The IntersectionX and Superpicks watchlists are up to date HERE. For the year, the full IBD50 and Stocktwits50 watchlists, compounded weekly and with results calculated Friday close to Friday close, have gained 15.48% and 12.78% respectively.
Q1 2013 IntersectionX, IBD and Stocktwits results.
31 MarSuperpicks 2012: +28.3%. Doubles IBD50 Top-10 performance.
29 DecThe IntersectionX and Superpicks watchlists are up to date and may be viewed HERE. There are only two Superpicks this week. DDD drops as it is no longer rated #1 at Zacks.
Using consistent scoring from prior weeks, this is how our lists look. It isn’t pretty after a good week last week. The only ETF of the list we follow that was in the black last week was Emerging Markets, small caps, especially value, getting the worst treatment. The IBD50 Top-10 list had 0% winners last week. Usually this would imply an up week next week, however, with the short trading week and that fiscal cliff I am making no encouraging recommendations.
However, it should be remembered that we only started our Superpicks watchlist on week commencing 2/4/12. The numbers for all the other lists above are a full year. If we make an like-to-like comparison, this is how the numbers stack up:
Those first few weeks of 2012 made a difference. Our Superpicks have made 28.33% from inception which doubles the return from the IBD50 Top-10 for the same period. As the Superpicks has fewer holdings, its volatility as measured by standard deviation is higher. These numbers have no money management in them. What is interesting is that the Superpicks have had a very few blow-out weeks driven by one stock (and a few sorry weeks driven by the same) which show how missing (or avoiding) those weeks could make a big difference.
For example on the week of 7/14, the Superpicks were up 15.5% on average aided by a 35% jump in Melanox (MLNX). MLNX actually hit higher numbers during that week. What goes up often comes down and MLNX is now priced lower than it was at the start of that week. The worst week in the Superpicks was a -8.4% week the week of 10/13. In that week (yes it was MLNX) Mellanox sold off 25.5%. Align (ALGN) was close behind with a 24.3% sell-off.
To keep it simple, for those looking for timing signals (I happen to think trailing stops work well here, pick your own %age) consider being out of the market when IBD says the uptrend is under pressure and certainly be out when they say the market is in correction.
A quick recap on how we figure our numbers. Score is kept by Google Finance, Friday close to Friday close. I use VectorVest quick tests for the index performance, same time period. I average the +% and -% of each watchlist for the weekly performance. The numbers of stocks in the IntersectionX and Superpicks changes. These weekly averages are compounded weekly to arrive at the YTD performance. Others are simple averages — yearly and four week — of those averages. It may not be perfect but it is consistent and, I think, resaonably indicative of the results an individual might achieve.
A happy and successful 2013 to you, the efforts of our elected representatives to the contrary nothwithstanding.
IBD50 Top-10 model portfolio updated
15 DecOur IBD model portfolio project is now up to date HERE.
Lots of buying and selling; -6.115% of portfolio value lost since the general election, still trending down.
IBD50 one year on
11 NovWe pay quite a bit of attention to the IBD50, so I thought it would be interesting to see what happened to the stocks that were listed one year ago.
Of the socks in the IBD50 a year ago, only eight are there today — which does not mean they haven’t rotated in and out betweentimes:
Of the other forty-two, fifteen are in the black today. The best performers are ALXN +42%, TSCO +24% and AUY, ULTA and BIIB tied for third with +22%. I cannot help but note that ALXN has been up 100% since last year.
Of the twenty-seven losers, some are just terrible. RMBS -76%, DECK – 72% and AH -58%.
If there’s a lesson or two here, they might be that i) The IBD50 = rotation and ii) trailing and protective stops are there for a reason.
Market commentary: Have we hit bottom? — IBD50, Stocktwits50, IntersectionX
17 JunOur IntersectionX watchlist and its related Superpicks has been updated. It may be viewed on its page : http://paladinmoney.com/intersection-50/intersection-50-list/
Last week was the first week in seven when the four-week weekly average of profits and losses on the IBD50 and ST50 turned positive. The broader lists both did better than their top-10s too.
