Do you, for example sell/reduce if the PE ratio hits a level well beyond the long term norm for the sector and the specific stock? Conversely, do you buy back/add when the PE falls below that norm, always given that the news-flow does not indicate any reason for the change in price.
To quote Harold Macmillan, "events, dear boy, events" are what cause me to sell/reduce my exposure to a specific stock (or possibly increase my exposure). If something happens that changes the picture from what I thought, I will obviously review my decision. Of course, by the time I learn of a new event, the price will already have moved, so the decision is whether the price change is a reasonable reflection of the changed circumstances. I definitely do NOT set price limits - up or down - for selling.Do you, for example sell/reduce if the PE ratio hits a level well beyond the long term norm for the sector and the specific stock?
There has been a very lively debate, in the last several days. The Woodford and ethics investing debate has been very lively indeed.
as tobacco is a legally traded commodity like alcohol like airline tickets like petroleum. It is not my responsability to chaperone grown adults into what they should or should not put into their bodies
ethics should not come into it
I also hold the opinion that the market regularly mis-prices a share, over a short time frame.
Lots of important questions there.
I would like to respond to one point.
As a stock picker, who has chosen to step away from the fundamental "buy the market' rule, you do not have a set rule for when to sell either.
You should know why you bought the share originally, because some positive attribute was not reflected in the price, if you still believe this to be true, hold, otherwise sell. Knowing why you bought should answer the when to sell question.
Yes. For me, it's all about the expected future return, including dividends, starting from the current price.one of the criteria around the strategy is the expected return including dividends
I don't think I agree. The return is never fixed. The future is always uncertain, so our expectations for what the future holds are constantly changing.price become less significant as your return is fixed when you buy.
If a stock's price rises, but my expectations for future earnings and dividends are unchanged, it becomes less attractive, so I'm more inclined to sell. Conversely, if the price falls and my expectations are unchanged, I'm more likely to increase my holding, so I agree with the second part, but not the first part.A stock gaining significantly in value doesn't change you % return. A price drop allows you increase your return if there is evidence that dividends will continue as before.
If a stock's price rises, but my expectations for future earnings and dividends are unchanged, it becomes less attractive, so I'm more inclined to sell.
Conversely, if the price falls and my expectations are unchanged, I'm more likely to increase my holding, so I agree with the second part, but not the first part.
I don't think I agree. The return is never fixed. The future is always uncertain, so our expectations for what the future holds are constantly changing.
If a stock's price rises, but my expectations for future earnings and dividends are unchanged, it becomes less attractive, so I'm more inclined to sell. Conversely, if the price falls and my expectations are unchanged, I'm more likely to increase my holding, so I agree with the second part, but not the first part.
If you're expectations for future income streams remain the same as when you purchased, and if you had invested as a long term play, why would a price increase make it less attractive. You would continue with the same income stream on your original purchase cost.
Otherwise, I don't give a hoot about market irrationality, provided the fundamentals are OK. As I said in an earlier posting, my ideal holding period is forever. In that context market irrationality - even for a prolonged period - isn't a concern.
Then I'm just plain wrong. Irrationality doesn't come into it. I've often been wrong in my assessments of stocks. I've admitted it many times in my column. Having the humility to accept your mistakes is essential for long-term survival. Neil Woodford was hubristic and couldn't believe he could get things wrong. That led to his downfall.the market could be correct and you (im not referring to you personally but any investor) could be wrong.
Hi @EmmDee
You seem to think current market value is irrelevant. It fundamentally changes the equation. Suppose I bought at 80, for a dividend of 4 a year. My running yield was 5%. If the price has now risen to 100, and the dividend is unchanged, my running yield has fallen to 4%. If I can find something that now yields a safe 5%, I'll sell the one that's NOW giving me only 4% and buy the other one.
Hi.
I don't think it is irrelevant but it doesn't change your yield run rate - that is baked in at the start (assuming no change in dividend). To use your example, if you buy at 80 for a yield of 4 (5%). If the price goes to 100, you are still getting 5% because it is still €4 on your original capital outlay of €80. Any new investment will get 4% as you say - so it might affect whether you increase your investment or it might alter the equation for somebody else looking to copy your approach
So if you were considering switching investment - you would need to find something that beats 5% not 4%.
That seems wrong to me. Just arithmetically.
If you bought Stock A at 80 for a 5% yield and now the price had moved to 100 (so now yielding 4% on the market price), you could sell Stock A and buy any Stock B with a yield of say 4.5% (or any number greater than 4%) and be better off that you were.
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