Beating the Market, 3 Months at a Time: A Proven Investing Plan Everyone Can Use

Beating the Market, 3 Months at a Time: A Proven Investing Plan Everyone Can Use

Beating the Market, 3 Months at a Time: A Proven Investing Plan Everyone Can Use

Beating the Market, 3 Months at a Time: A Proven Investing Plan Everyone Can Use

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Overview

“The authors have created a simple, systematic plan that gives investors a long-term edge with minimal effort and reduced risk. They’ve done all the work for you, and it’s rewarding and easy to follow.”

–Bob Kargenian, President, TABR Capital Management

 

“There are diamonds in them thar hills’ — but to find investment grade diamonds it pays to have experienced guides. Gerald and Marvin Appel provide a simple but powerful plan for the often complex world of investment opportunities.”

–Dr. Alexander Elder, Author of Come Into My Trading Room and Trading for a Living

 

A Complete Roadmap for Investing Like a Pro That Requires Only 1 Hour Every 3 Months

 

  • The easy way to build a winning portfolio–and keep winning
  • Reduce risk, increase growth, and protect wealth even in tough, volatile markets
  • Absolutely NO background in math or finance necessary!

 

You can do better!

 

You don’t have to settle for “generic” investment performance, and you needn’t delegate your decision-making to expensive investment managers. This book shows how you can quickly and easily build your optimal global portfolio–and then keep it optimized, in just one hour every three months.

 

Top investment managers Gerald and Marvin Appel provide specific recommendations and simple selection techniques that any investor can use–even novices.

 

The Appels’ approach is remarkably simple and requires only one hour of your time every 3 months, but don’t let that fool you: it draws on state-of-the-art strategies currently being used that really work.

 

www.systemsandforecasts.com

www.appelasset.com

www.signalert.com

 

If you know what to do, active investing can yield far better returns than “buy-and-hold” investing. But conventional approaches to active investing can be highly complex and time-consuming. Finally, there’s a proven, easy-to-use approach: one that’s simple enough for novices, quick enough for anyone, requires no background in math–and works!

 

Gerald and Marvin Appel show you how to identify, and give you specific recommendations for, the best mutual funds, ETFs, bond funds, and international funds. They do not stop there. They demonstrate how you can quickly and easily evaluate each investment’s performance every 3 months, and how to make adjustments to continually optimize the performance of your portfolio.

 

Using their easy to implement strategies, you can achieve better capital growth while reducing risk; profit from new opportunities at home and abroad; make the most of innovative investment vehicles; and protect your assets even in the toughest markets.

 

Improving rates of return while you also reduce risk

Setting intelligent investment targets and implementing strategies to meet them

 

Identifying today’s most profitable market sectors…

…and those that will continue to lead

 

Short-term vs. long-term bonds, mature vs. emerging markets

What to choose now, and when to switch


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780132703291
Publisher: Pearson Education
Publication date: 01/17/2008
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 240
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

    Dr. Marvin Appel is CEO of Appel Asset Management Corporation and Vice President of Signalert Corporation, Registered Investment Advisors in Great Neck, New York, which together manage more than $300 million for individual clients. He also edits the highly acclaimed investment newsletter, Systems and Forecasts, and has authored Investing with Exchange Traded Funds Made Easy (FT Press, 2006).

    He has been featured on CNNfn, CNBC, CBS Marketwatch.com, and Forbes.com, and has presented at conferences ranging from the World Series of Exchange Traded Funds to the American Association of Individual Investors. The New York State Legislature has invited Dr. Appel to present his economic and investment outlook.

 

    Gerald Appel is a world famous author and lecturer. A frequent guest on television and radio, he has appeared on Wall Street Week with Louis Ruykeyser and his articles and/or articles about him have appeared in Money Magazine, Barron’s, Technical Analysis of Stocks and Commodities Magazine, Stocks Futures and Options Magazine, Wealth Magazine, the New York Times, Forbes, Kiplinger’s Magazine, and elsewhere. He is the founder of Signalert Corporation, an investment advisory firm that manages more than $300 million in client assets and is the author of numerous books and articles regarding investment strategies, including Technical Analysis: Power Tools for the Active Investor (Financial Times Prentice Hall, 2005).

