Performance and Trading
You heard
the saying, but what does it really mean? We live in a world where performance
is stressed. Hedge funds can be measured on a monthly basis. Twenty percent charges on profits are levied by fund making
their view short-term. Daily assessments are made, comparing one sector to
another giving the impression that short-term performance is what it’s
all about. But is it? No it is not.
Just look
at where real wealth resides and why it’s there. Old Money means wealth held for many generations. How can wealth
be held in this way, and how was it made up? While that’s a huge subject
and one we cannot cover here, it’s important for you to realize that
this was not made on a monthly, trading basis. It certainly was not made
through day or week or month trading. Many traders do well several times and
then on a “certainty”, go into an investment that costs them
their past profits, and more –this is more akin to gambling. Looking at
a month to month trading performance as the measure of investing ability, the
investment manager is being measured on his ability to trade short-term and
not on his investment abilities. Genuine wealth-building ability is a far
broader subject than this, as the wealthy know.
It is possible to trade well. We do know
of a trader who consistently made exceptional profits over a long period. He
chose a share that was out-of-sight from the general market in London
–a tin share called Ayer Hitam in central
Malaysia. The chart pattern was an even, consistent set of waves that
followed the same highs and lows over time. He would follow that and buy low
and sell high while it stayed below the markets radar. He made an absolute
fortune for himself, but his trading was very different from today’s
meaning of trader. One of our friends, a professional trader who hosts a
trading site, confirmed that 52% of trades succeed. The profits are entirely
dependent on the trader and his ability to manage technical analysis and not
the underlying investment. Fundamentals are not considered such a high
priority in such trading. The point we
want to emphasize is that trading is not investing!
Through my
own experience as a Fund Manager, I’ve learned that by far the most
successful strategy and wealth-builder is to take a long-term approach and
only trade the occasional mid-term major corrections, aiming at 30% moves, or
so. The emphasis of successful investing focuses on investments that do well in the bad times. Select
investments that can withstand the sort of tribulations we’ve seen in
the last four and a half years and you can see that not losing money or
profits ensures that you can build your wealth when the times are good. This
requires a deeper approach to investing, covering economics, finance, and
business; it more than just ‘punting’ the charts. But
that’s real wealth creation investing, still there when you retire or
die. And after all, isn’t it true that the best investor is the one
that has made the most when he dies?
One of the
most successful wealth creating vehicles of the past 30 years has been a
share called De Beers, a diamond company with a difference…
De Beers
In 1980
the South African diamond company De Beers stood at around Rand 30 on the Johannesburg
Stock Exchange. It did well in the previous century, but let us begin with
1980 –it paid a dividend of 1% every year; however, it had certain
winning ingredients. Its cash balances were roughly the same as its total
share worth, or when it felt that it was better to hold diamonds themselves,
the value of those diamonds equalled its total share value. The business came
into its value for nothing. It successfully marketed the saying
“Diamonds are Forever”, or as Marilyn Monroe put it,
“Diamonds are a girl’s best friend.”
This
remains a successful formula. More importantly, De Beers managed to dominate
the Diamond market on the supply front and could almost name its prices. It
was a near-monopoly, supported by most if not all the world’s diamond producers.
Until the Oppenheimer family took De Beers off the market at a price of R340,
a share in the last few years (still paying it regular 1% dividend) this was
a share that served that investor generation well. It was held as a constant
hold in portfolios and not usually traded. It more than justified its
presence there! In good times they acquired cash through diamond sales; in
bad times they acquired stock. Throughout that period, the share held its
value in terms of assets owned. Its liquidation value almost always matched
its share price. Pension Funds and pensioners couldn’t have done
better. Today, that monopoly has been broken, and the Oppenheimer family has
just sold their shares in the company to Anglo American.
Today the
sellers of those shares need a place to park their wealth at least if not a
replacement investment. These are among those people who buy gold because
they have money!
Where Can You Find Such an Investment Today?
Today, that skill is still needed when you make your
choice of what to invest in. So how do you find such an investment?
Take a
look at the environment that De Beers operated in –particularly from
the end of the Second World War. Recovery, the growth of wealth across the
developed world was the theme that took the developed world from war’s
end to 1980. Then currency confusion and inflation set in, to be cured by
Volker in the U.S. raising interest rates to 25%. From then on, economic
global expansion took the U.S. and the developed world to its heyday in early
2007. Then just as had happened in 1914, when the British Empire reached its
zenith, the dreams of continually growing wealth were shattered by a credit
crunch that we’re still seeing rampaging throughout the Western world.
An
examination of the causes and potential for worse to come tells us that in
the four years since then, western world leaders have failed to correct the
structural faults. A further look tells us that the foundation structures of
the developed world are crashing into each other and appear nowhere near
solving the problems than they were when it started. What does this point to
in the future?
The hold
the U.S. has had on the global economy alongside the dominance of the U.S.
dollar on the world’s financial system is waning and infested with its
own long-term problems. China and India together with their satellite Asian
nations are sucking the wealth out of the west slowly but surely. At some
point in the future, the dollar will have to give ground to the Chinese Yuan.
The emerging world will have as much say as the West will have on global
matters. But the financial world was not designed for that. It was designed
for dollar hegemony. The influence and power of the west will have to shrink
and with a great deal of difficulty and protest. The world will come under
diverse influences, with international trust and interdependence suffering as
a result. It will be a very uncertain, if not unstable world we move into
–far more so than now.
It’s
in this climate that a successful investor must operate. Changing times will
be the investment theme of the future. So how can one choose an investment
that suits this scene? The exact science of hindsight tells us that we should
have had this discussion in the year 2005. That year would have been a good
time to get out of mainstream companies in the west and into gold. Not only
would one have secured profits but would have climbed aboard an investment
that has risen more than fivefold in 7 years. Silver has done even better.
But hindsight thinkers are facing the wrong way. What does the future hold?
Expect the
leaders of the financial and political world to give us more of the same
flailing about in problems they’re not authorized by profits or voters
to resolve. This will continue until the criteria of profits and voters are
changed by circumstance –if it should ever happen. Until then bad time investments will continue to
do well. Investments that have done well in bad times since 2007 will continue to do well. Leading that pack
are gold and silver bullion as well as the derivatives and mining company
shares producing them.
Retaining Wealth
The theme
we see going forward is to keep hold of what you have made. The emphasis
remains on keeping wealth more than it does on making new wealth. This is the
time to invest in something that will do well in bad times. The good times
will see these investments do just as well if not better. Gold and silver
will continue to be at the forefront of well-performing, bad time
investments.
So why are
people not buying gold to make money? This is one of those saying that seem
so neat that they are more remembered than thought about. Alan Greenspan put
it more succinctly, when he said “Gold is money in extremis.”
When a market has topped and interest rates rise,
the only place to be is in cash.
When hope in the future and potentially damaging
problems abound in cash itself as well as markets, non-national cash is the
place to be.
When you believe that these problems will persist
until fundamental changes are made in the global financial system so that it
recovers and grows, you hold global cash until that time.
With
little sign of the hoped-for, effective reforms of the financial system and
future stability and growth, the time to move out of that global cash has not arrived, and the
only globally-accepted, all situations “cash” is gold!
There will
be the occasional situation where individual companies or assets outperform
gold, but a core investment for the bulk of investors that want wealth
protection remains precious metals –in particular gold and to a lesser,
but potentially more profitable, silver.
|