much cliche talk of how all of these concepts are “dead” and “wrong” - it’s bull. [/quote]





OK, it’s hard for my browser to read this when I quote people. I think it is bullsh!t that people who invest in individual stocks go Broke more often than not. That’s what we tell ourselves. He was just one example.



The great thing about individual stocks is that you don’t really care what the dow is doing. At least I don’t. You can have a number of disciplined strategies that allow you to receive a return that is better than the market. Does that mean you’ll make a million dollars? Of course not. It may take a few months (or even a year) to reach certain price targets.



This means that I can’t “retire” in a few months. I don’t have predictive powers. As for valuing securities. I have a theory (yes, a theory) that I have tested on a few investment banks. IB’s are anchored to higher prices (just like people) and so are analysts. If you look at the Level II Equities and Fixed Income part of the CFA curriculum, it is obvious that a lot of analysts are using bad processes on good intel.



Going back to your point about numbers being either cooked, errors made - you are 100% correct. This requires a more conservative approach to analysis and pricing. I don’t have it to an exact science, but a conservative approach works best.



I agree that the mass affluent investors simply need some guidance in retirement. For those clients, I am happy to refer them to you and Ron (I promise). For those who like to generate wealth by investing, I believe I can help. Up market, down market, sideways market. Will they be receiving 500% returns (ice - you and I have spoken about this - even I believe it is unrealistic)? Unlikely. But can you take advantage of analysts bad pricing? I believe so.



Also, as for the markets becoming more and more efficient - big surprise here - I don’t believe in strong or semi-strong EMH. That’s a whole different topic.



I also agree that this particular prospect had a lot of luck on his side. But I think it is easy to dismiss his success as “pure luck”, when I have seen it time and again. I had another prospect who made his first million picking stocks from just picking ticker symbols in the paper - that was luck. I have seen people make money off of individual stocks too often to dismiss it as luck.



Anyway, I simply think there are other ways. The point of science is to question everything. When we think we have all of the answers, we are finished. As investors, as people. You name it.

Aug 10, 2009 7:52 pm
Moraen:

[quote=iceco1d]
[quote=Moraen]Explain how MPT makes sense - always. Please educate me, as ice said.

First of all - it is a theory.
Indeed it is.  And it is a theory that needs to be adapted when being implemented in the “real world.” 

Agree. But the “real world” that we live in is populated by irrational people. MPT is like most economic theories - it assumes people are rational.

Second, most assets become correlated during a down market.
I do not believe this to be true, and I do not believe there is much evidence to support this either.Although my rant was a bit “under the influence,” I still believe most of what I said to be true.  I think some of the points I touched on in my rant, are points that don’t get considered by most FAs.  You have to consider the environment that most fund managers operate in; they have goals, benchmarks, targets, etc., to determine how much money they make, and even IF they keep their job.  You have a lot of funds doing things are really not that prudent, just so they can tout their numbers during the good years.  I don’t understand, how anyone can look at the assets that completely blew up last year, and find a way to blame it on MPT. 

We’ll have to disagree on this then. You can’t blame MPT for assets themselves getting blown up, but you can blame it for why it was how people’s portfolios blew up. Agree about fund managers. Definitely is not their fault. They usually have to follow prospectuses. I believe there is plenty of evidence to support that most assets become MORE closely correlated - not perfectly correlated for sure. My bad.

Third, why has there been so much historic deviation from the mean? Normally, these are outliers, but when it happens as often as it has - it’s part of the normal distribution, which destroys the basis of the theory.
You’re going to have to elaborate on this for me.  How often is “often?”  Maybe I’m arguing a different point here.  I’m talking the whole ball of wax.  The whole idea of conventional thinking about “diversify, allocate assets, back off of equities as you get older, etc.” and the allegation that it’s a bogus strategy. 

Statistically speaking, outliers happen almost never. The S &P 500, according to MPT, should never have lost more than 12.7% in one month, EVER. However, it has happened either eleven or twelve times (I can’t remember which). This puts it on the normal distribution curve, which invalidates the theory.

I don’t think “this time it’s different”. I think “every time it’s different”.

I agree. There are a myriad of investment theories and philosophies. MPT and AA are used by us in the investment world so that we can tell clients that because we understand the science of investing, they need us.

I will agree to the extent that many FAs tout “MPT” for various reasons, and have no clue what it’s really all about…nor do a lot of FAs have any idea what they are selling, or why.  Most FAs get their investment strategies from other salesmen - either fellow FAs, or wholesalers.  All the same.Let me tell you a story of a doorknock of an incredibly wealthy prospect when I was a newbie. The guy had about eight million dollars. I got an appointment with him and sat down with him. He proceeded to explain to me how he had acquired eight million dollars.

He used the money he made as a musician (think opera not Windy’s band) to trade during the late nineties.   He even gave me his investment strategy. He asked me what I was going to do to help him manage his money. I told him, “well, that’s great how you got that money. But you know, you really need to buy and hold and diversify. Right now, your money is concentrated in five individual stocks and a TON of cash. Really, you should sell those and let PROFESSIONALS manage your money. Let me take these statements with me and I’ll come up with a plan for you.” His response, “No thank you. I learned everything I needed about how you manage money.”

Now, I was a rookie, but I was confident. But this guy had created his wealth by using simple, disciplined investment strategies that had nothing to do with MPT. He was also sixty years old, so he had been around for a little while.

I believe that 100%.  Lets shift gears here for a second, and focus on the Efficient Markets Hypothesis, and how that may have applied to this particular client.  15 years ago, 25 years ago, etc., investing was a whole different ball game.  You could “pick stocks.”  You could “identify trends.”  You could do lots of things, because the flow of info, and the “market” reacted to such info at a much slower pace.  It had to.  The technology didn’t exist to uncover, or disseminate that information at the pace that it can today.  There was also the consideration that the shear number of people participating in the market actively, was much MUCH lower.  This is a trend that is going to continue.  The more and more efficient markets become, the less and less effective ANY type of active management will be, and the MORE resources it will take to uncover and exploit inefficiencies.Your 60 year old prospect, made sht-tons of money in the stock market during a time when it was simply easier to do.  Your prospect probably also had some luck on his side.MPT and AA will likely never end in Apocalypse. If it did, all theories would end. MPT is good for one thing - telling people that it’s ok to lose money.

