Investing Lessons: Avoiding the Peter Lynch Bias

By The Sizemore Letter

The single most important lesson I’ve learned about being a successful investor is the need to maintain emotional detachment.  Any feelings you may have towards a stock are unrequited.  If you love a stock, it will not love you back.  And if you hate a stock, it will not give you the satisfaction of responding in kind.  (As tragic as unanswered love may be, unanswered hate is often more damaging to your pride.)

A stock is like that unattainable cheerleader you had a crush on in high school.  She neither loved you nor hated you; she was completely unaware you existed.

No matter how much you love a stock (and write favorably about it in MarketWatch) it will not reward your loyalty by rising in price. And heaven help you if you allow your emotions to cloud your judgment in a short position.  I know of no surer way of losing your investment nest egg than to short a stock or other investment you hate.  Alas, I know from experience; I shorted the Nasdaq 100 in the fall of 2003.  In an outbreak of moral high-horsing that has (thankfully) now been purged out of me, I decided that tech stocks were overpriced and needed to fall further.  The Nasdaq had very different ideas, and I was forced to cover that short at a 20% loss with my tail tucked between my legs.

A closely-related investment mistake is succumbing to what I call the “Peter Lynch bias.”

Peter Lynch ran the Fidelity Magellan fund from 1977 to 1990 and had one of the best performance records in history for a mutual fund manager—an annualized return of over 29% per year.

Unfortunately, he also offered some of the worst advice in history when he recommended that investors “invest in what they know.”

On the surface, it seems like decent enough advice.  If you stumble across a product you like—say, a particular brand of mobile phone or a new restaurant chain—then it might be reasonable to assume that others will feel the same way.  If the stock is reasonably priced, it might make a good investment opportunity.

Unfortunately, “investing in what you know” tends to create muddled, emotionally baggaged thinking.  The fact that you like Chipotle (NYSE:$CMG) burritos and are intimately aware of every ingredient used in the red salsa does not automatically make Chipotle a good investment any more than your liking of Frappuccino makes Starbucks (Nasdaq:$SBUX) a good investment.   Rather than give you an insightful edge, liking the product causes you to lose perspective and see only what you want to see in the stock.

How do we mitigate our emotional impulses?

In a prior article, I noted that “brain damage can create superior investment results.”  But short of physically re-wiring our brains, what can we actually do?

I try to follow these basic guidelines and recommend them:

  • If you like a company’s products, try using one of their competitors before seriously considering purchasing the stock.  If I had really taken the time to learn how to use an Apple (Nasdaq:$AAPL) iPhone or Google (Nasdaq:$GOOG) Android device, I probably wouldn’t have gotten sucked into the Research in Motion (Nasdaq:$RIMM) value trap. Yes, RIMM was one of the cheapest stock in the world when I recommended it last year.  But I cannot deny that my decision to recommend it was biased by my ownership of a BlackBerry phone.  Likewise, many iPhone owners are probably buying Apple for similar reasons today.
  • To the best extent you can, try to follow trading rules and use stop losses.  What works for one investor will be very different than what works for another.  Perhaps you use a hard stop loss of, say, 10% below your purchase price.  Or perhaps you use a trailing stop or 20-25%.  If you are a value investor, perhaps you base your sell decision on valuation or fundamentals rather than market price.  But in any event, my point stands.  Lay out the conditions under which you intend to sell and stick to them.  Stock ownership is a marriage of convenience with quick, no-fault divorce if your situation changes.  Don’t make the mistake of falling in love.
  • Unleash your inner Spock.  For readers who are not Star Trek fans, Spock is an alien from the planet Vulcan who is incapable of feeling emotions.  When talking about a stock or watching its price fluctuate gets your heart racing, take a step back and try to look at the investment through Spock’s eyes.  Is it logical?  Do the numbers make sense?  Are the growth projections based on reasonable facts or on optimistic hope?  Would you buy a different company if it were trading at the same price multiple?

Admittedly, these are not precise guidelines.  But then, another lesson I learned is that it is a mistake to try to be too precise in this business.  Follow the lead of great value investors like Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett by making sure you have a wide margin of safety in your assumptions.

Disclosures: Charles Sizemore has no positions in any securities mentioned. This article first appeared on MarketWatch.

The post Investing Lessons: Avoiding the Peter Lynch Bias appeared first on Sizemore Insights.

