If you follow this strategy, I can say with high conviction that you will not be successful in the long run. I cannot say this a 100%, but very few people do this successfully. Saul is one of them. You cannot predict how your stocks will behave. There are always periods when stocks perform really badly and then suddenly they will turn. INFN is an example. TSLA is the other way round. So your approach above will essentially mean, you buy TSLA, ride the stock from 30 to 290 and then jump into INFN just before it starts going up.
What you are talking about is market timing. There’s no element of analysis/thinking it it, right? If you think INFN has significantly better prospects than TSLA going forward, then selling TSLA and buying INFN is absolutely the right thing to do.
If you read my portfolio review, for each one I sold there is a good deal of doubt regarding the potential going forward. TCS, I have soured on, after seeing how Kindel and company have been performing. I like the concept, I like Elfa, but I don’t like how they are running, and I can’t see them being a market beater. Since I also know that Q4 is their big quarter and the stock has been sold off, I bought a few calls as a play on Q4. I think the decision is sound, based on what one can gather by following the earnings releases.
The same story for INVN. Do I think they are over sold? Yes. Do I really believe in their ability to be a market beating investment? No, because I did listen to the conference call, and I looked at what happened with their deal with Apple, and I also looked at what else is out there with respect to competition. But I also realise that MEMS can play a big role in wearables and hence the stock replacement strategy. It reduces exposure, while allowing for upside.
With CLNE, it doesn’t really matter at all. It’s a tiny exposure and I still have calls for the upside punt. It was always speculative and will continue to be so for a while.
Let’s finally look at MTH. That stock came via a buy write for playing around with covered calls. It’s a stock I have owned for a while, and it’s been a good covered call candidate. I have written 7 calls so far, and I have been wanting it called away and it never does. I just replaced it with a leap and now I will continue with a diagonal type strategy. This is purely for fun.
Anirban