 

Read an Excerpt

IntroductionIntroduction"Financial Savvy" How To Invest Smart So You Will Have the Money You Need When You Need It

By Gerald Appel and Dr. Marvin Appel

Articles and discussions of financial and investment planning generally focus on the accumulation of assets for the later stages of life—to provide for the maintenance of standards of living, medical needs, creation of estates, and vacations.

Each period of life carries with it special financial requirements associated with that particular stage. In certain ways, young adults require less capital than older adults. Medical expenses tend to be considerably lower. Younger people are more capable of traveling "on the cheap," in hostels, camping, and in less luxurious and/or group accommodations. They are usually more able to share apartments, to live in relatively small quarters.

On the other hand, younger people also often find themselves in situations that call for unusually large expenditures. New businesses and professional practices require start-up capital. Living accommodations have become particularly expensive in major cities across America. Funds may be needed to pay off college loans, perhaps to finance graduate school and other forms of advanced education. Certain professions, such as medicine, require long training periods, which may coincide with marriage and even with parenthood.

The age period between, perhaps, 33–45 is usually a period of increasing professional accomplishment and rising income. It is also a period of sharply rising expenses to meet the needs of growing families, which may require larger homes, multiple automobiles, summer camp, familyvacations, perhaps private school, payment for special child events, and a whole multitude of expenses that families assume to be certain that their children have what other children have.

This is also the period during which families attempt to set aside the money needed to finance college, weddings, and other expenses incurred by children as they move through adolescence into young adulthood.

Although investment programs are best initiated as early in life as possible, it is not surprising that for many couples and individuals, serious capital accumulation tends to start only after the children, if any, have left the house. Fortunately, for most people, peak earnings often take place at this time. Hopefully, the years between middle age and retirement prove sufficient for the accumulation of capital needed later on. Financial Planning and Sharp Investing Are Not Just for the Older Folk...

What is the point of all this discussion, which really, if we think about it, contains few surprises?

Well, you can work hard throughout your life to make the money you need to keep up with life's changing needs. Or, you can try to plan and carry through your affairs so that you accumulate an amount of money along the way that, by savvy, active investing, you can make work for you! Which Is Where This Book Comes In...

It is, of course, possible to hand over your assets to a financial planner or to a money manager or to a stock broker (in recent years, referred to as an investment consultant) or to a mutual fund family, to step aside, and to hope for the best. Many managers have had excellent long-term performance records, and some will even make a reasonably serious attempt to match the portfolios they create for you to your own personal life situation, risk tolerances, and temperament. Why and How to Become a Self-Sufficient Investor

However, although there are definite potential benefits that can accrue from retaining professional managers, there are also some definite disadvantages. For one, the use of professional managers usually involves additional expenses for your investment portfolio— typical management fees ranging between 1–2% of assets per annum, depending upon the size of your account. Hedge funds generally charge much higher management fees.

In many cases, professional money managers bring with them potential conflicts of interest in one form or another. Insurance agents, mutual fund managers, and brokerage house personnel work for and are paid by their companies whose interests often take precedence over the interests of customers. For example, financial advisors and/or brokerage house personnel often receive commission income paid by mutual funds to them for the products they recommend and sell, as well as management or custodian fees from client customers for as long as accounts stay open. It can be readily understood that such commissions are likely to impact the recommendations made by such advisors, particularly when alternative investment choices might lie with mutual funds that pay no commissions whatsoever to salespeople.

