timmerjames Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 Looking for opinions on this situation: nonretirement account, will need the bulk of the money in 10-12 years so would probably sell entire portfolio some time before that to preserve capital. Stocks were mostly purchased recently except brk which was purchased at $120. Should I have more stocks? Suggestions? Thanks. Brk 30% Ge 18% Bp 14% Mcd 14% Bh 12% Vz 12% Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
peter1234 Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 Depends on your conviction and your ability to stomach volatility. Being concentrated with the right picks leads to higher returns. More concentrated: Potentially higher returns, higher volatility Benefits of lower volatility from more picks declines as you get above 10, 20 picks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
writser Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 Maybe the more relevant question is: should I have _these_ stocks? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ross812 Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 It looks like GE, MCD, BP, and VZ are dividend picks. Are you doing a drip to avoid taxes, do you need the income? I would diversify a little more. Add some small caps, perhaps PRFZ as a diversified ETF? BH and MCD are in a related industry and GE and BP are sensitive to the macro environment. KMI has the same dividend as BP and should be less volatile being pipelines, I would choose another recession resistant co in place of BH or MCD if you are going to stay as concentrated as you are. Some other industries: Defense - BAH, Healthcare - large insurance or big pharma, Retail - WMT, Kroger, TJX, maybe housing - Lowes or HD, Transportation - CHRW or EXPD. You have GE for manufacturing, DHR and TDG are good as well Owner operators - MKL, TPRE or GLRE, FFH. I would be inclined to put 15% in a small cap etf like PRFZ, 25% in a large high quality EFT like VLUE, QUAL, VIG possibly MOAT. Then doll out the other 60% equally spread amongst companies that are at the top of their industry. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
timmerjames Posted September 17, 2014 Author Share Posted September 17, 2014 Thanks for the graph peter. That is helpful. I think for me 10 might be the number. I have pretty high conviction for each of these picks but I think adding 4 more would help smooth volatility. Thanks Ross. I am reinvesting the divvies; I might need some as income in 5 years. Maybe 1/4 is too much for mcd and bh. I have more conviction in bh so maybe I will cut back on mcd and add another dividend company in a different industry. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rkbabang Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 You might want to consider the equipment/construction industry. DE (or maybe CAT) for dividends or ASTE for a smaller growth pick with a smaller dividend (Astec is an excellent company). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
yadayada Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 wouldn't buy based on dividends. They can easily go away. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wescobrk Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 depends on your comfort level with volatility. Munger's entire portfolio (and has been for many, many years) is 3 stocks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KCLarkin Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 I think you are fine, especially with your large cap bias. 6-8 is probably ideal. If BRK drops 50%, you temporarily lose 15K. I don't know your financial situation but that doesn't seem worth losing much sleep over. In other words, the extra effort in carefully monitoring 4 more stocks would outweigh the reduced volatility. You need to embrace the volatility. I'd be more worried about your short time horizon than your portfolio concentration. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kraven Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 I never understand these one size fits all responses. There is no right answer and I don't care what some general answer about 8 being the perfect number or 6 or 3 or 15 says. It's very personal to the investor. It has to feel right. You will know what the right number is. Munger has 3 (if in fact he does which I am skeptical about) because he has 3 investments he feels strongly about. Schloss had around 100 because that worked for him. Not accounting for portfolio size, and despite Munger's inferences to the contrary, if you look at the results set out in the 1984 Graham and Doddsville article/speech Schloss had a better overall record over a longer time period. So do what feels right. Know yourself and you can't go wrong. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KCLarkin Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 I never understand these one size fits all responses. There is no right answer and I don't care what some general answer about 8 being the perfect number or 6 or 3 or 15 says. It's very personal to the investor. It has to feel right. You will know what the right number is. Munger has 3 (if in fact he does which I am skeptical about) because he has 3 investments he feels strongly about. Schloss had around 100 because that worked for him. Not accounting for portfolio size, and despite Munger's inferences to the contrary, if you look at the results set out in the 1984 Graham and Doddsville article/speech Schloss had a better overall record over a longer time period. So do what feels right. Know yourself and you can't go wrong. Schloss was a full-time professional investor. If the OP was just buying a basket of cheap stuff, that might be okay. But based on his portfolio, I am assuming he has put substantial effort into the selection each stock. My recommendation is based on the time/benefit tradeoff, especially for a relatively small portfolio. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LC Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 A guy like Schloss made his money from the market's inferior wisdom, buying hundreds of stocks under book. A guy like Buffett made money from his superior wisdom, buying a few stocks where he felt he was right. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
