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Reasons for Estate Planning
Real Estate Syndicates
What is Your Creative Retirement Plan?
Retirement Savings When You Change Jobs -
Take It or Leave It
Strategies to Selling Your Home at the
Right Price and Pace
Student Loan Consolidation Is Great Money
Management Which Save Money and Time With a Loan
Save Money Basics
Second Marriages - Estate Planning Concerns
Signs of Dividend Increase
The Secret to Negotiations for FSBO Sellers
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Think about the impact of changing interest rates
on your Income Securities during the past five years. Bonds and
Preferred Stocks; Government and Municipal Securities; they all
moved higher in Market Value. Sure you felt wealthier, but the
increase in your Annual Spendable Income got smaller and smaller.
Your total income could well have decreased during the period as
higher interest rate holdings were called away (at face value), and
reinvestments were made at lower yields!
How many of you have mental bruises from the
realization that you could have taken profits during the downward
trajectory of the cycle, on the very securities that you now lament
over. The nerve; falling below the price you paid for them years
ago. But the income on these turncoats is the same as it was in
2004, when their prices were ten or twenty percent higher. This is
the work of Mother Nature’s financial twin sister. It’s like acorns,
snowfalls, and crocuses. You need to dress properly for seasonal
changes and invest properly for cyclical changes. Remember the days
of Bearer Bonds? There was never a whisper about Market Value
erosion. Was it the IRS or Institutional Wall Street that took them
away?
Higher rates are good for investors, particularly
when retirement is a factor in your investment decisions. The more
you receive for your reinvestment dollars, the more likely it is
that you won’t need a second job to maintain your standard of
living. I know of no retail entity, from grocery store to cruise
line that will accept the Market Value of your portfolio as payment
for goods or services. Income pays the bills, more is always better
than less, and only increased income levels can protect you from
inflation! So, you say, how does a person take advantage of the
cyclical nature of interest rates to garner the best possible income
on investment quality securities? You might also ask why Wall Street
makes such a fuss about the dismal bond market and offers more of
their patented Sell Low, Buy High advisories, but that should be
fairly obvious. An unhappy investor is Wall Streets best customer.
Selecting the right securities to take advantage
of the interest rate cycle is not particularly difficult, but it
does require a change in focus from the statement bottom line… and
the use of a few security types that you may not be 100% comfortable
with. I’m going to assume that you are familiar with these
investments, each of which could be considered (from time to time)
for a spot in the well diversified Income Portion of your Asset
Allocation: (1) The traditional individual Municipal and Corporate
Bonds, Treasuries, Government Agency Securities, and Preferred
Stocks. (2) The eyebrow raising Unit Trust varietals, Closed End
Funds, Royalty Trusts, and REITs. [Purposely excluded: CDs and Money
Funds, which are not investments by definition; CMOs and Zeros,
mutations developed by some sicko MBAs; and Open End Mutual Funds,
which just can’t work because they are really “managed by the mob”…
i.e., investors.]
The market rules that apply to all of these are
fairly predictable, but the ability to create a safer, higher
yielding, and flexible portfolio varies considerably within the
security types. For example, most people who invest in Individual
bonds wind up with a laundry list of odd lot positions, with short
durations and low yields, designed for the benefit of that smiling
guy in the big corner office. There is a better way, but you have to
focus on income and be willing to trade occasionally.
The larger the portfolio, the more likely it is
that you will be able to buy round lots of a diversified group of
bonds, preferred stocks, etc. But regardless of size, individual
securities of all kinds have liquidity problems, higher risk levels
than are necessary, and lower yields spaced out over inconvenient
time periods. Of the traditional types listed above, only preferred
stock holdings are easily added to during upward interest rate
movements, and cheap to take profits on when rates fall. The
downside on all of these is their callability, in best-yield-first
order. Wall Street loves these securities because they command the
highest possible trading costs… costs that need not be disclosed to
the consumer, particularly at issue.
Unit Trusts are traditional securities set to
music, a tune that generally assures the investor of a higher yield
than is possible through personal portfolio creation. There are
several additional advantages: instant diversification, quality, and
monthly cash flow that may include principal (better in rising rate
markets, ya follow?), and insulation from year-end swap scams.
Unfortunately, the Unit Trusts are not managed, so there are few
capital gains distributions to smile about, and once all of the
securities are redeemed, the party is over. Trading opportunities,
the very heart and soul of successful Portfolio Management, are
practically non-existent.
What if you could own common stock in companies
that manage the traditional Income Securities and other recognized
income producers like real estate, energy production, mortgages,
etc.? Closed End Funds (CEFs), REITs, and Royalty Trusts demand your
attention… and don’t let the idea of “leverage” spook you. AAA +
insured corporate bonds, and Utility Preferred Stocks are
“leverage”. The sacred 30-year Treasury Bond is “leverage”. Most
corporations, all governments (and most private citizens) use
leverage. Without leverage, most people would be commuting to work
on bicycles. Every CEF can be researched as part of your selection
process to determine how much leverage is involved, and the
benefits… you’re not going to be happy when you realize what you’ve
been talked out of! CEFs, and the other Investment Company
securities mentioned, are managed by professionals who are not
taking their direction form that mob (also mentioned earlier). They
provide you the opportunity to have a properly structured portfolio
with a significantly higher yield, even after the management fees
that are inside.
Certainly, a REIT or Royalty Trust is more risky
than a CEF comprised of Preferred Stocks or Corporate Bonds, but
here you have a way to participate in the widest variety of fixed
and variable income alternatives in a much more manageable form.
When prices rise, profit taking is routine in a liquid market; when
prices fall, you can add to your position, increasing your yield and
reducing your cost basis at the same time. Now don’t start to
salivate about the prospect of throwing all your money into Real
Estate and/or Gas and Oil Pipelines. Diversify properly as you would
with any other investments, and make sure that your living expenses
(actual or projected) are taken care of by the less risky CEFs in
the portfolio. In bond CEFs, you can get un-leveraged portfolios,
state specific and/or insured Municipal portfolios, etc. Monthly
income (frequently augmented by capital gains distributions) at a
level that is most often significantly better than your broker can
obtain for you. I told you you’d be angry!
Another feature of Investment Company shares (and
please stay away from gimmicky, passively managed, or indexed types)
is somewhat surprising and difficult to explain. The price you pay
for the shares frequently represents a discount from the market
value of the securities contained in the managed portfolio. So
instead of buying a diversified group of illiquid individual
securities at a premium, you are reaping the benefit of a portfolio
of (quite possibly the same) securities at a discount. Additionally,
and unlike regular Mutual Funds that can issue as many shares as
they like without your approval, CEFs will give you the first shot
at any additional shares they intend to distribute to investors.
Stop, put down the phone. Move into these
securities calmly, without taking unnecessary losses on good quality
holdings, and never buy a new issue. I meant to say: absolutely
never buy a new issue, for all of the usual reasons. As with
individual securities, there are reasons for unusually high or low
yields, like too much risk or poor management. No matter how well
managed a junk bond portfolio is, it’s still just junk. So do a
little research and spread your dollars around the many management
companies that are out there. If your advisor tells you that all of
this is risky, ill-advised foolishness… well, that’s Wall Street,
and the baby needs shoes.
The final article in this Income Investing
trilogy will be on managing the Income Portfolio using the Working
Capital Model.
Steve Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.com/
Professional Portfolio Management since 1979 Author of: "The
Brainwashing of the American Investor: The Book that Wall Street
Does Not Want YOU to Read", and "A Millionaire's Secret Investment
Strategy" |