If you want to be an investor, you have to be OK with losing money on occassion.  Investments are for the long term.  Not just securities investments, ANY investment.  When you invest in a new office, you are expecting it to be a long term payoff.I have a friend that did some auditting for MER during the BofA merger.  He said it was unreal how cluttered and ambiguous their books were.  He said it was basically an impossible task to audit them.  Now, you’ve made mention SEVERAL times that you do your own fundamental analysis on individual securities…if you have major accounting firms that can’t make heads or tails of MER’s books, how on Earth do you have any chance?  I mean, YOU can only work with numbers that someone ELSE is giving you anyway.  How many times have we seen books cooked, ridiculous errors, etc.?  How can you be effective using numbers like that?  Heck, look at Bear Stearns?  They went into the damn weekend telling the WORLD they were fine.  What info could you have used to contradict that statement?  How about Enron?There are people as smart as, or smarter than, you and I that do nothing but look at these firms books all day long, and STILL manage to get caught with their pants down.I want to know, what information, what algorithms, what ANYTHING are you, and your 60 year old UHNW prospect using these days?It is extremely difficult to grow wealth by investing using AA and MPT. It just is. The people that have done it have “added more” from the money they generate from their JOB, not their INVESTMENTS.
I strongly disagree with this.  By following a disciplined investment strategy, using MPT and AA, you can indeed grow your wealth very effectively.  Here is the difference:  your prospect INTENDED to trade himself to ONE of TWO places - RICH or BROKE.  It just so happens that he ended up rich.  There are just as many people like him, if not MORE, that ended up BROKE.  That was HIS objective.To Joe Smith, with a wife, and a 401K, and a Roth IRA, and a regular old job, they CAN’T ACCEPT BROKE.  They need to grow their wealth over time.  They want to retire someday.  They want to leave something for their kids.  They don’t want to trade themselves either rich or broke - they’d like rich, but can’t afford to risk being broke chasing it.Yes, diversification effectively kills your chances of becoming instantly wealthy a la “I put my entire savings account in Cisco in 1990 and sold it in 1999!!!”  But for most people, that’s OK…because they want to avoid “I quit my job to be a trader…but I got burned in Enron, Puma Technologies, eToys.com, Bear Stearns, yada yada yada, and now I’ve lost my house!”
Wealthy people own individual stocks. Those people also became wealthy because they owned individual stocks.
Total bullsh
t (pardon my french).  Wealthy people own stocks, yes.  But they also own ETFs, UITs, individual munis, real estate, etc.  Some of them even own mutual funds and annuities.  HOWEVER - MOST wealthy people didn’t become wealthy because they “bought individual stocks” - most wealthy people became wealthy because they have a great job, or they started a great business, or they inherited a sht-ton of money, or they had a house in Ocean City on the boardwalk before it became a tourist haven.  Most wealthy people got that way completely independent of the stock market.   Besides, the number 1 goal of a HWN person is simply to STAY A HNW PERSON.  They don’t NEED equities, because they don’t need that much growth.  They need to keep pace with, and slightly stay ahead of, inflation, and they need to do it in a TAX-EFFICIENT MANNER.Wealthy people don’t buy as many “packaged products” (like mutual funds) because they aren’t cost efficient for the amount of money they are investing.  They don’t NEED to pay Vanguard 15 bps a year to assemble an S&P 500 index fund - if they want exposure to the S&P, they can just BUY THE STOCKS for less cost on a commission basis.  It’s about cost for the UHNW people (with the packaged products).  Mutual funds were invented because Joe Blow can’t get exposure to what he needs $50 at a clip.  It’s different when you have $5MM.  I think all theories are valid. They just have different functions. [/quote]Really though, Ron makes a few good points.  Where was everyone when the Dow was @ 6.6K?  Why weren’t all of the quasi-analysts saying GET IN NOW!!!  Why not @ 7.5K?  Or 8K?  Why weren’t they on here telling us @ Dow 14 or 13K to GET THE FCK OUT!More importantly, as has been stated before…if you are THAT SURE, why do you have clients?  If you were that good, and that consistently good, with the volatility we’ve had this year, u hopefully made yourself a few million dollars, at least.There just seems to be a complete lack of perspective with these discussions.  Perspective of what our clients need us to do for them, and what our capabilities are.  I’d like to post more, but I’m out of here for the week (will probably be on briefly a few times, but that’s it).  Really though, all of these theories, like any theory, don’t apply PERFECTLY to the real world, but they do indeed apply if you understand them.  There is too much cliche talk of how all of these concepts are “dead” and “wrong” - it’s bull.  [/quote]


OK, it’s hard for my browser to read this when I quote people. I think it is bullsh!t that people who invest in individual stocks go Broke more often than not. That’s what we tell ourselves. He was just one example.

The great thing about individual stocks is that you don’t really care what the dow is doing. At least I don’t. You can have a number of disciplined strategies that allow you to receive a return that is better than the market. Does that mean you’ll make a million dollars? Of course not. It may take a few months (or even a year) to reach certain price targets.

This means that I can’t “retire” in a few months. I don’t have predictive powers. As for valuing securities. I have a theory (yes, a theory) that I have tested on a few investment banks. IB’s are anchored to higher prices (just like people) and so are analysts. If you look at the Level II Equities and Fixed Income part of the CFA curriculum, it is obvious that a lot of analysts are using bad processes on good intel.

Going back to your point about numbers being either cooked, errors made - you are 100% correct. This requires a more conservative approach to analysis and pricing. I don’t have it to an exact science, but a conservative approach works best.

I agree that the mass affluent investors simply need some guidance in retirement. For those clients, I am happy to refer them to you and Ron (I promise). For those who like to generate wealth by investing, I believe I can help. Up market, down market, sideways market. Will they be receiving 500% returns (ice - you and I have spoken about this - even I believe it is unrealistic)? Unlikely. But can you take advantage of analysts bad pricing? I believe so.

Also, as for the markets becoming more and more efficient - big surprise here - I don’t believe in strong or semi-strong EMH. That’s a whole different topic.

I also agree that this particular prospect had a lot of luck on his side. But I think it is easy to dismiss his success as “pure luck”, when I have seen it time and again. I had another prospect who made his first million picking stocks from just picking ticker symbols in the paper - that was luck. I have seen people make money off of individual stocks too often to dismiss it as luck.

Anyway, I simply think there are other ways. The point of science is to question everything. When we think we have all of the answers, we are finished. As investors, as people. You name it.

  When I'm done with this thread I'm moving to "War and Peace".
Aug 10, 2009 8:09 pm

this is nothing more than a -tradeable bear market rall.

Aug 10, 2009 8:42 pm

If it’s a tradable bear market rally, the question that has been asked multiple times is when to sell? Should you have sold in June? s&p 900? 1000? 1100?



Maybe the real quesion is whether you have even bought back in and participated in this “tradeable bear market rally?” If not, for your client’s sake, I hope you do get the dip so your pride will be enough intact to put your clients back in.



Aug 10, 2009 8:47 pm
Gaddock:

[quote=Ron 14]It is totally Monday Morning QB with these guru’s. Look at my topic about 200k in new money a few months back. Dow was at 7k and not a single one of these guru’s would go 100% equities. They have given up on asset allocation, rebalancing, diversification, and the power of equities. They are chanting their death mantra, “This time is different.” !!!

  When you say "these guru's" are you speaking of people who don't build their entire book on asset allocation via mutual funds or some specific forum members?[/quote]   Neither. I am talking about market timers. And those people know who they are. You aren't one of them.
Aug 10, 2009 9:01 pm

Holy guacamole.  I was lost somewhere around the middle of page 2.

  I didn't have the patience to read the whole thing, so I'm not even sure where the conversation went, but I DID get the part about correlation falling apart during bear markets.  Well, here is proof.  I go to this website a lot for cool charts.  This one shows correlation in a bull market and bear market.  You have to toggle between the two time periods at the top.   http://dshort.com/charts/diversification.html?diversification-success   It's a cool chart that basically shows that ALL equity markets tanked in lock-step during this bear.  Although it does make a good case for making sure you own bonds if you are a pure buy-and-hold guy.
Aug 10, 2009 9:07 pm

Nice B. I saw a few bond funds get beaten up too though.



In fairness to the length of the threads, I started this morning and then finished after being at a conference all day.

Aug 10, 2009 9:23 pm
Incredible Hulk:

If it’s a tradable bear market rally, the question that has been asked multiple times is when to sell? Should you have sold in June? s&p 900? 1000? 1100?

Maybe the real quesion is whether you have even bought back in and participated in this “tradeable bear market rally?” If not, for your client’s sake, I hope you do get the dip so your pride will be enough intact to put your clients back in.

  Hey Hulk I could feed you trades all day long. My positions are market neutral for the most part. I would give you the symbol but FINRA could construe it as advice. If you think about it you should be able to figure it out who this trade is on.   Short sold ACME (as in Bugs Bunny's ACME) for $29.47   Bought the same amount of Calls for $2.45 35 strike.   Sold the same amount of Puts for $9.70, 35 strike.   When you smash them together your gain is $1.72 for a return of 4.9%. Trade ends on the third Friday of September I think the 15th.   NO MATTER WHERE THE STOCK GOES THE GAIN IS LOCKED IN AND PAID IN ADVANCE.   Another to think about is once you've averaged down a loosing position by selling puts and getting assigned. Once the equity is above the basis put (no pun intended) in a stop sell a put lower than the stop and sell calls on the amount of shares needed to average down. Any way the market goes you win. On expiration use a following stop and write the options again.   Market neutrality is the way to go IMHO.  
Aug 11, 2009 7:24 pm

[quote=iceco1d]

  Dude,

WTF?  Can't you see that we are in a 'secular bear?' I mean, it's SO clear.              Perfect.
Aug 11, 2009 9:47 pm

If your buy and hold portfolio with a textbook allocation model with the oh so nice three layerers of fees is flat after a decade I would say that’s pretty good indication.

Aug 12, 2009 2:03 pm

I’m not sure who this comment is directed to, but it is an incorrect statement. The “textbook” middle of the road American funds portfolio is up roughly 45% in the last 10 years. Are you suggesting that the “testbook” allocation is 100% S&P 500? I can’t argue with your previously mentioned trades, but you are sorely misinformed on “textbook” allocation model returns.

Aug 12, 2009 3:55 pm
Incredible Hulk:

I’m not sure who this comment is directed to, but it is an incorrect statement. The “textbook” middle of the road American funds portfolio is up roughly 45% in the last 10 years. Are you suggesting that the “testbook” allocation is 100% S&P 500? I can’t argue with your previously mentioned trades, but you are sorely misinformed on “textbook” allocation model returns.

