Charlie, here is some food for thought.
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I aim for a return that is 80% - 120% of the market (SPY). Meaning that if the market returned 10% in a given period, I would be happy with anything between 8% and 12%. This goal keeps me from reaching too far and keeps speculation in check.
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My rough portfolio to support the above is as follows.
Base: (typically 60% of my portfolio
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Index Funds : 40% (see below)
BRK : 25% (up from historical 15%)
Value: (typically 30% of my portfolio)
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MSFT : 15%
GOOG : 10% (recently doubled my position)
AAPL : 5% (see below)
BAM : 2% (down from 5%)
Speculation: (typically under 10% of my portfolio)
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DIS : 2%
AMZN : 2%
ATVI : 2%
(rough numbers - doesn’t add up to 100% exactly)
Index Funds are split between SPY, RSP, QQQE, GLOBAL and TSX
My percentages are off a bit now, in the past I have had speculative positions in DLTR, BABA, DG, COST amongst others. Each of these did very well for me - and I have the board (Jim) to thank for most of these ideas. I would never have more than 10% of my portfolio in speculative positions. A couple of years ago there were posters on the board ridiculing many of us for not investing in “obvious 10 baggers” - its important to be disciplined and not chase. I don’t need these positions to be 10 baggers for me to meet my investment goal - and if I put more in these investments it would put my floor at risk as well.
Value - these are much harder to find and you need to be VERY patient. Keep your money in the index fund until you find a very good deal. As an example, my cost basis on MSFT is $35 / share. Apple is $23 / share. My goal is to never sell these - however I have violated that rule a couple of times (and regretted it each time). I thought COST was going to be in that bucket (my cost basis was under $325, but I couldn’t resist selling it when it got above $550 recently. Time will tell if I regret that or not). Right now I would put GOOG as a decent entry point for VALUE. Its important to understand the business and have a thesis that looks reasonable. For example with GOOG, there is a reasonable thesis that it will trade above $3500 per share in a few years. Know how to construct that and have confidence it in. Most of these won’t be 10 baggers quickly, but over a longer period they should do well. These should be predictable business’ with a track record. You will often find that when they are cheap its because they are out of favor. Follow along on the Falling Knives board for some ideas (INTC has been mentioned recently - which I think is a decent idea).
I don’t know how old you are (or rather what your timeframe is - clearly that will have a big impact - but I wouldn’t focus too much on how much was lost, but rather what your current capital base is). I am nearing the end of my accumulation phase (in fact I have taken the foot off the savings gas the past 12 months) so for me its more about “staying rich” than “getting rich”, but I have used the above strategy for the past 10 years or so. The results have been good.
Here are my most recent returns (as of May 31)
5Y 3Y 1Y
tecmo : 17.68% 20.82% 3.42%
SP500 : 13.38% 16.44% -0.30%
Best of luck!
tecmo
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