CASH IS A POSITION
I go to the Money
Show every year to visit with friends who have booths and are speakers. Then
when folks are filing out of lectures I listen to their comments on what I know
the speaker has been saying. The Money Show is for investors from all
walks of life; however, my guess is the median age is close to 60. Those who go
have accumulated a nest egg and now are retired or very close to retirement.
They came to learn more about how to make their money grow. Last year
there were 256 separate events not counting what was given in the Exhibition
Hall. Almost without exception speakers were showing how cash can accumulate
faster if the listener bought his product whether it was a mutual fund, stock,
bond, partnership or who knows what. Are there that many money makers out
there?
One speaker had an hour
telling the market was due to crash and the thing to do was buy long term put
options. He also said if you would not do that to buy some government bonds
which were paying about 2 to 3%. The exit comments I heard were pretty well
summed up by one lady who said, “Is he nuts. How can we live off 2%?” When
you are in a bear market the old saying is, “He who loses the least is a
winner”. No, you can’t live on that small a return, but you can lose large sums
by trying to be invested at all times. There have been many years in the past
where cash with no percent return beat the heck out of the stock market. Go back
to 2000 and remember the NASDAQ lost 78% of it value in 3 years. Since March
2000 investors in the 50 hottest-selling mutual funds have lost an average of
42% according to the Lipper Analyst. Fidelity Magellan, the largest fund at that
time remains a loser of 23% and Janus, 4th largest, is down 45%.The Buy N
Holders have still not recovered their
investments.
If you had sold out near
(I did not say at) the top, say within about 10 or 15% your account would have
been pretty darn healthy when it finally did start back up. You would not have
lost 30 to 40% or more of your hard-earned money. That is what I refer to as a
“reverse profit”.
If you had put a loss
limit on your portfolio of 10% on each position and taken out just enough to
live on it probably would that have been less than letting it stay invested in
the market? You can easily check that. Putting 100% of your money in a money
market while the market is declining does not mean you are not invested. You are
invested – in cash. This protects your savings from huge losses that can and do
occur regularly in market cycles. I have written about those 16-year cycles
previously.
The smartest investors
set a limit from where they bought from the highest price their equity has
reached as to where they will sell if it starts going down. Usually 10% is the
rule of thumb, but it can be 5% or 20%. That is your
choice.
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