T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
817.1 | 1994 performance - up 4.1 percent | ASDG::HORTON | Paving the Info Highway | Wed Jan 11 1995 16:31 | 27 |
| The 26-Dec-1994 Barron's has another article about the Dogs of the Dow
strategy (pp.14-15).
Total return for 1994 was 4.1%, which beat all the major market averages.
Here are stats for the past several years:
Year Dow Dogs DJIA S&P 500
----------------------------------------------------
1983 38.73% 25.65% 22.51%
1984 7.64 1.08 6.27
1985 29.48 32.78 32.16
1986 32.08 26.92 18.47
1987 0.61 6.02 5.23
1988 26.14 15.95 16.81
1989 26.53 31.71 31.49
1990 -7.58 -0.40 -3.17
1991 34.25 23.91 30.00
1992 7.86 7.44 7.60
1993 27.30 16.80 10.10
1994* 4.10 4.00 1.30
----------------------------------------------------
* Through 12/22
|
817.2 | Don't believe those numbers, even if they ARE from Barron's | EVMS::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Thu Jan 12 1995 08:48 | 15 |
| Of course you have to remember to account for taxes and dividends
when comparing against an index that can be held without paying
taxes on gains. Figure taxes are 1/3 of the gains on that part
of the portfolio that turns over, which is probably half or less.
Transaction costs have to be counted, too.
Of course you don't have to rebalance your portfolio every year
nor do you have to rebalance your portfolio at year-end. I wonder if
there's an optimal day of year to do the rejuggling. Or if changing
every 17 months works better. Anybody have daily DJIA component data
going back 10 years or more?
I think this is a good method if you have enough cash, say $30k+
John
|
817.3 | Taxes, transactions, all a wash... | ASDG::HORTON | Paving the Info Highway | Fri Jan 13 1995 15:31 | 18 |
| John,
Sure, a third of dividends and capital gains will go to Uncle to pay for empty
VA hospitals, tobacco subsidies, strategic stockpiles of mohair, and other
essentials, but the same of true of any strategy using periodic adjustments, so
it's a wash when making comparisons.
Transaction costs can be held to a minimum by buying/selling shares through
dividend reinvestment plans (once you have an initial share or two). DRPs are a
nice way to avoid paying for your broker's daughter's wedding in Palm Beach. I
think nearly all the DJIA stocks offer them.
DRPs also allow the small investor to buy odd amounts, some as little as $25 at
a time, as long as you are already a shareholder, so you don't need $30k+ to get
started. Exxon and Texaco, two perennial Dogs, let you buy initial shares
directly.
Jerry
|
817.4 | It's not a wash when somebody stays dirty | EVMS::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Fri Jan 13 1995 16:36 | 20 |
| > -< Taxes, transactions, all a wash... >-
> essentials, but the same of true of any strategy using periodic adjustments, so
> it's a wash when making comparisons.
Yes, that's true assuming the underlying instruments pay approximately
the same in dividends.
BUT the previous comparisons showed DOGS vs. DJIA vs. S&P500.
The latter two indexes can be purchased via mutual funds and held
indefinitely, and thus do not incur periodic transaction costs,
especially for transactions that generate taxable events.
Comparisons against indexes must include taxed dividend return and
UNTAXED capital gains, versus the AFTER-TAX return of the trading
strategy. You want to model what happens in real life, and it
inevitably gets much dirtier than the numbers that come in the paper.
John
p.s., next "great strategy" will be "Dogs of the Utility average".
|
817.5 | PaineWebber Fund | ASABET::MOLLIN | | Wed Jan 25 1995 13:27 | 7 |
| PaineWebber has a fund set up that uses this strategy. If you are
intersested in more details, contact me and I can give you an
800 number for the broker I use.
ASABET::MOLLIN or Dick Mollin @MLO
Dick
|
817.6 | A.G.Edwards - low commission for single share | ASDG::HORTON | Paving the Info Highway | Mon Jan 30 1995 14:17 | 11 |
| A.G. Edwards has a special commission rate for the purchase of
a single share: 16 percent of stock price, plus $3.00.
Makes it inexpensive to get started with DRPs, plus it's quick.