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(VIDEO) GBP/USD: How Elliott Wave Patterns Predicted Recent Drop Under 1.60

A great 6-minute video lesson in Elliott wave analysis of forex markets
November, 2012

By Elliott Wave International

Every Friday, the editor of EWI’s forex-focused Currency Specialty Service, Jim Martens, records a video update for his subscribers. Each video delivers a real-life lesson on Elliott wave application to forex markets.

Watch this 6-minute video Jim recorded on October 12. Jim called for cable (GBP/USD) to drop below 1.60 in wave 5 of the developing Elliott wave sequence.

Ten days later, on October 23, GBP/USD fell as low as 1.5925.

Download Your Free 14-page eBook: “Trading Forex: How the Elliott Wave Principle Can Boost Your Forex Success”Here’s some of what you’ll learn:

  1. Which Elliott waves to trade
  2. Which Elliott waves set up your forex trade
  3. When your analysis is wrong
  4. Guidelines for projecting price targets
  5. How to evaluate an Elliott wave structure
  6. How to use the bigger picture to give you perspective on the market’s next major move

Jim also takes you through two real-world trading examples to reinforce what you’ve learned and apply it to your own trading.

All you need is a free Club EWI profile to download this FREE 14-page eBook now >>

 

This article was syndicated by Elliott Wave International and was originally published under the headline (VIDEO) GBP/USD: How Elliott Wave Patterns Predicted Recent Drop Under 1.60. EWI is the world’s largest market forecasting firm. Its staff of full-time analysts led by Chartered Market Technician Robert Prechter provides 24-hour-a-day market analysis to institutional and private investors around the world.

 

Peru holds rate steady, sees further decline in inflation

By Central Bank News
    The central bank of Peru held its benchmark interest steady at 4.25 percent, as expected, saying the deviation in inflation from its target range was due to temporary supply side factors in a domestic environment where growth is close to potential and an external environment that is “highly uncertain.”
    The Central Reserve Bank of Peru (BCRP), which has held interest rates steady since April 2001,  also said inflation, which again fell in October due to a reversal of earlier supply shocks, will gradually trend toward 2 percent.
    Peru’s inflation rate fell to 3.25 percent in October, the lowest this year, from 3.74 percent in September. Inflation has exceeded the central bank’s upper tolerance range since June 2011.
    The central bank targets inflation of 2.0 percent, within a one percentage point tolerance band.
    BCRP said indicators show that Peru’s economy has stabilized around its long-run sustainable level although sectors linked to exports show a weak performance and there is uncertainty about the global economic growth rate.
    Peru’s economy, the fastest growing in South America this year, expanded by an annual 6.1 percent in the first and second quarters of this year and the finance minister said recently that Gross Domestic Product expanded about 6.4 percent in the third quarter.
    Third quarter data are first scheduled for release later this month.
    Peru’s economy is forecast to expand by 6 percent, or slightly more, this year,  down from 6.9 percent in 2011.

    www.CentralBankNews.info

Google Earnings Trading Idea

By JW Jones, OptionsTradingSignals.com

We recently discussed the impending release of third quarter earnings for Google (GOOG), analyzed the expected move in light of then-current options pricing, discussed the expected behavior of the implied volatility of the options, and finally constructed an option trade structure we thought had a high probability of success. I thought it would be helpful to discuss how our prognostications fared and finally to consider “lessons learned” in this exercise.

This column is essentially a trade journal entry. I would encourage all traders to make such entries routinely; each trade, whether it is economically successful or not, has an embedded lesson. No trader ever reaches the point at which he executes perfectly. The lesson has been paid for. It is foolish not to capture its message.

Google was scheduled to report earnings after the closing market bell on Thursday, October 18.  It is worth noting that most options players wait until an hour or less prior to earnings release to enter earnings trades. These last minute players were completely shut out because of an unexpected early earnings release mid-day on Wednesday.

Prior to this unforeseen early release of information the stock was trading around $755. The stock immediately sold off and traded wrapped around $680 / share for the next few days. This 10% sell off was the largest move on earnings for the prior four quarters. The recent range of price moves on earnings had been between 2% and 8%.

The second portion of our prospective analysis was to calculate the anticipated move that was reflected in the options pricing. We calculated the impending move at $34.60; roughly 50% of the actual move that occurred. This means that the move on earnings was a 2 standard deviation move, a very unusual event.