randomep Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 A guy like Schloss made his money from the market's inferior wisdom, buying hundreds of stocks under book. A guy like Buffett made money from his superior wisdom, buying a few stocks where he felt he was right. I used to think buying many stocks (say 30) is di-worsification until I read about schloss's results. Like many previous responses it depends on what kind of investor you are, there are so many variables specific you each person's case. But one thing that hasn't been mentioned is, if you want to know your investments well and be a do-it-yourselfer, then you have to read the quarterlies, I find that I have a capacity to follow just 20 stocks. That is 80 reports a year at least! I may be able to follow more stocks if I am investing full time. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest moneystockholder Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 Have as many as you want as long as you've done an appropriate analysis of all of the companies you currently have. This also means keeping up with all the information and news happening within the company itself, these things tend to change or impact investment theses, particularly if unexpected things happen. You can have a portfolio of 1 stock that will outperform all the major funds. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mephistopheles Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 It looks like GE, MCD, BP, and VZ are dividend picks. Are you doing a drip to avoid taxes, do you need the income? You have to pay taxes on dividends, whether or not they are reinvested. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wescobrk Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 "if you look at the results set out in the 1984 Graham and Doddsville article/speech Schloss had a better overall record over a longer time period." Schloss had 21.3 compared to munger's 19.8 cagr but schloss had another 14 years to offset the 73-74 on his returns compared to munger. Your statement is definitely correct but I thought further data helps explain how close they are and walter had more time to offset the 73-74. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hielko Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 I never understand these one size fits all responses. There is no right answer and I don't care what some general answer about 8 being the perfect number or 6 or 3 or 15 says. It's very personal to the investor. It has to feel right. You will know what the right number is. Munger has 3 (if in fact he does which I am skeptical about) because he has 3 investments he feels strongly about. Schloss had around 100 because that worked for him. Not accounting for portfolio size, and despite Munger's inferences to the contrary, if you look at the results set out in the 1984 Graham and Doddsville article/speech Schloss had a better overall record over a longer time period. So do what feels right. Know yourself and you can't go wrong. Schloss was a full-time professional investor. If the OP was just buying a basket of cheap stuff, that might be okay. But based on his portfolio, I am assuming he has put substantial effort into the selection each stock. My recommendation is based on the time/benefit tradeoff, especially for a relatively small portfolio. What makes you think that OP has put a 'substantial effort into the selection each stock'? It is just a more or less random selection of large cap names... and OP's questions doesn't directly scream brilliance IMO. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
yadayada Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 people either say buy an index if your not good at this, or if your good go ahead and pick stocks. The problem is a lot of people buying the index might panic sell when the market goes down. I think the best solution is, get decent investment advisor or buy real estate if you cannot invest. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mephistopheles Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 people either say buy an index if your not good at this, or if your good go ahead and pick stocks. The problem is a lot of people buying the index might panic sell when the market goes down. I think the best solution is, get decent investment advisor or buy real estate if you cannot invest. Investing in real estate also takes work, and has its own set of risks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
timmerjames Posted September 17, 2014 Author Share Posted September 17, 2014 Hiekl - Dude, lighten up. As for your brilliant comment....I never claimed to be brilliant; just looking for views/insights to improve and learn. " More or less random"? Either it is or it isn't and since when did BH become a large cap? Mephistopheles - if you are in the 15% tax bracket the tax is 0% on dividends. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
yadayada Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 people either say buy an index if your not good at this, or if your good go ahead and pick stocks. The problem is a lot of people buying the index might panic sell when the market goes down. I think the best solution is, get decent investment advisor or buy real estate if you cannot invest. Investing in real estate also takes work, and has its own set of risks. it's fool proof. You just need a bunch of common sense. Or you can find a bunch of very well performing hedgefunds and investors over the past 10 years, and just buy their 10 best picks. I would probably do tht with little time. And don't sell unless they sell. op: http://greatinvestors.tv/video/howard-marks-on-the-distinction-between-risk-control-and-ris.html Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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