If you had asked me two days ago, I would have told you that I thought recent bullish days were driven largely by speculation driven by expectations of more easing by national banks. I may still have been right. However as I write this it appears that the pro-bailout parties in Greece will get the first chance to form a government. If this hint of stability is viewed bullishly, which I expect it to be, then we may see a short period of rising prices, particularly in the so-called “leading stocks” on our watchlists.
Be that as it may, the underlying situation in Europe remains troubling leading me to believe that caution should continue to be the watchword.
Interesting yield stock off IBD50: TAL
4 FebThis was an interesting stock that popped out of my screen using Vectorvest’s VST*RT screen on the combined IBD50 and ST50 stocks for the week. It’s the highest yielding stock on the IBD50 by far. It has a 6% yield! Not what you expect necessarily from these lists. Interesting company if you read its summary from Yahoo! finance carefully. They have two business lines. Certainly on the ups lately, which appears contradicted by the falling Baltic dry goods index:
TAL International Group, Inc. engages in leasing intermodal containers and chassis worldwide. It operates through two segments, Equipment Leasing and Equipment Trading. The Equipment Leasing segment involves in the acquisition, lease, re-lease, and sale of various intermodal transportation equipment, such as dry freight containers, which are used for general cargo, including manufactured component parts, consumer staples, electronics, and apparel; refrigerated containers that are used for perishable items, such as fresh and frozen foods; and special containers, which are used for heavy and oversized cargo that consists of marble slabs, building products, and machinery. This segment also leases chassis that are used for the transportation of containers and tank containers, which are used to transport bulk liquid products, such as chemicals. The Equipment Trading segment purchases containers from shipping line customers and other sellers of containers, and resell these containers to container traders and users of containers for storage and one-way shipments. As of June 30, 2011, the company had a fleet of 991,807 containers and chassis, including 27,299 containers under management for third parties, representing 1,621,465 twenty-foot equivalent units. TAL International Group, Inc. was founded in 1963 and is headquartered in Purchase, New York
Looks to me as if it may be about to take a bit of a breather but OTOH we are right at the point of the 50-day SMA crossing up past the 200-day SMA. I will be looking at this stock a bit more closely. Make your own decisions and do your own due diligence. http://www.talinternational.com/
2011 IBD50 monthly portfolio lookback.
1 JanRather than spit out some Silly Season stats for the week I thought I would take a look back at how the IBD50 monthly portfolio has fared through year end. Recapping for those new to the project, we started close to the end of January 2011 investing a virtual $5,000 in each of the top-10 stocks in the Investors Business Daily IBD50 watchlist. Each month, we sold the stocks that fell out of the top 10 and replaced them. There is no money management. In the beginning I also tried a week;ly updated portfolio but it really didn’t outperform the monthly and was too much trading. At one point in the year, July 8th, we were up $17,946 or 37%, which puts the year end gain of $3,284 or 6.7% into perspective. Had we just bought and held the original list of ten we would currently be down 6.5%:
As you can see there were definite winners and losers! I literally just traded out LULU, the last of the original ten today when I refreshed the list. Looking at the numbers above, and how much money I left on the table with LULU clearly in real life the portfolio could have benefitted from some money management. That is easier said than done though. A couple of other investors worked on optimizing this portfolio with money management. As critics of stops will tell you, getting out isn’t the hard part. When to repurchase is. And there’s a lesson there. You will see that most of the gains in this portfolio came from two roughly 2-week periods. Miss them and most of the gains are gone too. In real life I would still approach this portfolio with protective, not trading stops.
