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Successful Investing - Avoiding Implementation Shortfalls

An issue every investor faces is that of successfully implementing his investment strategy.

It's nice to read or hear about great investing strategies but oftentimes, when you try to implement them, they fail to deliver the superior returns.

Here are some key points to consider to maximize your chance of success when you implement your strategy.

Transaction Costs

Advertised performances seldom take into account trading costs. One reason is that costs will be very different depending on which stock broker you use.

Ensure your Trading Cost is kept under 1%. Reciprocally, always remove a good 1% for transaction costs from any performance numbers you see.

Bid-Ask spread

This is a hidden fee and can be a Killer. It is too easy not to pay attention to: for instance, Bid-Ask spread is not included in Mutual Fund's Expense Ratios. Very few studies or performances from investment books take it into account.

Bid-Ask spread is larger for small Cap (sometimes in excess of 1%) than for large Cap (usually less than 0.25%).

Turnover rate is also very important.

Value Investing with lower turnover rate and larger market capitalizations will suffer less than Momentum strategies that typically invest in smaller cap and keep stocks for just months, weeks or even days.

For instance, a strategy investing in small cap with 1% average Bid-Ask spread and an annual turnover rate of 300% will loose 1%*300%=3% per year. This is on top of trading costs !

Can you execute the trades ?

The learning curve for investing in stocks can be steep, but in the final analysis is well worth it.

Most investment strategies assume that you Buy and Sell Stocks at specific time but can you, in practice, buy or sell at that specific time ?

How often have you seen Stock Picks recommendations - often on week-ends - but then on Monday it is impossible to execute at the Friday's price because the share skyrocket 20% at the opening.

Later, the guru proudly announces that his stock pick outperformed but you could not buy at the set price so could not reap the advertised gain.

This can be an issue for strategies with frequent trades. Again, Value Investing will suffer less because there are fewer trades so it is less sensitive to exact entry/exit points. If you use Market Timing, favor systems with few signals per year.

Diversification

After a strategy is highlighted, it is not rare to see it underperforming. A good example is the Dogs of the Dow. The strategy underperformed after it was detailed in the early 90s.

Many attribute its underperformance to the fact that too much money flowed into the strategy thereby reducing its efficiency. I rather attribute its underperformance to the biggest Bull Market in History where Value Investing was less rewarding than Growth/Momentum.

A take is that every strategy will underperform at some point. This is when your nerves will be at test and when you will be tempted to abandon and switch strategy... only to see it outperform afterwards.

The simple solution - highly recommended - is to diversify with 2 or more investing strategies.

Since then, the Dogs of the Dow has been outperforming the Dow Jones and the S&P500 since 2000.

Conclusion for Successful Investing

Whatever your investment strategy, there will be a difference between paper profits and real profits. This is true even if you invest in Index Funds.

To maximize your chance of success in the Stock Market:

- Strive to keep transaction costs below 1% per year
- Pay great care to strategies investing in Smaller Cap with high Bid-Ask spread
- Beware strategies with frequent trades
- Diversify

Jacky Pandion is a DIY Investor. He advocates a disciplined way to invest in the stock market. Visit www.mechanical-investing.com for Successful Stock Investing strategies.

 

Basics of investing in stocks

You need to consider some basics before you enter the world of investing in stocks. The main reason: the stock market is a field dominated by savvy investors, who know the ins and outs of making profitable trades. For people who are not on the inside, Wall Street can be a very dangerous place. Here are a few tips that can help you in your beginning stages:

1) Don't even consider "tips" that tell you about "hot stocks". Consider the source: if you had a huge, cannot miss, money making investment tip, would you offer it the world at large, free of charge? You wouldn't, and neither would anyone else. If someone is touting a can't miss stock, they most likely have a financial interest in seeing the stock rise. Conversely, if they are rooting for the stock to miss, you can almost rest assured that have "shorted" the issue.

2) Always do your due dilligence. You'll hear this advice over and over again, and that's because it's extremely important and bears repeating. You must always do your own due dilligence. Relying on the advice of others, no matter how well intentioned it may be, is almost always a recipe for disaster. Make sure you dig in and really examine the public numbers and financial releases from companies. Nothing tells the story more clearly than the numbers. Ignore basic touting techniques like press releases which have very little substance, and rely instead on hype to tell the company's story.

3) Only invest money you can afford to lose. Sure this is a basic point, but tons of people miss it. You should only invest money that you can honestly afford to lose, and without any tears, if the worst case scenario comes to fruition. Everyone enters into investments with the right idea of earning big profits, but in many cases, this never pans out. If you lose your rent money, you can rest assured that your days of dabbling in the stock market will come to a very quick and bitter end. ut asides small amounts of money each week from your paycheck for savings and investment and use that.

In no other endeavor can you make the types of returns that are associated with the world's greatest stock investors. But make sure to take your time, and keep detailed records of all of your transactions, with particular attention being paid to what you were thinking when you made the trade. Over time, this record will become an invaluable instrument for helping you determine what type of trade makes you the most money, and it will also give you insights into your character as a trader. There's plenty more to learn, of course, but hopefully these basic ideas will help you on your stock investing journey. Good luck.

Darren McLaughlin is the webmaster of the Stock Market Basics resource center.

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Mutual Funds

A mutual fund is perhaps one of the most popular means of long term investing and is the vehicle of choice in IRAs and 401k accounts. A mutual fund is basically a way of investing in a pool of different companies in order to minimize risk.

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