  Would you agree America Funds balanced fund is a fair example of a middle of the road textbook allocation model?   I would.   https://www.americanfunds.com/funds/details.htm?fundGroupNumber=11&fundClassNumber=0   After a decade of fees and that nice up front load they've gained a whopping...   Drum role please...   (((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((( 3.69% ))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))   x 12 = 45% give or take.   Wow!! I stand corrected. That allocation stuff really works!   What if you subtracted inflation?   hmmmmmmm   Given that $100 in 1999 would be $127.49 according to the CPI (I think those figures are fudged so the Feds don't have to increase SS more than they have) or just over 27%.   So;   45% - 27 = 18 for a annual return of (not even worth a drum roll) 1.8%   Imagine a C share after inflation OUCH!!!   Yeah  those models and academia have really knocked it out of the park.    
Aug 12, 2009 4:09 pm
Gaddock:

[quote=Incredible Hulk]I’m not sure who this comment is directed to, but it is an incorrect statement. The “textbook” middle of the road American funds portfolio is up roughly 45% in the last 10 years. Are you suggesting that the “testbook” allocation is 100% S&P 500? I can’t argue with your previously mentioned trades, but you are sorely misinformed on “textbook” allocation model returns.

  Would you agree America Funds balanced fund is a fair example of a middle of the road textbook allocation model?   I would.   https://www.americanfunds.com/funds/details.htm?fundGroupNumber=11&fundClassNumber=0   After a decade of fees and that nice up front load they've gained a whopping...   Drum role please...   (((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((( 3.69% ))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))   x 12 = 45% give or take.   Wow!! I stand corrected. That allocation stuff really works!   What if you subtracted inflation?   hmmmmmmm    [/quote]   Yes...that's correct, the performance (or lack thereof) of ONE below average fund proves that MPT and/or asset allocation cannot work.  Well done!   I'm sure I can easily find one advisor using technical analysis and options who lost money over 20 years...I guess that means that the whole theory is useless......really?        
Aug 12, 2009 4:11 pm
Hey Kool-Aid:

[quote=Gaddock][quote=Incredible Hulk]I’m not sure who this comment is directed to, but it is an incorrect statement. The “textbook” middle of the road American funds portfolio is up roughly 45% in the last 10 years. Are you suggesting that the “testbook” allocation is 100% S&P 500? I can’t argue with your previously mentioned trades, but you are sorely misinformed on “textbook” allocation model returns.

  Would you agree America Funds balanced fund is a fair example of a middle of the road textbook allocation model?   I would.   https://www.americanfunds.com/funds/details.htm?fundGroupNumber=11&fundClassNumber=0   After a decade of fees and that nice up front load they've gained a whopping...   Drum role please...   (((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((( 3.69% ))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))   x 12 = 45% give or take.   Wow!! I stand corrected. That allocation stuff really works!   What if you subtracted inflation?   hmmmmmmm    [/quote]   Yes...that's correct, the performance (or lack thereof) of ONE below average fund proves that MPT and/or asset allocation cannot work.  Well done!   I'm sure I can easily find one advisor using technical analysis and options who lost money over 20 years...I guess that means that the whole theory is useless......really?  [/quote]   That's why I only buy CD's for my clients.
Aug 12, 2009 4:18 pm
Hey Kool-Aid:

[quote=Gaddock][quote=Incredible Hulk]I’m not sure who this comment is directed to, but it is an incorrect statement. The “textbook” middle of the road American funds portfolio is up roughly 45% in the last 10 years. Are you suggesting that the “testbook” allocation is 100% S&P 500? I can’t argue with your previously mentioned trades, but you are sorely misinformed on “textbook” allocation model returns.

  Would you agree America Funds balanced fund is a fair example of a middle of the road textbook allocation model?   I would.   https://www.americanfunds.com/funds/details.htm?fundGroupNumber=11&fundClassNumber=0   After a decade of fees and that nice up front load they've gained a whopping...   Drum role please...   (((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((( 3.69% ))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))   x 12 = 45% give or take.   Wow!! I stand corrected. That allocation stuff really works!   What if you subtracted inflation?   hmmmmmmm    [/quote]   Yes...that's correct, the performance (or lack thereof) of ONE below average fund proves that MPT and/or asset allocation cannot work.  Well done!   I'm sure I can easily find one advisor using technical analysis and options who lost money over 20 years...I guess that means that the whole theory is useless......really?[/quote]   Tell me please what "theory" you are referring too? Who said "useless" not me Buckwheat. We were talking about a secular Bear market.
Aug 12, 2009 4:24 pm

Well you are saying asset allocation doesn’t work because it hasn’t for the last 10 years, arent you? That would make is useless, in your mind.

Aug 12, 2009 4:34 pm
Ron 14:

Well you are saying asset allocation doesn’t work because it hasn’t for the last 10 years, arent you? That would make is useless, in your mind.

  Girls Girls .... chill.   I said the fact that it didn't work for the last decade is a fair indication that we are in a secular BEAR MARKET.   Jeees even the very thought makes you all want to burn a which.
Aug 12, 2009 4:37 pm
Ron 14:

Well you are saying asset allocation doesn’t work because it hasn’t for the last 10 years, arent you? That would make is useless, in your mind.

  RON!!!! OH NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!   "because it hasn't for the last 10 years"   YOU SAID IT NOT ME!!!!  
Aug 12, 2009 4:38 pm

I couldn't care less if we are or we aren't. Ok, great, we are in a secular bear market and it started 10 years ago. If you don't see it coming before hand, which nobody did, it doesn't matter much.  Either way it doesn't mean asset allocation is dead.

Aug 12, 2009 4:39 pm

Nice try, but I was reframing your comments in question form, not making a statement.

Aug 12, 2009 4:42 pm

[quote=Ron 14]

I couldn't care less if we are or we aren't. Ok, great, we are in a secular bear market and it started 10 years ago. If you don't see it coming before hand, which nobody did, it doesn't matter much.  Either way it doesn't mean asset allocation is dead.

[/quote]   Show me where I said that. You're the one saying it again and again.
Aug 12, 2009 4:57 pm

Unreal! You know I don’t think its dead. Do you believe in it or not ? I am making the assumption that you believe it is now an inept strategy.

Aug 12, 2009 5:02 pm

Ron ron ron,

  You do know what they say about an 'assumption' don't you?   IMHO It's not the strategy that's "inept" 
Aug 12, 2009 5:25 pm

[quote=Ron 14]

I couldn't care less if we are or we aren't. Ok, great, we are in a secular bear market and it started 10 years ago. If you don't see it coming before hand, which nobody did, it doesn't matter much.  Either way it doesn't mean asset allocation is dead.

[/quote]   I would disagree that that nobody saw it coming (either the 2000 cycle or the 2007/8 cycle).  First, I am not saying I saw it - I was not even in the biz in 2000.  But there are some pretty standard technical strategies (the simplest being PE) that stand out.  Even if you tried to ride the last Bull market to the very bitter end, and lost some, you could have either (a) seen the stratospheric PE's, which were well documented - and I remember being an investor and being concerned, or (b) followed moving average theory and moved out as the market fell in 2000, thus avoiding the rest of the 3-year calamity (well 2.5 years or whatever).  There are other well-documented strategies (i.e. relative strength) as well, that I am not as familiar with.   My opinion is that asset allocation/MPT smooths out the returns during cyclical (bull and bear)markets, but does absolutely nothing to protect in a secular bear market.  The key is not having a crystal ball, but rather reacting to what is known.   For kicks, you should read Unexpected Returns from Crestmont Research (Ed Easterling).  Make sure you get the updated version.  I read the older version, and what was interesting is that they predicted what was coming.  Not that you would necessarily make adjustments to the degree that they do, but it teaches you something about taking profits and taking some money off the table when appropriate.
Aug 12, 2009 5:48 pm

I know a guy who is a big relative strength dude. I think he’s full of crap. But it could just be him.



I agree asset allocation isn’t dead. Neither is MPT. But they should be dead as the primary theories people use. Once again, if you believe everything you read and there is nothing to add, you are finished in any business.



There are plenty of valid strategies.



MPT is the easy way out for advisors. I’m just not sure what value is added. If it is, “I keep them from making mistakes”, then you are a financial psychologist, not a financial advisor.



All of you talking about being in cash and “when to go to cash”. If you are looking at valuations, you will naturally move to cash when they become to high.

