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What Most Investors Don't Understand About Stocks

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What Most Investors Don't Understand About Stocks

Alexander Green, Chief Investment Strategist, The Oxford Club

Alexander Green

It's true that no asset class has outperformed a diversified portfolio of stocks over the long haul.

But that's not the whole story. Let me illustrate with an example...

In the October 2022 issue of The Oxford Communiqué, I recommended Novo Nordisk (NYSE: NVO).

I started by posing this question...

Wouldn't it be great if there were a safe and effective drug that could solve the obesity crisis?

I then explained what a GLP-1 drug is - no need to do that now - and declared "This is a well-managed, highly profitable, recession-resistant company with an excellent growth profile, a blockbuster new product, and scads of upside potential."

We stopped out of the stock less than 22 months later with a 123% gain. (The S&P 500 - with dividends reinvested - returned 54% over the period.)

We use trailing stops to protect both our profits and our principal.

They ensure that a significant gain never slips through our fingers - and that a small loss never becomes an unacceptable loss.

Since it's not possible to know in advance how long the market - or any individual stock - will trend higher, a trailing stop keeps you in a position as long as it is trending higher... or at least sideways.

However, if the stock falls back by a certain percentage - 25% in our Oxford Trading Portfolio - we sell, no questions asked.

Why? Because a price decline generally reflects the current and anticipated business prospects for the company.

(Every major selloff starts with a minor selloff.)

However, some traders don't like stops.

They claim that they can knock you out of a position that later trades higher, leading to regret.

This is true. But let me point out that no investment strategy ever devised doesn't occasionally lead to regret.

Novo Nordisk has lost nearly 100 points over the past 14 months, as the company has had to deal with stiff competition from Eli Lilly (NYSE: LLY) and others.

So no Oxford Club Member regrets taking a 123% gain last year.

Still, the sharp selloff in Novo Nordisk surprises many investors.

After all, GLP-1 drugs really work, allowing patients to drop approximately 20% of their body weight in a relatively short period of time.

Yet success attracts competition. And competition erodes sales, profits, and margins.

As growth in earnings declines, so does the share price, generally.

What will surprise readers is just how common this phenomenon is.

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Of the more than 28,000 U.S. stocks whose returns can be tracked between 1926 and 2022, nearly 59% earned less than U.S. treasury bills over their full histories, according to research by Hendrik Bessembinder, a finance professor at Arizona State University.

If most stocks did that poorly, some readers would ask, how did the indexes do so well?

The astonishing answer is that - over the very long haul - all the stock market's excess returns over cash has come from fewer than 4% of the companies.

Let me restate this in blunter terms: Ninety-six percent of publicly traded companies deliver long-term returns that are somewhere between mediocre and lousy.

That is why there are only two alternatives for savvy investors: Indexing - which guarantees that you will own that small percentage of stocks that post phenomenal returns (in diluted form due to diversification) - and ultra-careful stock selection.

Some investors aren't satisfied owning an index fund and merely earning the market's return.

They want outperformance - and it's not an unreasonable desire.

But when you are playing a game where only one in 25 stocks delivers gangbuster returns, you need to use a discipline that enables you to protect both your profits and your principal.

For The Oxford Club, trailing stops are that tool.

Incidentally, trailing stops can also protect you from a savage bear market.

For instance, the S&P 500 declined 37% in 2008, the first year of the financial crisis.

As a result, we stopped out of every position in our Oxford Trading Portfolio that year with an average gain of 28%.

Ordinarily, an average gain of 28% is nothing to crow about. But in a year when the market lost 37% of its value? I heard no complaints.

History also reveals that things can get worse than they did in 2008 - and equities can stay depressed a lot longer.

Italian stocks, for example, lost 78.2% in the 20 years ended in 1979. Japanese stocks lost 64.3% in the 20 years ended in 2009. Norwegian stocks lost 74.1% during the 30 years ended in 1978. German stocks lost 21.5% in the 20 years ended in 1980. And Swiss stocks lost 20.9% in the 30 years ended in 1991.

Can't happen here in the U.S.? Think again.

During the Great Depression, the market plunged 67% over nearly 13 years. And stocks didn't fully recover for over 16 years.

Losses that occur over a decade are rare in the U.S. But they do happen.

In the 120 months ended in February 2009, the market lost a total of 37.4%.

Other 10-year periods when U.S. stocks posted negative returns include the 120 months ended in September 1974, August 1939, June 1921, October 1857, and April 1842.

The losses in these periods ranged from 23% to 37.3%. These losses are in real terms, adjusted for inflation.

In short, long-term declines do happen from time to time and individual stocks can go to zero.

So, yes, you will occasionally wish that you had hung on to a stock rather than getting stopped out.

But, over the long haul, the likelihood is that you will look back at 96% of your stocks and wish you had either locked in a profit or cut your loss at some point along the way.

Trailing stops make sure that happens.

Good investing,

Alex

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