The two AGE brokers I called (Wellesley, MA and Worcester, MA)
did not know about the special rate. Each thought the $25 minimum
would apply. The Wellesely broker called up the commission on a
hypothetical trade of one share at $10.00 and was surprised to see
the commission of $1.60 (plus $3 transaction fee).
-Jerry
|
817.7 | 1995 Dogs win by a nose | ASDG::HORTON | paving the info highway | Thu Jan 04 1996 14:06 | 42 |
|
Not a bad year for the Dow Dogs strategy.
As Andrew Bary pointed out in "By a Nose" (Barron's, 18-Dec-1995),
as of Dec. 14th the Dogs were leading the DJIA and the S&P 500
by a small percentage. Also, the Dogs were doing better than
over 90% of all general equity funds.
Here are results for 1995. In this analysis I've assumed that
each company's dividend is immediately reinvested at the stock
price used by that company's dividend reinvestment plan.
Figures do not take taxes or commissions into account.
Dividends 1994 1995 Total
Symb Issue Paid/share Price Price Return
---------------------------------------------------------------
S Sears 1.79* $22.875* $39.000 71.5%
MO PhilMorris 3.49** 57.500 90.250 64.6
JPM MorganJP 3.00 56.125 80.250 49.6
EK EKodak 1.60 47.750 67.000 44.5
XON Exxon 3.00 60.750 80.500 39.4
TX Texaco 3.20 59.875 78.500 37.3
DD DuPont 2.08 56.125 69.875 28.5
MMM MinnMinMfg 1.88 53.375 66.375 28.3
CHV Chevron 2.00** 44.625 52.375 22.1
Z Woolworth 0.15*** 15.000 13.000 -12.6
---------------------------------------------------------------
Average: 37.3%
* 1994 price for Sears is adjusted for Allstate spin-off.
Analysis assumes ALL was held with ALL dividends reinvested
in additional ALL shares, and year-end ALL price of $41.125.
** Dividend increased during 1995.
*** Dividend suspended during 1995.
-------------------------------------------------------------
Hmmm, 37.3% return beats the Dow (33.5%), the S&P 500 (34.1%),
and 90% of general equity funds.
So, who still needs a high-priced money manager?
-Jerry
|
817.8 | Dogs for 1996 | ASDG::HORTON | paving the info highway | Thu Jan 04 1996 14:07 | 30 |
|
And they're off...
Here are the Dow Dogs for 1996 and their stats at 1995's close.
There is little turnover: eight 1995 Dogs are on the 1996 list
(Int'l Paper and General Electric replace Sears and Woolworth).
Choices are the same as in the 18-Dec-1995 Barron's article except
that Eastman Kodak overtook General Motors for the #10 spot.
Div Yield Price
Symb Issue Rate Price Yield Rank Rank
-------------------------------------------------------------
MO PhilMorris 4.00 90.250 4.432 1
TX Texaco 3.20 78.500 4.076 2
JPM MorganJP 3.24 80.250 4.037 3
CHV Chevron 2.00 52.375 3.819 4 2
XON Exxon 3.00 80.500 3.727 5
DD DuPont 2.08 69.875 2.977 6 5
MMM MinnMinMfg 1.88 66.375 2.832 7 3
IP Int'l Paper 1.00 37.875 2.640 8 1
GE General Electric 1.84 72.000 2.556 9
EK EKodak 1.60 67.000 2.388 10 4
-------------------------------------------------------------
All these companies offer dividend reinvestment plans that
allow optional cash purchases, so you can avoid nearly all
brokerage expense. Exxon and Texaco even let you buy your
initial shares directly ($250.00 minimum).
-Jerry
|
817.9 | Texaco | WMODEV::GERARDI_B | America's PSG | Thu Jan 04 1996 14:19 | 6 |
| Hi,
I should probably do my own research, but do
you have a phone number for Texaco?
Bart
|
817.10 | phone nos. for Texaco, Exxon | ASDG::HORTON | paving the info highway | Thu Jan 04 1996 17:28 | 16 |
| Bart,
The number for Texaco is 800-283-9785.
BTW, Exxon's is 800-252-1800.
Here's a good Web site with DRP info on hundreds of companies:
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs.cmu.edu/user/jdg/www/drip.html
It lists phone numbers, shares needed to join, optional investment
amounts (min/max), etc.