Definitely a year of two halves. If you had sold up at the fourth of July weekend and gone fishing you would have been very happy. Otherwise, not so much. And, bearing in mind that this is supposed to be a portfolio of the top-10 leading stocks picked by a respected financial newspaper it will not be lost on anyone that the peaks of the highs have been trending down since September. As I have observed in my recent weekly commentaries on the IBD50 and the Stocktwits50, the top-10 selections from these watchlists have significantly underperformed. Quite what this augurs for 2012 I do not know. But the lessons of the gain-producing 2-3 week periods is not lost on me. I think we may see the same thing this year, and I would hate to miss them.
Happy New Year all.
Christmas cheers; stock pickers wilt.
25 DecA Merry Christmas to all! While the run-up to Christmas was generally cheery, indeed, if I had a dollar for every predictable reference I have read to the “Santa Claus rally” I could retire today, the watchlists we follow underperformed the broader markets again.
As you will observe, the ST50 handily outperformed the IBD50, but both lists fell behind the average market move, which we define as the mean of the week’s change on the S&P500 and the Nasdaq composite. Although the Top-10 lists from each watchlist exceeded the return of the main list (IBD) or came close (ST50) the lists and their top tens were beaten by both the S&P and the Nasdaq, but much more so by the S&P. If we go back over the twenty weeks we have been keeping this score each watchlist has only beaten our market average 30% of the time. The IBD50 has not beaten the market since the end of October. From our calculation of weekly compounded returns, the market has produced a 5.6% profit. Using the same basis, both watchlists are at a loss of between 5% (IBD) and 10% (ST). To cap it off, it is worthy of note that of the top five performers from both the IBD and the ST lists, only one out of the top five performers from either list came from its top ten selection. And the others were generally from some way down the lists too. A simple buy-and-hold in the large-cap ETF DIA would have yielded you 7.33% over the same period. So we can conclude that maybe large cap stocks are better in favor as the cap-weighted SPY beat equal weight RSP over the same period by an 11% margin. But it is also an inescapable, although unseasonal observation that our watchlist writers just can’t get ahead just now.
Using our Vanguard ETfs as proxies, financials and energy beat the broader markets. It should be lost on no-one that the broader markets, and in the case of VTI, that’s really the broader market, gave the rest of the sectors a Santa Claus asswhuppin. It shouldn’t be lost on anyone that REITs are moving up again. Not shown, RWR, the SPDR REIT ETF moved up 4.12% this week. As a point of note, according to ETFDb.com. VNQ is the larget REIT ETF by assets if not volume traded.
Dividend ETFs moved back up the list this week, with the equal weight S&P ETF leading the pack.
The large-cap value stocks did best in style, and indeed, a quick scan using TC2000confirms that in December, large cap value ETFs have generally done well. Which not only brings us back to the Dogs of The Dow question, but also whether the Dogs of The S&P might not have some merit.
Stocktwits50 ahead since recent bottom on Nov 25th
11 DecThe Stocktwits50 saved me from a totally red face after my tentative pronouncement that the nature of the markets may have changed in last week’s commentary.
As you may observe from the watchlist summary, the IBD’s Top-10 failed to beat the main list this week. The IBD Top-10 only had two winners. The full list could not scrape together better than 46% winners.
The Stocktwits 50 however had a Top-10 list that produced 3.29% with 80% winners. The ST50 main list turned in 66% winners. Both the ST50 Top-10 and the full list beat my market average for the week. The IBD50 did not.
Seemingly, either the market is liking momentum stocks or Ivan has sharpened his pencil as since the last market bottom on 11/25, the ST50 has beaten the market average each week, whereas the IBD50 has not.
For the record, I average the S&P500 and the NASDAQ composite to compile a market “average”. This week’s average was +0.82%. (SPX 0.88%, IXIC 0.76%)
Before moving onto the Vanguard ETF proxies numbers for the week I do want to give a shout-out to Smartstops. In the recent market conditions money management has been, well, challenging. Smartstops has provided invaluable insight and is a service that will easily more than pay for its meager subscription if you use it.
I will confess to making a mess of the Google spreadsheet I use for tracking the Vanguard ETF proxies this week, so you get to see my tracking sheets from TC2000. If you click on the image you will see them large enough to see individual performance:
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