Aug 12, 2009 6:30 pm

[quote=Vin Diesel]

    this is nothing more than a -tradeable bear market rall.     [/quote]       perfect.   (Last time brokers had conversations like this........ 1982)  
Aug 12, 2009 6:31 pm
B24:
My opinion is that asset allocation/MPT smooths out the returns during cyclical (bull and bear)markets, but does absolutely nothing to protect in a secular bear market. The key is not having a crystal ball, but rather reacting to what is known.


I shall humbly disagree with this paragrah. AA does a tremendous job protecting in just about any market, excluding the last 18 months. To discard a well worn strategy on a once in an investment lifetime event like last year is very short sighted.

In a secular bear market you still have rallies up and down. If your asset allocation would suggest 35% fixed & 10% cash then regular rebalancing to that tune would have provided substantial protection in any given decade that doesn't include last year. Even including last year, you were protected to an extent against the 50%+ market decline.

Anyone basing their advice for retirees, pre-retirees on market performance over the last 24 months is as narrow minded as the advisor in '99 basing their advice on the then previous 24 month period..
Aug 12, 2009 6:34 pm

[quote=Gaddock]

Would you agree America Funds balanced fund is a fair example of a middle of the road textbook allocation model?





[[/quote]



No, I wouldn’t. It is a fair example of a balanced mutual fund, not a textbook allocation model.
Aug 12, 2009 6:38 pm

“AA does a tremendous job protecting in just about any market”… WHAT?

That goes along with “getting a little bit pregnant” and "I am always right sometimes"



I agree w/B24 that there are indicators that saw the decline coming(simple ones too, like SMA)



I also agree w/ Morean… if you are just keeping them from making mistakes you aren’t an advisor… You are a the equivalent of the Vanguard help desk(not bad people, but not advisors).



Incredible, for retirees that you help into the crash, you have to be narrow minded because 40% of their equity got wiped out last year, and now where is the income going to come from.

Aug 12, 2009 6:40 pm

[quote=Incredible Hulk] [quote=Gaddock]

Would you agree America Funds balanced fund is a fair example of a middle of the road textbook allocation model?
 

[ [/quote]

No, I wouldn't. It is a fair example of a balanced mutual fund, not a textbook allocation model.[/quote]   What America Funds were you talking about?  
Aug 12, 2009 6:47 pm
Squash1:

“AA does a tremendous job protecting in just about any market”… WHAT?
That goes along with “getting a little bit pregnant” and “I am always right sometimes”

I agree w/B24 that there are indicators that saw the decline coming(simple ones too, like SMA)

I also agree w/ Morean… if you are just keeping them from making mistakes you aren’t an advisor.. You are a the equivalent of the Vanguard help desk(not bad people, but not advisors).

Incredible, for retirees that you help into the crash, you have to be narrow minded because 40% of their equity got wiped out last year, and now where is the income going to come from.

  Seeing that a majority of investors underperform their own investments (DALBAR Study of investor behavior) I would say if you can keep them from making mistakes and that is all you do you are a great advisor.  
Aug 12, 2009 6:47 pm
Gaddock:

[quote=Incredible Hulk]I’m not sure who this comment is directed to, but it is an incorrect statement. The “textbook” middle of the road American funds portfolio is up roughly 45% in the last 10 years. Are you suggesting that the “testbook” allocation is 100% S&P 500? I can’t argue with your previously mentioned trades, but you are sorely misinformed on “textbook” allocation model returns.



Would you agree America Funds balanced fund is a fair example of a middle of the road textbook allocation model?



I would.



https://www.americanfunds.com/funds/details.htm?fundGroupNumber=11&fundClassNumber=0



After a decade of fees and that nice up front load they’ve gained a whopping…



Drum role please…



(((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((( 3.69% ))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))



x 12 = 45% give or take.



Wow!! I stand corrected. That allocation stuff really works!



What if you subtracted inflation?



hmmmmmmm



Given that $100 in 1999 would be $127.49 according to the CPI (I think those figures are fudged so the Feds don’t have to increase SS more than they have) or just over 27%.



So;



45% - 27 = 18 for a annual return of (not even worth a drum roll) 1.8%



Imagine a C share after inflation OUCH!!!



Yeah those models and academia have really knocked it out of the park.



[/quote]



[quote=Gaddock] If your buy and hold portfolio with a textbook allocation model with the oh so nice three layerers of fees is flat after a decade I would say that’s pretty good indication.[/quote]





Gaddock -



Your original post stated that the “textbook” allocation was flat after a decade. You chose an average balanced mutual fund that was up 45% and used it as an example of “flatness”. I don’t think 45% is correctly described as flat. Using a “textbook” allocation would involve systematic rebalancing. Pulling from equities as we approached the top and adding to them on the way down. Obviously not hitting the top or bottom, but certainly enhancing returns and smoothing out some of the volatility.



I can’t decide if you are arguing for argument’s sake or are so blinded by the last 2 years that you’ve lost your “common” sense - as in advisor’s sense. Cherry picking the worst decade and basing your investment philosophy on that is very short sighted. Do your clients only plan on living for the next ten years and you do you anticipate the next ten years to repeat the previous ten?
Aug 12, 2009 6:51 pm

[quote=Incredible Hulk]



[quote=Gaddock] If your buy and hold portfolio with a textbook allocation model with the oh so nice three layerers of fees is flat after a decade I would say that’s pretty good indication.[/quote]





Gaddock -



Your original post stated that the “textbook” allocation was flat after a decade. You chose an average balanced mutual fund that was up 45% and used it as an example of “flatness”. I don’t think 45% is correctly described as flat. Using a “textbook” allocation would involve systematic rebalancing. Pulling from equities as we approached the top and adding to them on the way down. Obviously not hitting the top or bottom, but certainly enhancing returns and smoothing out some of the volatility.



I can’t decide if you are arguing for argument’s sake or are so blinded by the last 2 years that you’ve lost your “common” sense - as in advisor’s sense. Cherry picking the worst decade as basing your investment philosophy on that is very short sighted.[/quote]



So wait now you are rebalancing at the top and the bottom? What happened to text book allocation, rebalance quarterly or some other imopportune time.



No you want to compare rebalancing at the highs and lows…aren’t you making the other side’s point?

Aug 12, 2009 6:59 pm

[quote=Squash1]



So wait now you are rebalancing at the top and the bottom? What happened to text book allocation, rebalance quarterly or some other imopportune time.



No you want to compare rebalancing at the highs and lows…aren’t you making the other side’s point?[/quote]





I’m sorry, I thought we were speaking about what we do in reality. In my practice, we subscribe to MPT and AA. In doing so, you have to rebalance. In reality, I have clients that rebalanced toward equities in Oct-Nov of last year and again in Feb-Apr. Did they all catch the bottom? No, in fact, I don’t think I even had one client reallocate to equities on March 6th. It doesn’t change the fact that the client that moved an additional $25k from a bond fund to an equity fund at the end of February juiced his total return.

Aug 12, 2009 7:02 pm
Incredible Hulk:

I’m not sure who this comment is directed to, but it is an incorrect statement. The “textbook” middle of the road American funds portfolio is up roughly 45% in the last 10 years. Are you suggesting that the “testbook” allocation is 100% S&P 500? I can’t argue with your previously mentioned trades, but you are sorely misinformed on “textbook” allocation model returns.

  Show me the textbook allocation you spoke of. You're the one that brought up America Funds not me.   1.8% in a textbook allocation per year over a decade in real dollars IMHO is flat.
Aug 12, 2009 7:02 pm

Gaddock -

You are also quick to point out the “layers of fees” on funds. But in your own example of your “market neutral” positions, you failed to include any trading fees or potential margin fees in your return. I guess you work for free and your broker/dealer is a non-profit.

Aug 12, 2009 7:08 pm
Gaddock:

[quote=Incredible Hulk]I’m not sure who this comment is directed to, but it is an incorrect statement. The “textbook” middle of the road American funds portfolio is up roughly 45% in the last 10 years. Are you suggesting that the “testbook” allocation is 100% S&P 500? I can’t argue with your previously mentioned trades, but you are sorely misinformed on “textbook” allocation model returns.

  Show me the textbook allocation you spoke of. You're the one that brought up America Funds not me.[/quote]   Yeah he brought up American Funds the family, YOU brought up American Funds American Balanced Fund.
Aug 12, 2009 7:11 pm
Gaddock:

[quote=Incredible Hulk]I’m not sure who this comment is directed to, but it is an incorrect statement. The “textbook” middle of the road American funds portfolio is up roughly 45% in the last 10 years. Are you suggesting that the “testbook” allocation is 100% S&P 500? I can’t argue with your previously mentioned trades, but you are sorely misinformed on “textbook” allocation model returns.



