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An investment strategy is a set of principles that guide investment
decisions. There are several different investing plans you can follow depending
on your risk tolerance, investing style, long-term financial goals, and access
to capital,
Investing strategies are flexible. If you
choose one and it doesn’t suit your risk tolerance or schedule, you can
certainly make changes. However, changing investment strategies come at a cost.
Each time you buy or sell securities—especially in the short-term in
non-sheltered accounts—may create taxable events. You may also realize your
portfolio is riskier than you’d prefer after your investments have dropped in
value.
Here, we look at four common investing
strategies that suit most investors. By taking the time to understand the characteristics of
each, you will be in a better position to choose one that’s right for you over
the long term without the need to incur the expense of changing course.
KEY
TAKEAWAYS
·
Before you figure out your strategy, take
some notes about your financial situation and goals.
·
Value investing requires investors to
remain in it for the long term and to apply effort and research to their stock
selection.
·
Investors who follow growth strategies
should be watchful of executive teams and news about the economy.
·
Momentum investors buy stocks experiencing
an uptrend and may choose to short sell those securities.
·
Dollar-cost averaging is the practice of
making regular investments in the market over time.
Getting Started
Before you begin to research your investment strategy,
it’s important to gather some basic information about your financial situation.
Ask yourself these key questions:
Even though you don’t need a lot of money to get started,
you shouldn’t start investing until you can afford to do so. If you have debts or other
obligations, consider the impact investing will have on your short-term cash
flow before you start putting money into your portfolio.
Next, set out your goals. Everyone has different needs,
so you should determine what yours are. Are you saving for retirement? Are you
looking to make big purchases like a home or car in the future? Are you saving
for your or your children’s education? This will help you narrow down a
strategy as different investment approaches have different levels of liquidity,
opportunity, and risk.
Next, figure out what your risk tolerance is.
Your risk tolerance is determined by two things. First, this is normally
determined by several key factors including your age, income, and how long you
have until you retire. Investors who are younger have time on their side to
recuperate losses, so it’s often recommended that younger investors hold more
risk than those who are older.
Risk tolerance is also a
highly-psychological aspect to investing largely determined by your emotions.
How would you feel if your investments dropped 30% overnight? How would you
react if your portfolio is worth $1,000 less today than yesterday? Sometimes,
the best strategy for making money makes people emotionally uncomfortable. If
you’re constantly worrying about the state of possibly losing money, chances
are your portfolio has too much risk.
Risk isn’t necessarily bad in investing. Higher risk
investments are often rewarded with higher returns. While lower risk
investments are more likely to preserve their value, they also don’t have the
upside potential.
Finally, learn the basics of investing.
Learn how to read stock charts, and begin by picking some of your favorite
companies and analyzing their financial statements. Keep in touch with recent
news about industries you’re interested in investing in. It’s a good idea to
have a basic understanding of what you’re getting into so you’re not investing
blindly.
Value
investors are bargain shoppers. They seek stocks they believe
are undervalued. They look for stocks with prices they believe don’t fully
reflect the intrinsic value of the security. Value investing is predicated, in
part, on the idea that some degree of irrationality exists in the market. This
irrationality, in theory, presents opportunities to get a stock at a discounted
price and make money from it.
It’s not necessary for value investors to
comb through volumes of financial data to find deals. Thousands of value mutual
funds give investors the chance to own a basket of stocks thought to be
undervalued. The Russell 1000 Value Index, for example, is a popular
benchmark for value investors and several mutual funds mimic this index.
For those who don’t have time to perform
exhaustive research, the price-earnings ratio (P/E) has become the
primary tool for quickly identifying undervalued or cheap stocks. This is a
single number that comes from dividing a stock’s share price by its earnings
per share (EPS). A lower P/E ratio signifies you’re paying less per $1 of
current earnings. Value investors seek companies with a low P/E ratio.
Value investing is best for investors
looking to hold their securities long-term. If you’re investing in value
companies, it may take years (or longer) for their businesses to scale. Value
investing focuses on the big picture and often attempts to approach investing
with a gradual growth mindset.
People often cite legendary investor Warren
Buffett as the epitome of a value investor. Consider Buffett’s words when
he made a substantial investment in the airline industry. He explained
that airlines “had a bad first century.” Then he said, “And they
got that century out of the way, I hope.”1 This thinking exemplifies much of the value
investing approach: choices are based on decades of trends and with
decades of future performance in mind.