Our statistics tell us that the 1 standard deviation calculated move of +/- $34.60 / share would have contained 68% of the occurrences of the move. The actual 2 standard deviation event would have contained 95% of the movement events.

We discussed the fact that playing earnings directionally is difficult.  Obviously those sufficiently prescient to predict this massive sell off and structure appropriate options positions did well. In this particular case, simply buying puts would have been a profitable strategy since the move was so much larger than anticipated.

However, it is critical to realize that a trading strategy that can survive over the long haul cannot be based on statistically improbable events.  Traders who simply buy options ahead of earnings release are engaging in low probability strategies that will not be successful when used over a sufficient number of events that the probabilities are realized.

We considered the example of a high probability trade, a triple calendar. This trade was designed to deliver profit over a wide range of prices and profit from the anticipated volatility collapse on the front month contracts.

To recap, the original P&L curve is presented below:

Google - GOOG Option Trading

This trade was designed to be short term and was planned to conclude on the Friday following earnings. The original break even points for the trade were around $670 and $840 and were outside double the expected move. The trade had approximately a 90% chance of profitability.

At expiration on Friday, the planned duration of the trade, the price of GOOG was $682, within the initially projected zone of profitability.  So how did the trade do?

It was a scratch, losing $8. The reason for the loss was that the collapse in implied volatility extended to the December series options we were long to a greater degree than anticipated.

While a negative economic outcome is never welcome, I feel quite good about the result in light of the magnitude of the price move. I feel this is an example of how a well constructed trade exposes the trader to minimal loss even when price movements occur well outside the predicted range.

Happy Trading!

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JW Jones

This material should not be considered investment advice. J.W. Jones is not a registered investment advisor. Under no circumstances should any content from this article or the OptionsTradingSignals.com website be used or interpreted as a recommendation to buy or sell any type of security or commodity contract. This material is not a solicitation for a trading approach to financial markets. Any investment decisions must in all cases be made by the reader or by his or her registered investment advisor. This information is for educational purposes only.

 

Euro zone economy to remain weak in 2013 – ECB

By Central Bank News
    The economy of the 17 nations that share the single euro currency is weak and the European Central Bank (ECB) expects growth to remain weak next year.
    The ECB, which earlier held its benchmark refinancing rate unchanged at 0.75 percent, said inflation is expected to remain above 2.0 percent for the rest of 2012, due to high energy prices and taxes, but then fall below that level next year and remain in line with the bank’s price stability target.
    ECB President Mario Draghi said economic activity continues to be supported by the bank’s policy stance and confidence in financial markets has “visibly improved” since the announcement of the Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT) programme, which he said the bank is ready to undertake to avoid extreme scenarios and avoid worries over the impact of destructive forces.
    But the economy remains weak and Draghi said data continued to signal weak activity in the second half of this year.
    “While industrial production data showed some resilience in July/August, most recent survey evidence for the economy as a whole, extending into the fourth quarter, does not signal improvements towards the end of the year,” Draghi told a press conference.

     The euro zone economy contracted by 0.2 percent in the third quarter from the second quarter for an annual decline in Gross Domestic Product of 0.4 percent.
    “Looking ahead to next year, the growth momentum is expected to remain weak,” he said, adding that the risks surrounding the outlook remain on the downside.
    Annual inflation in the euro zone was 2.5 percent in October, above the ECB’s target of inflation below but close to 2.0 percent, but Draghi said underlying price pressures should remain moderate given modest growth and well-anchored expectations.
    Current levels of inflation should thus remain transitory,” Draghi said.
   
    www.CentralBankNews.info
   
   

Central Bank News Link List – Nov 8, 2012: China economy improving, policy flexible: central bank

By Central Bank News

Here’s today’s Central Bank News link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don’t miss any important news.

Aussie Increases as RBA Holds Interest Rates

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox.com (Dublin) – The Reserve Bank of Australia held its benchmark interest rate at the highest among the developed nations as global economy seems to stabilize and inflation in the country starts to pick. The Aussie has improved to five week-high against the dollar as risk appetite boosted commodity related currencies.

According to a statement released yesterday, the RBA governor Glenn Stevens left the overnight lending cash rate at 3.25 percent. Most economists were expecting the RBA to cut interest rate to 3 percent. According to Stevens’ statement, the prices data is slightly higher than bank expectation and the global economy is showing signs of improvement. He added that the board considered these figures to come up with the monetary policy.