Happy investing,
-Jerry
|
817.11 | Hennessy Balanced Fund | ASDG::HORTON | paving the info highway | Mon Apr 29 1996 18:20 | 10 |
| Hennessy Balanced Fund follows the Dogs of the Dow strategy, sort of.
It keeps half its holdings in 1-year Treasury issues, and the other
half evenly divided among the ten Dow Dogs with annual rebalancing.
I believe this fund is just starting, as the prospectus is dated
March 6, 1996.
Minimum initial investment is $1000. Minimum additions are $100.
Call 800-966-4354 for fund information.
|
817.12 | Checkpoint | 2155::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Mon Apr 29 1996 20:07 | 34 |
| Using the starting numbers from .8 here's what I get for how
the dogs of the dow are doing so far this year. Not bad
given we are only a third into the year, but I'm not sure
if it's beating the dow as a whole (I know for sure it's not
beating alot of the other composites :-).
Symb LastTrad Start Change %Change
MO 89.5 90.25 - 0.75 - 0.8%
TX 86.875 78.5 + 8.375 +10.7
JPM 84.125 80.25 + 3.875 + 4.8%
CHV 58.5 52.375 + 6.125 +11.7%
XON 85.875 80.5 + 5.375 + 6.7%
DD 79.875 69.875 +10 + 14.3%
MMM 66 66.375 - 0.375 - 0.6%
IP 40.625 37.875 + 2.75 + 7.3%
GE 77.625 72 + 5.625 + 7.8%
EK 76.75 67 + 9.75 +14.6%
Which if I'm correct in averaging the %'s to get the average % change
of the group assuming you invested the same amount of cash in each
is 7.66% return for the group (not counting dividends). I think that
is below the gain in the DJIA as a whole for the year to date?
Symb LastTrad Change %Chg Bid Ask DayLow DayHigh 52Wlow 52WHigh
MO 89.5 +0.25 +0.3 V: 1445400 88.75 90.25 67.75 104.625
TX 86.875 +1.5 +1.8 V: 534900 85.25 87 62.875 88.75
JPM 84.125 -0.25 -0.3 V: 370300 83.5 84.25 65.25 85.75
CHV 58.5 +0.625 +1.1 V: 764800 57.875 58.875 46 59
XON 85.875 +1.375 +1.6 V: 1204800 84.25 85.875 68.125 86
DD 79.875 +0.5 +0.6 V: 1582500 78.625 80.375 60.125 84.875
MMM 66 +0.875 +1.3 V: 491200 65 66.125 53.875 69.875
IP 40.625 +0.875 +2.2 V: 1890900 39.5 40.75 34.125 45.625
GE 77.625 -0.375 -0.5 V: 1036500 77.5 78.5 55.5 80.625
EK 76.75 +0.75 +1 V: 469100 75.5 76.75 55.625 77.875
|
817.13 | Safe haven, anyone? | ASDG::HORTON | paving the info highway | Tue Jul 23 1996 15:25 | 18 |
| The July 15, 1996 issue of Barron's has a short article by Andrew Bary
on YTD performance of the Dow Dogs. Here are comparative returns
through the end of June (with reinvested dividends):
Dow Dogs 11.5%
DJIA 11.8
S&P 500 10.1
Average U.S. equity fund 10.8
Average growth & income fund 9.2
Average equity-income fund 7.7
The Dogs have held up well since the start of July, losing less than 0.5%
(through July 11) vs. a 3% loss for the DJIA, according to John Downes,
editor of "Beating the Dow" newsletter.
Guess those juicy dividends help protect on the downside.
-Jerry
|
817.14 | 16.6 percent through Q3 | ASDG::HORTON | paving the info highway | Tue Oct 08 1996 15:27 | 18 |
817.15 | How does this work, exactly......... | CADSYS::RUBIN | Diana, HLO2-2/G13, 225-4534 | Mon Dec 23 1996 14:43 | 24 |
817.16 | Here's how it works, pretty much... | ASDG::HORTON | paving the info highway | Tue Dec 24 1996 10:10 | 40 |
817.17 | | LJSRV2::JC | I'm the Pox Mon, yeeeah the Pox Mon | Thu Dec 26 1996 14:36 | 1 |
817.18 | 30.5 percent in 1996 | ASDG::HORTON | paving the info highway | Mon Dec 30 1996 10:06 | 14
|