Over the long-run, value investing has
produced superior returns. However, value investing has seen prolonged periods
where it has underperformed growth investing. One study from Dodge & Cox
determined that value strategies have lagged behind growth strategies for a
10-year period during three periods over the last 90 years. Those periods were
the Great Depression (1929-1939/40), the Technology Stock Bubble
(1989-1999), and the period 2004-2014/15.2 Indeed, value investing, has consistently
underperformed growth investing since 2007, producing a drawdown of more than
50% through 2020.3 It
remains to be seen whether value stocks will regain their luster in the near
future.
Rather than look for low-cost deals, growth
investors want investments that offer strong upside potential
when it comes to the future earnings of stocks. It could be said that a growth
investor is often looking for the “next big thing.” Growth investing, however,
is not a reckless embrace of speculative
investing. Rather, it involves evaluating a stock’s current health
as well as its potential to grow.
A drawback to growth investing is a lack of dividends. If a company is in growth mode, it
often needs capital to sustain its expansion. This doesn’t leave much (or any)
cash left for dividend payments. Moreover, with faster earnings growth comes
higher valuations, which are, for most investors, a higher risk proposition.
While there is no definitive list of hard
metrics to guide a growth strategy, there are a few factors an investor should
consider. Growth stocks do tend to outperform during periods of falling
interest rates, as newer companies can find it less expensive to borrow in
order to fuel innovation and expansion. It’s important to keep in mind,
however, that at the first sign of a downturn in the economy,
growth stocks are often the first to get hit.4
Growth investors also need to carefully
consider the management prowess of a business’s executive
team. Achieving growth is among the most difficult challenges for a
firm. Therefore, a stellar leadership team is required. At the same time,
investors should evaluate the competition. A company may enjoy stellar growth,
but if its primary product is easily replicated, the long-term prospects are
dim.
Growth investing is inherently riskier and
generally only thrives during certain economic conditions. Investors looking
for shorter investing horizons with greater potential than value companies are
best suited for growth investing. Growth investing is also ideal for investors
that are not concerned with investment cashflow or dividends.
According to a study from New York
University’s Stern School of Business, “While growth investing underperforms
value investing, especially over long time periods, it is also true that there
are sub-periods, where growth investing dominates.”35 The challenge, of course, is determining when these
“sub-periods” will occur. While it’s inadvisable to try and time the
market, growth investing is most suitable for investors who believe strong
market conditions lay ahead.
Because growth companies are generally
smaller and younger with less market presence, they are more likely to go
bankrupt than value companies. It could be argued that growth investing is
better for investors with greater disposable income as there is greater
downside for the loss of capital compared to other investing strategies.
Momentum investors ride the wave. They
believe winners keep winning and losers keep losing. They look to buy stocks
experiencing an uptrend. Because they believe losers continue to drop, they may
choose to short-sell those securities.
Momentum investors are heavily reliant on technical
analysts. They use a strictly data-driven approach to trading and look for
patterns in stock prices to guide their purchasing decisions. This adds
additional weight to how a security has been trading in the short term.
Momentum investors act in defiance of the efficient-market
hypothesis (EMH). This hypothesis states that asset prices fully reflect
all information available to the public. A momentum investor believes that
given all the publicly-disclosed information, there are still material
short-term price movements to happen as the markets aren’t fully recognizing
recent changes to the company.
Traders who adhere to a momentum strategy
need to be at the switch, and ready to buy and sell at all times. Profits build
over months, not years. This is in contrast to simple buy-and-hold strategies
that take a “set it and forget it” approach.
In addition to being heavily active with
trading, momentum investing often calls for continual technical analysis.
Momentum investing relies on data for proper entry and exit points, and these
points are continually changing based on market sentiment. For those will
little interest in watching the market every day, there are momentum-style exchange-traded
funds (ETFs).
Due to its highly-speculative nature,
momentum investing is among the riskiest strategies. It’s more suitable for
investors that have capital they are okay with potentially losing, as this
style of investing most closely resembles day trading and has the greatest
downside potential.
Dollar-cost averaging (DCA) is the
practice of making regular investments in the market over time and is not
mutually exclusive to the other methods described above. Rather, it is a means
of executing whatever strategy you chose. With DCA, you may choose to put $300
in an investment account every month.