The decision to keep current interest rates is seen as a move to shield the economy against inflation risks. The nation’s economy relies on China as a trading partner, where it exports most of its products. Aussie remains above parity against the greenback despite acceleration in US economic growth.

According to Daniel Martin, a Singapore-based economist at Capital Economics Ltd, the RBA will not act unless the global economy takes a turn to the worst. Martin predicts that the Australian central bank will keep the rates unchanged till late 2013 as it seeks to boost non-mining sectors before the mining sector peaks.

The Australian dollar climbed to $1.0438 against the greenback after the decision was announced. This is the highest it has been since September 28. The Australian economy depends on exports to China with more than five percent of the GDP coming from the Iron ore exports to China. Chinese data have showed a rebound in the non-manufacturing sector which has been on a slowdown for the last 19 months.

The Australian dollar has increased by 57 percent in the last four years. This has lead to a loss of 37,000 manufacturing jobs in the last two years. The construction sector is reported to have lost 70,000 jobs in the past year. A report today is expected to show an increase of 600 jobs in the country, while the unemployment rate is expected to rise by 0.1 percent.

Disclaimer
Tradervox.com is not giving advice nor is qualified or licensed to provide financial advice. You must seek guidance from your personal advisors before acting on this information. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. Opinions expressed at Tradervox.com are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Tradervox.com or its management. 

Article provided by TraderVox.com
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Gold “Living Up to Safe Haven Reputation”, Fiscal Cliff Policies “Will Reduce Value of Stocks”

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Thursday 8 November 2012, 08:00 EST

SPOT MARKET gold prices hovered just below $1720 an ounce Thursday morning in London – 2.4% up on last week’s close – while stocks recovered some ground following losses yesterday, and the Dollar ticked higher, as central banks in the UK and Europe left monetary policy unchanged.

Silver prices hovered close to $32 an ounce – 3.4% up on the week so far – while other commodities edged higher. US Treasury bond prices gained while those for UK and German government debt fell.

“Gold is holding up well in the face of Dollar strength yesterday and today,” says commodities strategist Walter de Wet at Standard Bank.

A day earlier, the Dow Jones saw its biggest one-day drop this year on Wednesday, falling 2.4%.

The S&P 500 also fell 2.4%, the biggest one-day drop since the start of June, as focus shifted to Congress’s prospects of avoiding the so-called fiscal cliff of tax cut expiries and spending cuts currently scheduled for the start of 2013.

Policies aimed at avoiding the fiscal cliff would mean that “the marginal income-tax rate is probably going to go up…from 35% to 40%, capital gains from 15% to 20%, dividends from 15% to who knows where,” Bill Gross, co-chief investment officer at world’s largest bond fund Pimco told Bloomberg Tuesday.

“And ultimately if dividend and capital-gains tax rates go up, then stocks are worth less and that’s what you’re seeing.”

In contrast with stocks, gold prices rallied yesterday after an initial drop at the start of US trading, holding onto most of their gains for the week so far.

“Gold is displaying relative strength and living up to its reputation as a store of value and a safe haven,” says this morning’s commodities note from Commerzbank.

“Gold ETFs tracked by Bloomberg saw their gold holdings surge by more than 4 tonnes to a new record high of 2592 tonnes.”

The European Central Bank left its key interest rate on hold at a record low 0.75 % Thursday.
In a speech in Germany on Wednesday, ECB president Mario Draghi argued that Eurozone inflation “is well contained” and that the ECB expects it to fall below 2% next year.

In yesterday’s speech Draghi also denied that a banking union would necessarily lead to cross-border deposit guarantees.

“Organizing and funding deposit guarantee schemes can remain a national responsibility,” said Draghi, “with comparable effectiveness.”

The Greek government narrowly won a vote in favor of fresh austerity measures last night. The vote was passed 153 to 128 out of a total of 300, while the two biggest coalition parties expelled seven members between them for failing to support the measures.

Spain’s government meantime is considering selling 109-year-old palace Castellana in the heart of Madrid in order to raise cash, newswire Bloomberg reports, citing an unnamed source.

Euro gold prices traded just below €43,400 per kilo (€1350 per ounce) this morning, within 2.7% of last month’s all-time high. Dollar gold prices by contrast are around 10% off last year’s record.