Investment representatives, brokers, or managers associated with large brokerage houses, mutual funds, banks, or other financial institutions may or may not have the ability to distinguish between "safe" market periods and unsafe periods. They may or may not even have the discretion within their firms to advise clients regarding market conditions. Would it really be possible for an employee of a large brokerage house to advise his clients to liquidate equity positions and to move totally or near totally into cash? Could and would any major brokerage house urge its clientele as a group to sharply reduce their stock holdings? Could or would a major mutual fund family urge shareholders to redeem shares of its mutual funds because of negative market prospects?

Not very likely. Financial institutions rarely emphasize selling strategies. Wall Street emphasizes buying rather than selling recommendations. (It is not necessarily generally understood, but on Wall Street, when investment analysts become negative on a particular company, they do not downgrade its rating from "buy" to "sell" but rather from "buy" to "hold," which sounds like an entirely different opinion unless you are familiar with the code.)

You might just try to tune into one or the other of the television channels that specialize in tracking the stock market. Compare the number of times guests are asked to suggest stocks to sell compared to the number of times that they are asked to suggest stocks to buy.

Neither last nor least, brokerage houses, wealth managers, asset managers, and financial planners are most likely to provide careful supervision to "wealth assets," usually thought of as clients who have at least one million dollars worth of assets in account. The odds are much less that clients with relatively small amounts of assets—small to wealth managers, that is, but significant to these clients—will receive careful supervision, monitoring, and general attention. To Sum Up the Alternatives

The hiring of professional investment managers may secure for investors useful general financial planning assistance, useful professional investment advice, and at least a modicum of personalized supervision of investment assets.

That said, professional investment advice is often tainted by conflicts of interest, well meaning but not necessarily superior investment guidance, and possibly by some neglect of your own particular individual investment portfolios.

In any event, if you ultimately choose to delegate the task of managing your investments to others, choose your managers with care, taking care to verify their actual long-term performance with other accounts, and particularly their ability to protect assets during poor as well as favorable general stock market and economic climates. At the very least, learn enough to be able to evaluate the strategies that are being employed on your behalf. What You Will Learn from This Work

You may or may not have the desire or time to "do it all yourself." However, we have designed this book to provide you with specific, well-researched tools that you may well employ in self-directed investment programs to grow your assets and to build a way of life that will benefit you and yours for possibly decades to come.

More specifically, you will learn techniques by which you can increase the safety of your stock and bond investment instruments and how to manage your investment portfolio to improve your rates of return while reducing risk. You will learn how to identify those market sectors that are leading and likely to continue to lead in strength. You will learn when and why to buy short-term bonds and when and why to switch to the longer-term side of the bond market. You will learn how and when to invest in emerging markets, such as Brazil and India, and when to concentrate in longer-established stock markets, such as Europe and the United States. You will learn when to buy large and well-established companies in basic industries and when to buy into newly emerging corporations.

We will start with some investment basics, underlying principles of successful investing that are strongly recommended. You will learn a number of specific strategies that you can put to work immediately to grow your assets over the years, strategies that will provide for you specific times to enter and specific times to exit investment positions. Finally, you explore some unpleasant facts of economic life for motivational purposes, move from there into setting accumulation targets— hopefully realistic goals that are compatible with your personal economic situation.

The strategies that you will learn have been well researched, and though they require little time to apply (often no more than one hour every three months), they are likely to increase your investment returns significantly while reducing risks associated with buying, hoping, and holding.

If you are able to maintain investment discipline, to put a certain amount of time into the project, and to enjoy rather than fear decision making, you may well find your long-term growth of capital to be gratifying indeed. This is in addition to the satisfaction of knowing what you have personally accomplished for yourself and your family over the years involved.

We believe that this book provides the useful tools you need. The rest will be up to you....