Show me the textbook allocation you spoke of. You’re the one that brought up America Funds not me.[/quote]



I went to our standard, EDJ, balanced g&i american model. I used theirs, not mine as we were speaking about “textbook.” I went back to the site and it states internal use only, thus I won’t post it. The unbalanced 10 year return number matched your 45% ABALX return, so surely, you will believe that 45% is accurate, or at least believable.



Again, my point is that even an untouched “textbook” portfolio returned 45% and that is far from “flat”. Exclusive of rebalancing.
Aug 12, 2009 7:12 pm

I didn’t realize incredible was a jones guy… nevermind forget this argument…

Aug 12, 2009 7:15 pm
Incredible Hulk:

Gaddock -
You are also quick to point out the “layers of fees” on funds. But in your own example of your “market neutral” positions, you failed to include any trading fees or potential margin fees in your return. I guess you work for free and your broker/dealer is a non-profit.

  Wrap account, the margin I use doesn't cost anything. Not to mention is doubles+ your examples' annual performance in a month with a tiny fraction of the risk.
Aug 12, 2009 7:18 pm
Ron 14:

[quote=Gaddock][quote=Incredible Hulk]I’m not sure who this comment is directed to, but it is an incorrect statement. The “textbook” middle of the road American funds portfolio is up roughly 45% in the last 10 years. Are you suggesting that the “testbook” allocation is 100% S&P 500? I can’t argue with your previously mentioned trades, but you are sorely misinformed on “textbook” allocation model returns.

  Show me the textbook allocation you spoke of. You're the one that brought up America Funds not me.[/quote]   Yeah he brought up American Funds the family, YOU brought up American Funds American Balanced Fund.[/quote]   It matched the 45% ... and your point is?
Aug 12, 2009 7:55 pm

You know what else is interesting. I’m at home with a fever feeling like something you hate to step in trying to amuse myself, no really you guys are amusing, and we’ve added four or five pages to this post.

  I've never looked at this BBS one time from my office. Imagine if you used the time you spend here and read or prospect or GOD FORBID find a high return to risk position outside of a MF!    
Aug 12, 2009 7:57 pm

[quote=Incredible Hulk] [quote=B24]

My opinion is that asset allocation/MPT smooths out the returns during cyclical (bull and bear)markets, but does absolutely nothing to protect in a secular bear market.  The key is not having a crystal ball, but rather reacting to what is known.[/quote]

I shall humbly disagree with this paragrah. AA does a tremendous job protecting in just about any market, excluding the last 18 months. To discard a well worn strategy on a once in an investment lifetime event like last year is very short sighted.

In a secular bear market you still have rallies up and down. If your asset allocation would suggest 35% fixed & 10% cash then regular rebalancing to that tune would have provided substantial protection in any given decade that doesn't include last year. Even including last year, you were protected to an extent against the 50%+ market decline.

Anyone basing their advice for retirees, pre-retirees on market performance over the last 24 months is as narrow minded as the advisor in '99 basing their advice on the then previous 24 month period..[/quote]   I think you're missing my point.  Secular markets are part of the investing cycle.  I am not talking about every cyclical bear and bull.  I am saying that MPT/AA works within a secular bull market.  Since the last secular bull was 18 years long, people were duped into thinking that that's how things always are.  What about the 20's?  What about the 40's? What about the 70's?  What about the 00's?  Four out of the last 10 decades have been wipeouts.  I know Jones likes to talk about buy-and-hold like it's the holy grail, but the truth is, there are a lot of advisor-led investors that have had their portfolios wiped out (twice) in the past 10 years.  But hanging your hat on AA and MPT because it works in some markets is short-sighted.  You can recover from a 4-month cyclical bear market, it's tough to recover from a 10-15 year secular bear market.
Aug 12, 2009 8:13 pm

Waiting for my new satellite service to be installed… it’s pure crap that they give you 4 hour time blocks then show up at the end of a time block and still it take them 45 minutes to hook it all up…



By the way Directv is a rip off, if you don’t cancel within the first 24 hours(not sure I turned my tv on) then they try to make you pay a $400 cancellation fee…



Aug 12, 2009 8:34 pm

I guess we disagree on what buy and hold means. Buying and holding the S&P 500 over the last decade obviously doesn’t make sense. But what advisor worth their salt doesn’t also recommend bond exposure to some extent. Even in the context of this debacle of a decade an untouched/unrebalanced position of an average balanced fund - ABALX - the client still earned 45%. Is that what they expected to earn? Of course not. But tack on the 90s to 00s or the 50s to the 40s or the 80s to the 70s, and tell me how consistent AA hasn’t performed well.

Aug 12, 2009 8:53 pm

[quote=Gaddock] You know what else is interesting. I’m at home with a fever feeling like something you hate to step in trying to amuse myself, no really you guys are amusing, and we’ve added four or five pages to this post.



I’ve never looked at this BBS one time from my office. Imagine if you used the time you spend here and read or prospect or GOD FORBID find a high return to risk position outside of a MF!



[/quote]



Is that a challenge? If you want to compare gross revenue or appendages let me know.



Also, I believe it was you who made the “assumptions” comment earlier. Less than 20% of my revenue is generated from MFs.
Aug 12, 2009 8:55 pm

How many 65 year-old clients have a 20 year investment window?  Honestly.  You screw them up from age 60 to 70 (or longer), they’re done.  Cooked.  Game over.  Yes, your 35 year-old DCA client will be fine.  So you take the 35 year olds, I’ll take the 60’s year-olds, and we’ll call it a day.

Aug 12, 2009 8:58 pm

I think an account that is properly diversified is pretty much the same thing.

What's the difference?
Aug 12, 2009 8:58 pm

You aren’t planning for a 20 year life span for 60 year olds?

Aug 12, 2009 9:11 pm

My plan is to continue making significant returns with low risk. How long they live is not relevant if I continually make more than they draw. I plan on doing it in such a way that where ever the market goes we win.

That's my financial plan.

Aug 12, 2009 9:18 pm
Incredible Hulk:

I guess we disagree on what buy and hold means. Buying and holding the S&P 500 over the last decade obviously doesn’t make sense. But what advisor worth their salt doesn’t also recommend bond exposure to some extent. Even in the context of this debacle of a decade an untouched/unrebalanced position of an average balanced fund - ABALX - the client still earned 45%. Is that what they expected to earn? Of course not. But tack on the 90s to 00s or the 50s to the 40s or the 80s to the 70s, and tell me how consistent AA hasn’t performed well.

  All boats float when the tide comes in.
Aug 12, 2009 9:24 pm
Incredible Hulk:

You aren’t planning for a 20 year life span for 60 year olds?



Doesn't matter if you destroy their portfolio in their sixties.
Aug 12, 2009 9:30 pm

Maybe I should explain why I believe MPT advocates are like man-made global warming fanatics.



MPT is taking a snapshot of market analysis and saying that, “This is how things are”. The global warming fanatics are taking a small time period and saying, “look, the earth is getting hotter and it’s cause of you guys driving SUVs”.



Don’t believe everything. Question these theories.



I will go again once to the fact that MPT is predicated on a set of statistical analysis that is flawed.

Aug 12, 2009 9:41 pm

[quote=Incredible Hulk] [quote=Gaddock] You know what else is interesting. I’m at home with a fever feeling like something you hate to step in trying to amuse myself, no really you guys are amusing, and we’ve added four or five pages to this post.


I've never looked at this BBS one time from my office. Imagine if you used the time you spend here and read or prospect or GOD FORBID find a high return to risk position outside of a MF![/quote]

Is that a challenge? If you want to compare gross revenue or appendages let me know.

Also, I believe it was you who made the "assumptions" comment earlier. Less than 20% of my revenue is generated from MFs. [/quote]   Challenge? funny how you interpret things. No it wasn't it was just an observation. But if you want to know;   August, 1 started year three. My gross was over $250k for year two. I'll do over $400 this year with 30 million AUM, that's my goal.   As for the appendage, sorry but I'm not gay not that there is anything wrong with it, I just have no desire to see your wee wee.
Aug 12, 2009 10:54 pm

Gaddock is the best, just ask him.

Aug 12, 2009 11:00 pm

That’s crap Ron. We all know guys who work at banks are the best!