Here in London, the Bank of England today voted to leave interest rates at a record low 0.5% for the 45th month in a row. The Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee decided not to extend the £375 quantitative easing program, which ends this month.

“QE still has a benefit and those benefits will stay there,” reckons Alan Clarke, London-based economist at Scotia Capital.

“They’re not unwinding any purchases…they won’t close the door on it, they’ll leave their options open.”

“The UK outlook and data are rather mixed,” adds ABN Amro economist Joost Beaumont.
“Activity is worsening, and Eurozone problems are still lingering.”

Employees at Goldman Sachs were the biggest contributors to Mitt Romney’s election campaign, according to figures published by website Open Secrets. The top five political action committees (PACs) that contributed to the Republican were all investment banks. Barack Obama’s biggest contributor was the PAC at the University of California.

China meantime will not turn its back on one party rule, outgoing president Hu Jintao told the 18th Communist Party Congress on Thursday. The Congress will see seven new members of the Politburo Standing Committee named, including replacements for Hu and Chinese premier Wen Jiabao.

Total credit growth in China has been 16%, according to figures published by Standard Chartered, while the economy, measured by nominal GDP growth, has only grown by 10%.

“Growth needs to be achieved through real structural reforms that lift productivity rather than by adding leverage,” says a note from the bank.

“Otherwise, China will have a date with a financial crisis.”

Ben Traynor
BullionVault

Gold value calculator   |   Buy gold online at live prices

Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the UK’s longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist interest in monetary economics. Ben writes and presents BullionVault’s weekly gold market summary on YouTube and can be found on Google+

(c) BullionVault 2012

Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.

 

Serbia raises rate 20 bps, drops warning of new hikes

By Central Bank News
    Serbia’s central bank raised its key policy rate by another 20 basis points to 10.95 percent to reduce growing inflationary pressure and prevent higher food prices from spilling over to other prices.
    The National Bank of Serbia, which has raised rates five times this year for a total increase of 1.45 percentage points, said this increase should help reduce inflation to the bank’s target by the end of 2013, dropping its warning from last month that it may have to raise rates further.
    “Together with the measures taken by the National Bank of Serbia earlier, this upward revision of the key policy rate should contribute to the drop in year-on-year inflation next year and its retreat within the target bank by the end of 2013,” the bank said after a meeting of its executive board.
    The bank targets inflation of 4.0 percent, plus/minus 1.5 percentage points.
    Unlike last month, the bank did not warn of further rate hikes, indicating that it may wait and see how its tightening since June has affected inflation before changing rates further.
    Inflation in Serbia has been rising for five months in a row, hitting 10.3 percent in September and sharply above the bank’s upper tolerance range, mainly due to higher food prices from a bad harvest.
    “Monetary policy tightening aims to counter heightened inflationary pressures and to prevent the spillover on the effects of price increases, notably food, to other prices,” the bank said.
    But the central bank said the effect of the higher prices should ease with the new agricultural season and as base effects of higher administered prices and VAT rises disappear.
    “Persistently low aggregate demand will continue to produce a disinflationary effect,” the bank said, adding that the government has also sent positive signals about its commitment to fiscal consolidation.
    Serbia’s second quarter Gross Domestic Product rose 2.1 percent from the previous quarter, but compared with the same quarter last year the economy shrank by 2.2 percent.
    Serbia’s central bank started the year by cutting its policy rate by 25 basis points but then started raising rates from June. Including the January rate cut, rates have been raised by 120 basis points year to date.
 
    www.CentralBankNews.info

ECB holds interest rates steady, as expected

By Central Bank News
    The European Central Bank (ECB) held its benchmark interest rate on refinancing operations steady at 0.75 percent, as expected.
    The ECB, which also held the rate on the marginal lending facility steady at 1.50 percent and the deposit facility at 0.0 percent, had expected by economists to remain on hold but then cut rates over the next few months to help stimulate the euro area’s weak economy.
    ECB President Mario Draghi will explain the bank’s decision at a press conference later today.
    The ECB cut is key refinancing rate by 25 basis points in July and the rate it pays on overnight bank balances to zero in an effort to entice banks to keep funds in the 17 nation euro zone.
    The euro zone economy contracted by 0.2 percent in the third quarter from the second after stagnating in the second quarter, for an annual decline of 0.4 percent.
    But the inflation rate, 2.5 percent in October, remains above the ECB’s target of inflation below, but close to 2.0 percent.

    www.CentralBankNews.info