© Copyright Pearson Education. All rights reserved.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments xiii

About the Authors xiv

 

Introduction: "Financial Savvy": How To Invest Smart So You Will Have the Money You Need When You Need It xv

 

Chapter 1: Putting Together a Winning Investment Portfolio 1

Chapter 2: Advanced Diversification and Risk Management 15

Chapter 3: Prelude to Long-Term Wealth–Introduction to the Stock Market 39

Chapter 4: Nothing Succeeds Like Success 53

Chapter 5: Worldwide Opportunity 69

Chapter 6: Bonds–An Investment for All Seasons 89

Chapter 7: Special Bond Market Investment Opportunities 109

Chapter 8: Treasure in the Junkyard–How to Tame High Yield Bonds 129

Chapter 9: The Definitive Portfolio–The Whole Is Greater Than the Sum of Its Parts 149

Chapter 10: Don't Let Them Blow You Off the Planet! 165

Chapter 11: Maybe the Politicians Can’t Do It, but You Can–Planning and Carrying Through a Long-Term Financial Program 177

 

Appendix: Internet Resources for Investors 197

Endnotes 201

Index 209

 

Preface

Introduction

"Financial Savvy" How To Invest Smart So You Will Have the Money You Need When You Need It

By Gerald Appel and Dr. Marvin Appel

Articles and discussions of financial and investment planning generally focus on the accumulation of assets for the later stages of life—to provide for the maintenance of standards of living, medical needs, creation of estates, and vacations.

Each period of life carries with it special financial requirements associated with that particular stage. In certain ways, young adults require less capital than older adults. Medical expenses tend to be considerably lower. Younger people are more capable of traveling "on the cheap," in hostels, camping, and in less luxurious and/or group accommodations. They are usually more able to share apartments, to live in relatively small quarters.

On the other hand, younger people also often find themselves in situations that call for unusually large expenditures. New businesses and professional practices require start-up capital. Living accommodations have become particularly expensive in major cities across America. Funds may be needed to pay off college loans, perhaps to finance graduate school and other forms of advanced education. Certain professions, such as medicine, require long training periods, which may coincide with marriage and even with parenthood.

The age period between, perhaps, 33–45 is usually a period of increasing professional accomplishment and rising income. It is also a period of sharply rising expenses to meet the needs of growing families, which may require larger homes, multiple automobiles, summer camp, family vacations, perhaps private school, payment for special child events, and a whole multitude of expenses that families assume to be certain that their children have what other children have.

This is also the period during which families attempt to set aside the money needed to finance college, weddings, and other expenses incurred by children as they move through adolescence into young adulthood.

Although investment programs are best initiated as early in life as possible, it is not surprising that for many couples and individuals, serious capital accumulation tends to start only after the children, if any, have left the house. Fortunately, for most people, peak earnings often take place at this time. Hopefully, the years between middle age and retirement prove sufficient for the accumulation of capital needed later on.

Financial Planning and Sharp Investing Are Not Just for the Older Folk...

What is the point of all this discussion, which really, if we think about it, contains few surprises?

Well, you can work hard throughout your life to make the money you need to keep up with life's changing needs. Or, you can try to plan and carry through your affairs so that you accumulate an amount of money along the way that, by savvy, active investing, you can make work for you!

Which Is Where This Book Comes In...

It is, of course, possible to hand over your assets to a financial planner or to a money manager or to a stock broker (in recent years, referred to as an investment consultant) or to a mutual fund family, to step aside, and to hope for the best. Many managers have had excellent long-term performance records, and some will even make a reasonably serious attempt to match the portfolios they create for you to your own personal life situation, risk tolerances, and temperament.

Why and How to Become a Self-Sufficient Investor

However, although there are definite potential benefits that can accrue from retaining professional managers, there are also some definite disadvantages. For one, the use of professional managers usually involves additional expenses for your investment portfolio— typical management fees ranging between 1–2% of assets per annum, depending upon the size of your account. Hedge funds generally charge much higher management fees.

In many cases, professional money managers bring with them potential conflicts of interest in one form or another. Insurance agents, mutual fund managers, and brokerage house personnel work for and are paid by their companies whose interests often take precedence over the interests of customers. For example, financial advisors and/or brokerage house personnel often receive commission income paid by mutual funds to them for the products they recommend and sell, as well as management or custodian fees from client customers for as long as accounts stay open. It can be readily understood that such commissions are likely to impact the recommendations made by such advisors, particularly when alternative investment choices might lie with mutual funds that pay no commissions whatsoever to salespeople.