Aug 12, 2009 11:43 pm

[quote=Ron 14] Gaddock is the best, just ask him.

  If Gaddock had a brain he would trade for himself and keep his great returns with no risk. [/quote]   Ron, Your traded options for 7 years on the floor you say. You say you understand the model I'm using and I believe you. Most people don't get it no matter how many times and ways I explain it, brokers that is.   You should know the model I use is not risk free.   I'll toss you a little challenge.   No matter how remote the black Swan is ... What is the risk? I did take one on the chin.   I already told you why I don't nor do I take any of the positions I make for my clients. Kind of puzzling that you wont accept the reason since it's an admission of quite a weakness.    
Aug 12, 2009 11:49 pm
Moraen:

That’s crap Ron. We all know guys who work at banks are the best!

  No. Guys at banks are idiots.   I would love to know how you go from Eddie J to owning your own shop where you do nothing and employees do everything. You must have lit it up at Jones!
Aug 12, 2009 11:49 pm
Incredible Hulk:

You aren’t planning for a 20 year life span for 60 year olds?

  My plan doesn't require the client to live 20 years in order to realize good returns.  I plan on them living to 95 or longer.
Aug 12, 2009 11:51 pm

[quote=Gaddock][quote=Ron 14] Gaddock is the best, just ask him.

  If Gaddock had a brain he would trade for himself and keep his great returns with no risk. [/quote]   Ron, Your traded options for 7 years on the floor you say. You say you understand the model I'm using and I believe you. Most people don't get it no matter how many times and ways I explain it, brokers that is.   You should know the model I use is not risk free.   I'll toss you a little challenge.   No matter how remote the black Swan is ... What is the risk? I did take one on the chin.   I already told you why I don't nor do I take any of the positions I make for my clients.    [/quote]   I know its not risk free I was just taking a shot because you changed your tag line.  Also because I think what you do is comparing apples to oranges with what most of us do.
Aug 12, 2009 11:55 pm

It’s all about the almighty dollar Ron. The style may be different but the desired effect are in fact one and the same.

  Does the tag line bother you?
Aug 12, 2009 11:57 pm
  Short sold ACME (as in Bugs Bunny's ACME) for $29.47   Bought the same amount of Calls for $2.45 35 strike.   Sold the same amount of Puts for $9.70, 35 strike.   When you smash them together your gain is $1.72 for a return of 4.9%. Trade ends on the third Friday of September I think the 15th.   NO MATTER WHERE THE STOCK GOES THE GAIN IS LOCKED IN AND PAID IN ADVANCE.   If you want to share.  do you do this for all your clients?   how many differnet names? you just keep rolling?   does the math work for alot of stocks? this is your presentation to people?  what about getting premature assignment on puts?  or if they call in short loan?   
Aug 13, 2009 12:01 am
Ron 14:

[quote=Moraen]That’s crap Ron. We all know guys who work at banks are the best!



No. Guys at banks are idiots.



I would love to know how you go from Eddie J to owning your own shop where you do nothing and employees do everything. You must have lit it up at Jones![/quote]



It’s called planning and ambition. And I never said I don’t do anything. I just do MORE than you do. Bank brokers are lazy, that’s why they are at banks.



It’s also called thinking outside of the box, saving, investing correctly… etc. The ability to adapt, to think and overcome.



The same reason you are at a bank is the same reason you follow MPT - you need people to prop you up.



If you want to know how I did it. It’s simple. Plan your exit for at least a year. Serve in the military and create lifelong bonds with people who will trust you with more than their money. Have a set of balls. Create a new solution to financial problems. Find people who agree with you, offer them a good deal and HIRE them. Plant seeds in your fellow brokers/advisors minds.



Basically, take a chance. Once again, more risk, more reward. Tell me how you went from being a Jones broker to a bank broker - weakness and the need for a financial safety net?
Aug 13, 2009 12:06 am

BTW

  cash waiting for pullback? first 10% pullback in 1982 was in 998 days
Aug 13, 2009 12:09 am

Oh so you mean a natural market that you have built up overtime who you sell your non-repeatable strategies to. 

  You should be trading these stocks for yourself also. You would make more money and keep it all. The reason you don't is because you rather charge someone to use their money to make your bets.   Create a "new" solution to financial problems ? Give me a f**king break. 
Aug 13, 2009 12:15 am

[quote=Ron 14] Oh so you mean a natural market that you have built up overtime who you sell your non-repeatable strategies to.



You should be trading these stocks for yourself also. You would make more money and keep it all. The reason you don’t is because you rather charge someone to use their money to make your bets.



Create a “new” solution to financial problems ? Give me a f**king break. [/quote]



Deleted - it was a low blow.



Sorry that I have a natural market - that I did something worthwhile before coming to this business.



Talk to people about what they want and provide it. Just because you can’t provide it at a bank, don’t think you know anything about who I am or what I do. Or what I can do.



My strategies are incredibly repeatable. Once again, I’m not making people ridiculous returns, but I’m not losing them money either.



Somebody mentioned a black swan. MPT is the ultimate black swan. It’s failed 12 times. That’s way to much to be a simple outlier.



Go back to your scared bank and see how many referrals you can get from your tellers.



Aug 13, 2009 12:17 am

[quote=A b]

  If you want to share. 1 do you do this for all your clients?  2 how many differnet names? 3 you just keep rolling?   4 does the math work for alot of stocks? 5 this is your presentation to people?  6 what about getting premature assignment on puts?  7 or if they call in short loan?   [/quote] 1 Pretty much. I'll have as many as I can find. I had a program developed buy some guys in india to search just for the setups I like.   2 I can find around 20 a week usually but quite a few I cant get the shares for the short. I don't use ADR's as they are the ones that can bite you the only real way you can get nailed. I tell you what it is if Ron the floor trader is stumped.   3 Yep   4 See answer 2   5 One of the better ones.   6 WOW got your thinking cap on don't you .... As soon as they are assigned the trade is done. I'll trade them deep in the money to have a better chance of assignment. Early assignment is desired   7 No biggy we just cover the shares with cash in the account or use a little margin until the trade is over usually just a month or two. The shares received on assignment auto cover the short.   Not bad eyy?      
Aug 13, 2009 12:26 am

[quote=Moraen] [quote=Ron 14] Oh so you mean a natural market that you have built up overtime who you sell your non-repeatable strategies to. 

 
You should be trading these stocks for yourself also. You would make more money and keep it all. The reason you don't is because you rather charge someone to use their money to make your bets.
 
Create a "new" solution to financial problems ? Give me a f**king break. [/quote]

Deleted - it was a low blow.  

Sorry that I have a natural market - that I did something worthwhile before coming to this business.

Talk to people about what they want and provide it. Just because you can't provide it at a bank, don't think you know anything about who I am or what I do. Or what I can do.

My strategies are incredibly repeatable. Once again, I'm not making people ridiculous returns, but I'm not losing them money either.

Somebody mentioned a black swan. MPT is the ultimate black swan. It's failed 12 times. That's way to much to be a simple outlier.

Go back to your scared bank and see how many referrals you can get from your tellers.

[/quote]   I saw the low blow. Thats fine. I have been more honest about my story than anyone on this site. I even posted my Jones numbers. I had a natural market for being on the trading floor for 9 years. You know how many of those connections I used to build my clients base? 0. I wanted to start from zero, zip. I went to Jones and then saw the bank as a better opportunity to build a business than Jones for 5% less cut. Talk to people about what they want and provide it ? That is what Madoff did.
Aug 13, 2009 12:28 am

Unanticipated dividend

Aug 13, 2009 12:32 am

[quote=Ron 14] [quote=Moraen] [quote=Ron 14] Oh so you mean a natural market that you have built up overtime who you sell your non-repeatable strategies to.



You should be trading these stocks for yourself also. You would make more money and keep it all. The reason you don’t is because you rather charge someone to use their money to make your bets.



Create a “new” solution to financial problems ? Give me a f**king break. [/quote] Deleted - it was a low blow.



Sorry that I have a natural market - that I did something worthwhile before coming to this business. Talk to people about what they want and provide it. Just because you can’t provide it at a bank, don’t think you know anything about who I am or what I do. Or what I can do. My strategies are incredibly repeatable. Once again, I’m not making people ridiculous returns, but I’m not losing them money either. Somebody mentioned a black swan. MPT is the ultimate black swan. It’s failed 12 times. That’s way to much to be a simple outlier. Go back to your scared bank and see how many referrals you can get from your tellers. [/quote]



I saw the low blow. Thats fine. I have been more honest about my story than anyone on this site. I even posted my Jones numbers. I had a natural market for being on the trading floor for 9 years. You know how many of those connections I used to build my clients base? 0. I wanted to start from zero, zip. I went to Jones and then saw the bank as a better opportunity to build a business than Jones for 5% less cut. Talk to people about what they want and provide it ? That is what Madoff did. [/quote]



Riiiight. Is that all you can do is invoke Madoff? My clients get two statements, one from me and one from the custodian. They don’t have to rely on me.



