T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1005.1 | Better than brokerage home pages | EVMS::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Fri May 03 1996 13:13 | 10 |
| I had a look at some of their pages, starting at
http://fool.web.aol.com/fool_mn.htm
and was reasonably impressed. They definitely poke well-deserved holes
in the blowhards of the financial industry.
One thing that bothers me is that they tend to emphasize high-volatility
stocks. The next market correction may lose them a few subscribers.
I want to see if they're still around in, say, July 1998.
John
|
1005.2 | ex | MILKWY::JSIEGEL | | Fri May 03 1996 21:12 | 27 |
| I have a tape of theirs, and it expouses the Dogs of the Dow theory
(buy the top 10 yielding DOW stocks, hold for a year, then adjust
portfolio again to top 10 yielding DOW stocks...etc. You only review
and adjust once/year). But they recommend a variation that says look
at the cheapest 5 of these 10. But they don't stop here; they say drop
the cheapest, and double up on the 2nd cheapest, and that over the past
20 years this has yielded about 29% ave. annual return. From what I
remember, here's the numbers they stated:
Straight Dogs-of-Dow: ~17% ave annual return over last 20 yrs.
Buy 5 cheapest: ~22% ave annual return " " " "
2x 2nd cheapest, buy next 3 cheapest: ~29% ave annual...
I'm curious what the variation to these yields are for each 20 year
period beginning each year, i.e. year 1-20 vs. 2-21 vs. 3-22, etc. If
what they say is true, it's probably one of the best yields to be
achieved so easily and relatively risk free, as long as you have a long
time horizon.
As for their own recommended portfolio, I don't remember exactly what
it's made up of, but I know they were early and big backers of IOMEGA,
and that may be a big part of their gains.
By the way, all their info is on America Online. John, did you say
they are also on the internet?
/Jon
|
1005.3 | y | MILKWY::JSIEGEL | | Fri May 03 1996 21:15 | 3 |
| Whoops! I just reread 1005.1 and saw the internet address.
/Jon
|
1005.4 | Wonder what the 1965-1974 returns were like | EVMS::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Mon May 06 1996 09:43 | 23 |
| If you have 100 different investing schemes, by definition 5% will
satisfy a statistical confidence test at the 95% level, even though
they are no better than average in the long run.
> But they recommend a variation that says look
> at the cheapest 5 of these 10. But they don't stop here; they say drop
> the cheapest, and double up on the 2nd cheapest, and that over the past
> 20 years this has yielded about 29% ave. annual return.
"Dogs of the Dow" (10 best yielding, traded once a year) is pretty solid.
"The Dow 5" (5 cheapest dogs, traded once a year) is also pretty solid.
"Drop the cheapest" is starting to look like one of those 5 lucky-by-
chance schemes that may or may not continue to work well in the future.
Maybe a better approach is to drop any stock selling under $15 ($8? $5?)
or just double up on the most expensive of the 5. There are hundreds of
such possible "tweaks" and some of them will do better than others,
though not necessarily because of any superior underlying methodology.
As a general rule, the more tweaking you see, the more likely you are
looking at a curve-fit system that does well on backtesting but fails
to continue to provide superior returns. Caveat emptor.
John
|
1005.5 | Either (a) a BIG following or (b) "License to steal" | EVMS::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Wed May 08 1996 13:20 | 12 |
| An excerpt from
http://cnnfn.com/news/wires/9605/07/computer_zytec/
(q.v. for the entire story)
> Shares of Minneapolis-based Zytec lost $9.17 to $37.33 on Nasdaq
> turnover of more than 1.1 million shares.
>
> The stock's fall "is driven by the Motley Fool activity that has been
> surrounding Zytec," said Clint Morrison, an analyst at John G. Kinnard
> who has been tracking the company for a year.
|
1005.6 | Be Careful\ | MAIL2::INGALLS | | Mon May 20 1996 13:23 | 7 |
| The fools were prominently featured in a recent Fortune Article. They
in fact made the cover. They use a modified "Peter Lynch" methodology
which worked for Fidelity. However; their move with Iomega is very
scary. The bottom line is be careful. You might want
to read the article.
Good luck.
|