by winston » Tue May 17, 2016 7:49 am
The Most Important Question to Ask Yourself Today
By Ben Morris
Almost no one saw it coming…
For lots of folks, including many of the world's best investors, it caused major losses.
But if you followed the simple advice we showed you last year, which I'll reiterate today, you could have avoided their mistakes completely.
Let me start by asking you a few questions…
First, which market sectors will be the best and worst performers over the next 12 months?
Second, what percentage of your stock holdings are allocated to those sectors?
(I suggest writing your answers down. You'll find it useful to refer to them in the future.)
Finally, how would you have answered the same questions one year ago?
Some of the world's best investors likely would have said energy stocks would do the best.
At the end of March 2015, Seth Klarman had 40% of his multibillion-dollar hedge fund's assets allocated to that sector. David Einhorn had around 19% in energy stocks. And Carl Icahn had about 14% of his portfolio in energy.
At the time, the energy sector was down 23% from its June 2014 peak. The benchmark S&P 500 Index was up 6% in that same period. This divergence led lots of individual investors to expect a big rally in energy stocks, too.
But of the 10 different industry groups in the S&P 500, energy has been the worst performer. The sector has dropped 16.6% over the past year. The best-performing group, utilities, wasn't on most peoples' radars. It has climbed more than 14%.
You can see the returns of the 10 industry groups over the past year in the chart below…
Please Enable Images to See this
The S&P 500 is down 1.8% over the past 12 months. Most investors likely haven't even done that well, due to the volatility… But folks who put a lot of money into energy stocks last May, and didn't hold utility stocks, have fared far worse.
A 40% allocation to energy stocks, multiplied by a 16.6% drop in those stocks, comes to a 6.6% decline across an entire portfolio. With a mistake like that, the rest of an investor's portfolio would have to rise 11% just to break even over the past year.
Considering the average return of the other nine sectors was 1.4%, that's unlikely. Take away utilities, and the average return of the remaining eight was slightly negative.
Someone who went heavy in the worst sector, and missed the best sector of the last 12 months, likely saw his portfolio decline by at least 6.7%.
Compared with the S&P 500, that's disappointing.
Now, you likely believe that one sector of the market is going to perform extremely well over the next year… And you may be right.
But last year, Klarman got it dead wrong. His top holding is down 55% over the last year. And he's one of the world's best investors.
So look back at your answers to the first two questions… and ask yourself this final one: What happens if I'm wrong?
Make sure you're comfortable with the answer.
Source: DailyWealth Trader
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"