You have no response to the statistical failure of MPT. I can’t wait until Ice gets back - his arguments are intelligent and require thinking to respond.



I want to work with people I like. I like my market. I like my clients. And I can help them. I’ve been honest about my strategy. It’s not market timing.



I am sure the bank is appreciative that you are helping them build their business. I’m sorry, I’d rather be an owner than an employee. To each his own.
Aug 13, 2009 12:34 am

[quote=Moraen] [quote=Ron 14] [quote=Moraen] [quote=Ron 14] Oh so you mean a natural market that you have built up overtime who you sell your non-repeatable strategies to.



You should be trading these stocks for yourself also. You would make more money and keep it all. The reason you don’t is because you rather charge someone to use their money to make your bets.



Create a “new” solution to financial problems ? Give me a f**king break. [/quote] Deleted - it was a low blow.



Sorry that I have a natural market - that I did something worthwhile before coming to this business. Talk to people about what they want and provide it. Just because you can’t provide it at a bank, don’t think you know anything about who I am or what I do. Or what I can do. My strategies are incredibly repeatable. Once again, I’m not making people ridiculous returns, but I’m not losing them money either. Somebody mentioned a black swan. MPT is the ultimate black swan. It’s failed 12 times. That’s way to much to be a simple outlier. Go back to your scared bank and see how many referrals you can get from your tellers. [/quote]



I saw the low blow. Thats fine. I have been more honest about my story than anyone on this site. I even posted my Jones numbers. I had a natural market for being on the trading floor for 9 years. You know how many of those connections I used to build my clients base? 0. I wanted to start from zero, zip. I went to Jones and then saw the bank as a better opportunity to build a business than Jones for 5% less cut. Talk to people about what they want and provide it ? That is what Madoff did. [/quote]



Riiiight. Is that all you can do is invoke Madoff? My clients get two statements, one from me and one from the custodian. They don’t have to rely on me.



You have no response to the statistical failure of MPT. I can’t wait until Ice gets back - his arguments are intelligent and require thinking to respond.



I want to work with people I like. I like my market. I like my clients. And I can help them. I’ve been honest about my strategy. It’s not market timing.



I am sure the bank is appreciative that you are helping them build their business. I’m sorry, I’d rather be an owner than an employee. To each his own.[/quote]



Btw - I like yours and Gaddock’s tag lines. Hilarious!
Aug 13, 2009 12:37 am

Well if you are giving people what they want are you giving them guarantees ? That is why I used Madoff reference, he was making guarantees on returns. Im not saying what you do is shady. I am saying that investor psychology is such that what they want today will be different tomorrow.

Were you able to take your Jones clients with you ? Im sure you did and so will I.    
Aug 13, 2009 12:42 am
Ron 14:

Unanticipated dividend

  BINGO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!   Ronny Ron Ronny    Bravo     That's it freaking special dividend.     Unanticipated dividend for Ron, I'll remove the tag line you were manipulated into making.    
Aug 13, 2009 12:42 am

I guarantee nothing. Not even annuities or government bonds. I never guarantee anything. I agree about investor psychology. If it ever gets to the point where they don’t like my methods (which will expand as I hire more people - talked to a guy today with an interesting ETF strategy), they are free to leave. Everything we do is spelled out in the IPS and contract.



It’s a little easier to leave Jones. At Jones, you can not EVER sell Jones. At a bank (and you can correct me if I’m wrong) everybody there has their hands on your clients. At least talking to the bank brokers I know. There are the planners and the trust guys. Just another way for them to get their hooks in your clients. I wish you the best if you decide to leave ever, and would even be willing to share my exit plan (how exactly I did it, how I followed the rules I was supposed to, but still managed to get things set up) - with anybody. I think it becomes harder the longer you stay though.



Aug 13, 2009 12:44 am

I can take or leave MPT. MPT makes reference to risk free assets. There is no such thing. Ask my Great Uncle who has been rolling CD's since the early 80's if those are risk free. Now the poor guy has to sell his house to pay bills because inflation crushed him. Equities will return a greater real return over time than anything else and you will have to take on risk to get that.

Aug 13, 2009 12:46 am
Gaddock:

[quote=Ron 14]Unanticipated dividend

  BINGO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!   Ronny Ron Ronny    Bravo     That's it freaking special dividend.[/quote]   2004 I got kicked in groin when I was trading QQQ when Microsoft announced special dividend. Still Hurts !!
Aug 13, 2009 12:48 am
Moraen:

I guarantee nothing. Not even annuities or government bonds. I never guarantee anything. I agree about investor psychology. If it ever gets to the point where they don’t like my methods (which will expand as I hire more people - talked to a guy today with an interesting ETF strategy), they are free to leave. Everything we do is spelled out in the IPS and contract.

It’s a little easier to leave Jones. At Jones, you can not EVER sell Jones. At a bank (and you can correct me if I’m wrong) everybody there has their hands on your clients. At least talking to the bank brokers I know. There are the planners and the trust guys. Just another way for them to get their hooks in your clients. I wish you the best if you decide to leave ever, and would even be willing to share my exit plan (how exactly I did it, how I followed the rules I was supposed to, but still managed to get things set up) - with anybody. I think it becomes harder the longer you stay though.

  Totally agree that the bank has their hands all over your clients. That is why I don't use any products or funds connected directly to the bank. I figure if I ever bolt I will say to the clients that the bank wants me to put my clients in bank products and I don't think that is in your best interest. (They dont demand it now, but it is hinted)
Aug 13, 2009 12:50 am

Unanticipated dividend for Ron, I’ll remove the tag line you were manipulated into making.

Aug 13, 2009 12:53 am
Ron 14:

[quote=Moraen]I guarantee nothing. Not even annuities or government bonds. I never guarantee anything. I agree about investor psychology. If it ever gets to the point where they don’t like my methods (which will expand as I hire more people - talked to a guy today with an interesting ETF strategy), they are free to leave. Everything we do is spelled out in the IPS and contract. It’s a little easier to leave Jones. At Jones, you can not EVER sell Jones. At a bank (and you can correct me if I’m wrong) everybody there has their hands on your clients. At least talking to the bank brokers I know. There are the planners and the trust guys. Just another way for them to get their hooks in your clients. I wish you the best if you decide to leave ever, and would even be willing to share my exit plan (how exactly I did it, how I followed the rules I was supposed to, but still managed to get things set up) - with anybody. I think it becomes harder the longer you stay though.



Totally agree that the bank has their hands all over your clients. That is why I don’t use any products or funds connected directly to the bank. I figure if I ever bolt I will say to the clients that the bank wants me to put my clients in bank products and I don’t think that is in your best interest. (They dont demand it now, but it is hinted)[/quote]



Would be a good reason to leave too.
Aug 13, 2009 12:59 am
Ron 14:

[quote=Squash1]“AA does a tremendous job protecting in just about any market”… WHAT?
That goes along with “getting a little bit pregnant” and “I am always right sometimes”

I agree w/B24 that there are indicators that saw the decline coming(simple ones too, like SMA)

I also agree w/ Morean… if you are just keeping them from making mistakes you aren’t an advisor.. You are a the equivalent of the Vanguard help desk(not bad people, but not advisors).

Incredible, for retirees that you help into the crash, you have to be narrow minded because 40% of their equity got wiped out last year, and now where is the income going to come from.

  Seeing that a majority of investors underperform their own investments (DALBAR Study of investor behavior) I would say if you can keep them from making mistakes and that is all you do you are a great advisor.  [/quote]     This does not make you a great advisor, just as scoring a 95% on the 7 doesn't make you a great advisor.  This is why you will always want to work with the "average" investor, simply because this is the only level of expertise you have been able to master.  
Aug 13, 2009 1:01 am

AB

  Now that we've established the only risk to this position is a surprise dividend read between the lines.   Who would ever imagine somebody like ahhh say AIG for example would pay a special dividend at this time? Can you imagine the moral outrage?   
Aug 13, 2009 1:07 am

[quote=Ron 14]

I can take or leave MPT. MPT makes reference to risk free assets. There is no such thing. Ask my Great Uncle who has been rolling CD's since the early 80's if those are risk free. Now the poor guy has to sell his house to pay bills because inflation crushed him. Equities will return a greater real return over time than anything else and you will have to take on risk to get that.