This disciplined approach becomes
particularly powerful when you use automated features that invest for you. The
benefit of the DCA strategy is that it avoids the painful and ill-fated
strategy of market timing. Even seasoned investors occasionally feel the
temptation to buy when they think prices are low only to discover, to their
dismay, they have a longer way to drop.
When investments happen in regular
increments, the investor captures prices at all levels, from high to low. These
periodic investments effectively lower the average per-share cost of the
purchases and reduces the potential taxable basis of future shares sold.
Dollar-cost averaging is a wise choice for
most investors. It keeps you committed to saving while reducing the level of
risk and the effects of volatility. Most investors are not in a position
to make a single, large investment. A DCA approach is an effective
countermeasure to the cognitive bias inherent to humans. New and experienced
investors alike are susceptible to hard-wired flaws in judgment.
Loss aversion bias, for example,
causes us to view the gain or loss of an amount of money asymmetrically.
Additionally, confirmation bias leads us to focus on and remember
information that confirms our long-held beliefs while ignoring contradictory
information that may be important. Dollar-cost averaging circumvents these
common problems by removing human frailties from the equation.
In order to establish an effective DCA
strategy, you must have ongoing cashflow and reoccurring disposable income.
Many online brokers have options to set up reoccurring deposits during a
specific cadence. This feature can then be adjusted based on changes in your
personal cashflow or investment preference.
If you’ve narrowed down a strategy, great!
There are still a few things you’ll need to do before you make the first
deposit into your investment account. First, figure out how much money you need
start investing. This includes your upfront investment as well as how much you
can continue to invest going forward.
You’ll also need to decide the best way for
you to invest. Do you intend to go to a traditional financial advisor or
broker, or is a passive, worry-free approach more appropriate for you? If you
choose the latter, consider signing up with a robo-advisor.
Consider your investment vehicles. Cash
accounts can be immediately withdrawn but often have the greatest consequences.
401ks can’t be touched until you retire and have limited options, but your
company may match your investment. Different types of IRAs have different
levels of flexibility as well.
It also pays to remain diversified. To
reduce the risk of one type of asset bringing down your entire portfolio,
consider spreading your investments across stocks, bonds, mutual funds,
ETFs, and alternative assets. If you’re someone who is socially conscious, you
may consider responsible investing. Now is the time to figure out what you
want your investment portfolio to be made of and what it will look like.
The best investment strategy is the one
that helps you achieve your financial goals. For every investor, the best
strategy will be different. For example, if you’re looking for the quickest
profit with the highest risk, momentum trading is for you. Alternatively, if you’re
planning for the long-term, value stocks are probably better.
A general investment strategy is formed
based on your long-term goals. How much are you trying to save? What is your
timeline for saving? What are you trying to achieve? Once you have your
financial goals in place, you can set target performance on returns and
savings, then find assets that mesh with that plan.
For example, your goal may be to save
$1,000,000. To achieve this goal, you must invest $10,000 per year for 29 years
and achieve 8% annual returns. Armed with this information, you can analyze
various historical investment performance to try and find an asset class that
achieves your strategic target.
Beginners can get started with stocks by
depositing funds in a low-fee or no-fee brokerage firm. These brokerage companies
will not charge (or issue small charges) when the investor deposits, trades, or
withdraws funds. In addition to getting started with a brokerage firm, you can
leverage information on the broker’s website to begin researching which asset
classes and securities you’re interested in.
The decision to choose a strategy is more
important than the strategy itself. Indeed, any of these strategies can
generate a significant return as long as the investor makes a choice and
commits to it. The reason it is important to choose is that the sooner you
start, the greater the effects of compounding.
Remember, don’t focus exclusively on annual
returns when choosing a strategy. Engage the approach that suits your schedule
and risk tolerance. With a plan in place and goal set, you’ll be well on
your way to a long and successful investing future!
RISK DISCLOSURES ON DERIVATIVES
Risk disclosure in the Equity Futures & Options segment aims to inform individual traders about the inherent risks involved in trading these derivative instruments. By disclosing these risks, regulatory bodies such as SEBI seek to ensure that traders are fully aware of the nature of these instruments and the challenges they pose.
Source: SEBI Circular
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