February 2018 – End of Month Update … and the upside of slack

Slack Investor remains IN for US, UK (Just!), and Australian index shares.

… a very volatile month and a test for the fainthearted.  The monthly overall declines do not tell the whole story – rapid declines then recovering. The Australian Index (-0.4%) had the best recovery and the US index (-3.9%) and UK index (-4.0%) had similar overall monthly falls.

Thanks Alexas_Fotos Pixabay

Slack Investor is already off the couch and is still on alert for the US Market considering its high valuation and its recent 10.2% correction. The UK market is also under watch as it is very close to its monthly stop loss (See UK  Index page).

The Upside of being Slack

Some of the time there is a price to pay for being Slack – and only making sell decisions on a monthly basis. But it is not this day!

From Source

… A day may come when the courage of men fails, when we forsake our friends and break all bonds of fellowship. But it is not this day. Excerpt from Aragon’s  Sons of Gondor speech – Lord of the Rings – Wikiquote

Well, … quoting from Tolkien’s The Return of the King is perhaps is a little dramatic but this post is a bit technical and needed a picture of Viggo Mortensen just to brighten it up.

There are many share traders who set automatic stop losses with their brokers that trigger a sell order when the price moves below a designated value. This technique can be good when you want to set a stop loss and forget about it – But there are pitfalls. Slack Investor has tried this method before and has found that the automatic sells are sometimes triggered by a particularly volatile day and your automatic sell order  may trigger at $3.00 but at the close of the day the stock may have recovered to $4.00.

More common (and disappointing!) is when a rapidly falling price jumps below your automatic stop loss without triggering the sell. You then would sell the stock manually – usually at a lower price.

There are many traders who, like Slack Investor, set there stop losses manually … but act on them on a daily basis.  The chart below is a daily chart of the US Index S&P 500. As a refresher, each vertical line represents the daily price range for the S&P 500. A red line indicates that the price has dropped during the day, and a blue line shows a daily price rise. Clicking on the chart will increase the resolution and you can then make out little tabs either side of the vertical daily line. The tab on the left represents the opening daily price and the tab on the right the closing price for the day. A daily trader might act on his stop loss immediately the S&P 500 falls below the stop loss (e.g. big red arrow). This technique can be a very good thing if there are further falls! However, in this case, the recovery from the 10.2% correction has rewarded the Slack Investor’s slackness.

S&P 500 Daily Price chart – From Incredible Charts

 

S&P 500 Monthly Cart – From Incredible Charts

Slack Investor does not like the daily grind of decisions. He likes to do most of his trading based on monthly charts (See left) … where each vertical line represents a month of price movement for the US Index S&P 500. At the end of February 2018, the right hand tab of the last vertical red line indicates a closing price of 2713 – well above the stop loss of 2557 (for now!) so my trading method says to hang in there.

Sometimes there is a price to pay for this slackness – For instance, when there is not a recovery in the stock price! But the delight of only making monthly decisions outweighs this concern for me. My monthly trading method together with diversification (~20 stocks) and a bit of effort in selecting growth stocks has proved to be sound so far.

All Index pages and charts  have been updated to reflect the monthly changes – (ASX, UK, US).

6 thoughts on “February 2018 – End of Month Update … and the upside of slack”

  1. Hi Slack Investor. Apologies if you answered this before (I’m new to the blog) but why don’t you get really slack and just buy and hold index funds? Why try to time the market at all?

    1. Hi Kieran – I haven’t written a post about this yet. Buy and Hold is an excellent strategy … and agreed, the ultimate in slackness. I like owning shares and I like to think of my method as enhanced “Buy and Hold” as my stop losses are usually fairly wide and keep me in the market for all but the very big dips. I have been documenting a Slack Investor monthly trading strategy for index funds for 14 years (June 2004) and this method has outperformed Buy and Hold in the ASX, UK, and US markets so far (3.1%pa, 2.2%pa, 1.1%pa – see Index Pages tables). It is just a matter of what trading strategy suits you.

      1. Thanks for the detailed answer. Quick question on the ASX Index Page table – is the value of $10k for the benchmark based on an accumulation index? $14,917 seems too low for 13 years invested. Are you accounting for income being reinvested throughout the holding periods?

        1. Hi Kieran … yes, I can see that my tables need more explanation – I will add to these pages when time allows. For simplicity, the tables do not include dividends or interest when Slack Investor is out of the market. They do not include transaction costs either. They are a simple way of comparing a pure theoretical Index buy (ASX 200) in 2004 with the Slack Investor monthly trading method. The buy and sell signals would be approximately the same for an ETF that follows the index. For $10000 theoretically invested in the ASX 200 in 2005 (I actually own STW but base my trades on the ASX200 chart), holding the index would be worth $19 983 at 28 Feb 2018 without dividends. Using the Slack Investor monthly trading method, your investment would be worth $28 491.

  2. Hi SI, I’m not sure that day will every come – the value of much less stress, greater simplicity, and great results over the long run is hard to top when it comes to a satisfying life. Daily reviews are far too frequent in my view – there’s much better things to do with your time!

    Stop losses are an interesting strategy – I dabbled with them once but doesn’t really suit my investment style. The whole point of them is to not worry about your investments – but you can indeed still worry if they don’t execute the way they should!

    Hope you slackness continues to be rewarded in the coming months…

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