[/quote]     You're proof being?????  
Aug 13, 2009 1:08 am

[quote=iceco1d]

[quote=B24][quote=Incredible Hulk] [quote=B24]

My opinion is that asset allocation/MPT smooths out the returns during cyclical (bull and bear)markets, but does absolutely nothing to protect in a secular bear market. The key is not having a crystal ball, but rather reacting to what is known.[/quote] I shall humbly disagree with this paragrah. AA does a tremendous job protecting in just about any market, excluding the last 18 months. To discard a well worn strategy on a once in an investment lifetime event like last year is very short sighted. In a secular bear market you still have rallies up and down. If your asset allocation would suggest 35% fixed & 10% cash then regular rebalancing to that tune would have provided substantial protection in any given decade that doesn’t include last year. Even including last year, you were protected to an extent against the 50%+ market decline. Anyone basing their advice for retirees, pre-retirees on market performance over the last 24 months is as narrow minded as the advisor in '99 basing their advice on the then previous 24 month period…[/quote]



I think you’re missing my point. Secular markets are part of the investing cycle. I am not talking about every cyclical bear and bull. I am saying that MPT/AA works within a secular bull market. Since the last secular bull was 18 years long, people were duped into thinking that that’s how things always are. What about the 20’s? What about the 40’s? What about the 70’s? What about the 00’s? Four out of the last 10 decades have been wipeouts. I know Jones likes to talk about buy-and-hold like it’s the holy grail, but the truth is, there are a lot of advisor-led investors that have had their portfolios wiped out (twice) in the past 10 years. But hanging your hat on AA and MPT because it works in some markets is short-sighted. You can recover from a 4-month cyclical bear market, it’s tough to recover from a 10-15 year secular bear market.[/quote]Glad this thread didn’t die (yes, I’m still away). I haven’t caught up yet, but I’ve seen this statement (or some variant of it) posted several times now. My new question is this…In a “SECULAR BEAR MARKET,” do stocks discontinue the concept of paying dividends? Do bonds take a hiatus from coupon payments? Does cash stop paying interest?Going to go read the next 6 pages now, but if someone could enlighten me on this, I’d really appreciate it. Thanks in advance![/quote]



I get your point, but my guess would be that some companies may stop paying dividends and some bonds may stop paying coupons (Ah ha! The argument for diversification).



Ice - you’re in for a long read!
Aug 13, 2009 2:57 am

Ill change my tag too !

Aug 13, 2009 12:45 pm

[quote=iceco1d] Haha, just finished. I was in for a long read. I’m glad the thread ended on a less “angry” note…then again, it isn’t over yet I suppose!FWIW, I’d rather chat EMH than MPT.I think some of these POVs vary depending on what your definition of “buy and hold” is, and to what extent you considering MPT (conceptually, or literally). Does time-frame rebalancing count as B&H? How about tolerance-based rebalancing?What if you are selling using a buy-write strategy on your equity piece, does that still count as b&h (as long as you are doing the same thing, over and over, and not using any research to base your trades…like selling @ the money calls repeatedly on the same security(ies)).If you are talking retired people taking income from their portfolios, is it still considered b&h if you are “tactically” placing your withdrawals? Comments welcomed. Going to go catch up on some other threads now.

[/quote]



The real problem with MPT is that it is based in statistics. Conceptually, it’s a great idea. The only problem is, things change. We have gone through way too many changes in the past 100 or so years to think that something will always work one way. Economics is the only social science where we assume people are rational. A big mistake, IMHO. It is the reason we have Marxist theories that we battle to this day. I think we must constantly evolve the way we do business, or we’ll stagnate and eventually screw up.



As for your questions - I have to wonder that myself. Time-frame rebalancing seems to me to be both an offensive and defensive strategy (probably why people like it so much). Tolerance-based rebalancing seems a little strange simply because people’s risk tolerance changes as often as the market does. And since you are selling every time you rebalance, it might not be literally buy and hold. But I think it falls in the same framework as buy and hold.



Retired people - I don’t think you can call people taking withdrawals buy and hold investors. They are in a different phase of their life. They are in the only phase where they should be taking money out.



All very good questions though.

Aug 14, 2009 2:39 am

[quote=Gaddock]AB

  Now that we've established the only risk to this position is a surprise dividend read between the lines.   Who would ever imagine somebody like ahhh say AIG for example would pay a special dividend at this time? Can you imagine the moral outrage?   [/quote]   surprise div. worry is retarded.      if u can net 4% with comm and snake pit option spreads etc its neat.   Like every thing else in our biz, you got to get people to do it.     prospects would have to be real players to grasp it.  so many moving parts.   seems like it would take a hell of a lot of work to build up a good biz with it BUT sounds like u have a passion for it.    Its certainly unique  
Aug 14, 2009 5:32 am

structured CDs. problem solved

Aug 14, 2009 6:36 pm

[quote=A b] surprise div. worry is retarded.   

 if u can net 4% with comm and snake pit option spreads etc its neat.  Like every thing else in our biz, you got to get people to do it.    prospects would have to be real players to grasp it.  so many moving parts.  seems like it would take a hell of a lot of work to build up a good biz with it BUT sounds like u have a passion for it.    Its certainly unique  [/quote]   May be retarded BUT it does happen.   "snake pit option spreads"? actually it's called a reverse conversion. I'll bet your BD does them for you then sells them in strips just like the "structured product" that's nothing more than an over-wright.   If you show a guy that has some serious mulla that you can bring in hedged returns like that it's a no brainer. It makes the other broker look lazy. As for work ... I've automated the entire process. I can easily monitor hundreds of positions. My software only alerts me to positions that are out of tolerance for maintenance or to simply close out early with a profit.   Luckily I've been able to land some trusts, foundations & an endowments that allow me to show all involved what I can do. The referrals have been coming in very nicely.      
Aug 14, 2009 7:50 pm

[quote=Gaddock][quote=A b] surprise div. worry is retarded.   

 if u can net 4% with comm and snake pit option spreads etc its neat.  Like every thing else in our biz, you got to get people to do it.    prospects would have to be real players to grasp it.  so many moving parts.  seems like it would take a hell of a lot of work to build up a good biz with it BUT sounds like u have a passion for it.    Its certainly unique  [/quote]   May be retarded BUT it does happen.   "snake pit option spreads"? actually it's called a reverse conversion. I'll bet your BD does them for you then sells them in strips just like the "structured product" that's nothing more than an over-wright.   If you show a guy that has some serious mulla that you can bring in hedged returns like that it's a no brainer. It makes the other broker look lazy. As for work ... I've automated the entire process. I can easily monitor hundreds of positions. My software only alerts me to positions that are out of tolerance for maintenance or to simply close out early with a profit.   Luckily I've been able to land some trusts, foundations & an endowments that allow me to show all involved what I can do. The referrals have been coming in very nicely.      [/quote]   And this is all done on a non-discretionary basis?
Aug 14, 2009 7:57 pm

[quote=Wet_Blanket] 

And this is all done on a non-discretionary basis?[/quote]   That is correct.
Aug 14, 2009 8:21 pm

[quote=Gaddock][quote=Wet_Blanket] 

And this is all done on a non-discretionary basis?[/quote]   That is correct. [/quote]   Dear lord...when do you sleep?  Or, are you just picky and have a handful of large accounts?
Aug 14, 2009 8:55 pm

[quote=Wet_Blanket][quote=Gaddock][quote=Wet_Blanket] 

And this is all done on a non-discretionary basis?[/quote]   That is correct. [/quote]   Dear lord...when do you sleep?  Or, are you just picky and have a handful of large accounts?[/quote]   Put it this way ... I'm always on th phone and I'm going to start implementing minimums for these kinds of trades. Cant really do it on small accounts anyway. My two largest accounts trade in blocks most of the time.
Aug 15, 2009 2:10 am

go for it.  

ur margin pages had to look like a sceince project gone bad during oct nov 08 melt and feb mar of this year.  short puts at 30-40-50?  I bet margin geeks love u
Aug 15, 2009 5:16 pm

Actually I was assigned an assistant manager who knows all about options LOL. The other folks were pretty clueless.

During the meltdown i was going short and selling calls. Most of the put selling was rolling out of positions.