Investment representatives, brokers, or managers associated with large brokerage houses, mutual funds, banks, or other financial institutions may or may not have the ability to distinguish between "safe" market periods and unsafe periods. They may or may not even have the discretion within their firms to advise clients regarding market conditions. Would it really be possible for an employee of a large brokerage house to advise his clients to liquidate equity positions and to move totally or near totally into cash? Could and would any major brokerage house urge its clientele as a group to sharply reduce their stock holdings? Could or would a major mutual fund family urge shareholders to redeem shares of its mutual funds because of negative market prospects?

Not very likely. Financial institutions rarely emphasize selling strategies. Wall Street emphasizes buying rather than selling recommendations. (It is not necessarily generally understood, but on Wall Street, when investment analysts become negative on a particular company, they do not downgrade its rating from "buy" to "sell" but rather from "buy" to "hold," which sounds like an entirely different opinion unless you are familiar with the code.)

You might just try to tune into one or the other of the television channels that specialize in tracking the stock market. Compare the number of times guests are asked to suggest stocks to sell compared to the number of times that they are asked to suggest stocks to buy.

Neither last nor least, brokerage houses, wealth managers, asset managers, and financial planners are most likely to provide careful supervision to "wealth assets," usually thought of as clients who have at least one million dollars worth of assets in account. The odds are much less that clients with relatively small amounts of assets—small to wealth managers, that is, but significant to these clients—will receive careful supervision, monitoring, and general attention.

To Sum Up the Alternatives

The hiring of professional investment managers may secure for investors useful general financial planning assistance, useful professional investment advice, and at least a modicum of personalized supervision of investment assets.

That said, professional investment advice is often tainted by conflicts of interest, well meaning but not necessarily superior investment guidance, and possibly by some neglect of your own particular individual investment portfolios.

In any event, if you ultimately choose to delegate the task of managing your investments to others, choose your managers with care, taking care to verify their actual long-term performance with other accounts, and particularly their ability to protect assets during poor as well as favorable general stock market and economic climates. At the very least, learn enough to be able to evaluate the strategies that are being employed on your behalf.

What You Will Learn from This Work

You may or may not have the desire or time to "do it all yourself." However, we have designed this book to provide you with specific, well-researched tools that you may well employ in self-directed investment programs to grow your assets and to build a way of life that will benefit you and yours for possibly decades to come.

More specifically, you will learn techniques by which you can increase the safety of your stock and bond investment instruments and how to manage your investment portfolio to improve your rates of return while reducing risk. You will learn how to identify those market sectors that are leading and likely to continue to lead in strength. You will learn when and why to buy short-term bonds and when and why to switch to the longer-term side of the bond market. You will learn how and when to invest in emerging markets, such as Brazil and India, and when to concentrate in longer-established stock markets, such as Europe and the United States. You will learn when to buy large and well-established companies in basic industries and when to buy into newly emerging corporations.

We will start with some investment basics, underlying principles of successful investing that are strongly recommended. You will learn a number of specific strategies that you can put to work immediately to grow your assets over the years, strategies that will provide for you specific times to enter and specific times to exit investment positions. Finally, you explore some unpleasant facts of economic life for motivational purposes, move from there into setting accumulation targets— hopefully realistic goals that are compatible with your personal economic situation.

The strategies that you will learn have been well researched, and though they require little time to apply (often no more than one hour every three months), they are likely to increase your investment returns significantly while reducing risks associated with buying, hoping, and holding.

If you are able to maintain investment discipline, to put a certain amount of time into the project, and to enjoy rather than fear decision making, you may well find your long-term growth of capital to be gratifying indeed. This is in addition to the satisfaction of knowing what you have personally accomplished for yourself and your family over the years involved.

We believe that this book provides the useful tools you need. The rest will be up to you....

© Copyright Pearson Education. All rights reserved.

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