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Friday, September 24, 2010

A look back in time...

I've been following the ups and downs of the markets the last few months and what's interesting about my analysis is I don't really feel like much has changed. It has to be the most perplexing thing in the world for me now in my over 10 years of personal investing. It's perplexing because things are changing (slightly) and for the market we've seen its slow ascent higher. But I still think the market sucks. There is a lot of downside risk and I STILL like Commodities, Technology, Wireless.


I am clearing through my papers and I was looking of the habits of investing for success. The purpose of this blog was to capture the main theme of that write up and that was to keep a diary, a virtual diary in my example. The things to try and remember to do are:

~ Review your holdings (probably not daily)
~ Remember you portfolio includes all your accounts: Stocks, 401K, and IRA accounts do matter and they make up your complete portfolio
~ Pick how you want to measure your success: Success can vary from investor to investor so what defines whether you're up...a percentage, a target goal, etc
~ Start keeping track

I hope these tools go a long way into to helping you build your own portfolio. For me I do these things and really don't review my portfolio very frequently. I care about how they are trading but I don't get to concerned on their moves up or down. A great example was when we bought Burlington Northern Santa Fe. If you go back to when this stock was first recommended you will see why I thought it was important and at what prices I thought it was attractive. By taking notes, I still remember I liked this stock in the mid 70s because I believed that one of the positive things to take away from where the economy was at the time was the importance in commodities and the shift in emerging markets needing those commodities. I kept up with things but often didn't watch its swings. Its hard to wait but the odd thing was when Burlington finally got bought out at over $100 a share it was my friend that called me and alerted me of what had happened...I didn't know right away.


Here are a few examples of stocks that we've recommended over time and waited and watched them pay off as the fundamentals developed:


Supertel (SPPR) - I originally bought this in 2005 when it was known at Humphrey Hospitality. In researching my blog this was sold roughly 3 years later for around a 60% increase.

Cytyc (CYTC)- One of my all time favorite stocks, they were one of the first stocks I recommended and one of the first that I owned to get bought out. Bought at $17 and held until they got bought out in the $40s I believe.

Ambassadors International (AMIE) - This one was a stock that didn't move much for a long time I bought in 2004 for $13. I wrote an article 3 years later finally selling after I recall it hitting a peak of $32 and coming back down and settling in the mid 20s.

OIL - My call to buy oil stocks back in 2005 in my inaugural post was fitting. Who would have known the ride this commodity was going to be on going forward. Oil Post

Clayton Williams (CWEI) - Based on my call in oil, this was the a stock bought at $42 and this went all the up into the $100s. This took years to develop but what a ride.

Collectors Universe (CLCT) - Here is the final and prime reason to not let go of a good thing. CLCT is not the best stock I've owned over time, but it was the most stressful one to own. I have owned this stock since 2007. CLCT POST The story behind this stock and why I still own is because of fundamentals. This stock was paying a healthy dividend $.20c a quarter back then and helped me build up my war chest. When the decline of 2008 hit this stock plummeted to $4 when management cut the dividend. The only thing that stopped me from taking a huge loss was reading the financial report that was put out by the company. The newly appointed CEO (because the company booted the last one) outlined that the company could afford to still issue a dividend however it is prudent to hold the cash during tough times. So I waited and waited through the darkest period in the market and true to his word they brought the dividend back when the stock was around $6 a share. So I was essentially buying the stock each quarter with the dividends and lowering the cost of what I had bought the stock in. So today even with the stock standing at mid $13s a share we are seeing a 25% increase.


This is why its important to take notes.



Now it is even more important to remember your blunders and boy have I had a few in my past. The easiest one I can remember is:

Zhone Technologies - I rode this stock from $1.10 to the $1.40s. Then the fundamentals fell and I waited to long. This cost me a bunch as I never sold until this stock hit .70c! Ouch, they didn't get approval to sell in a region in Europe which they thought they had locked down. So this taught me be careful with penny stocks and they are volatile and their business can swing based on contracts.


Not Shorting Housing - This would have made me a legend if I knew about shorting back in the day. This post proves why you should write down your thoughts...my first call on housing and I didn't nothing about it: Housing


Rite Aid (RAD): Just a horrible pick and I'm glad to notice that I wrote about getting out of this position and putting my capital to better use. Ha to bad that cash went to Zhone Tech. LOL


NOT Buying Apple (AAPL) - I wrote a piece on this based on a reader question, and never followed my own advice.

BUYING ETFs - I will write here. Do not buy ETFs as an investment. I would only use these purely as hedges in your portfolio. They are difficult securities to own due to their calculations and just because oil is going up doesn't mean the ETF is going to do up also. Also, anything super levered (Banks x3) is just not smart!!! Repeat do not buy unless you are hedging your portfolio!!!

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