Category Archives: stocks

The Hazards Of Over-Diversification In Investment Advice

One thing I have learned over the course of my career is there are never any shortage of opinions or strategies on how you should be investing your nest egg. Everywhere you look there are hedge funds, mutual funds, ETFs, advisors, newsletters, insurance companies, and other fringe “experts” touting their methods. There is no doubt that each approach will have their own benefits and drawbacks. Opportunities and risks will be characterized by security selection, position size, timing, and costs. However, the problem that many investors run into is when they try to implement several divergent paths simultaneously. I had an investor email me the other day and say that they are subscribing to several newsletters in tandem with placing multiple accounts with different investment advisors. He wanted to know more about how we use ETFs – in effect shopping for one more opinion on what he should do with his money . I know his intentions were quite genuine. He is likely thinking that this structure is highly diversified and allows him to cover numerous bases with his investment portfolio. However, the reality is that he is trying to drink from a fire hose of information and absorbing opinions from a wide range of conflicting sources. Some questions immediately come to mind when I think about this common dilemma: How do you decide the weighting of each advisors’ opinion or strategy? What systems are you actually using and which ones are just there for “market research”? Are you increasing your overall costs by implementing all these services continually? Do each of these services enhance your total return or are they just giving you something to do? Are you just needlessly searching for the holy grail of strategists that will outperform in every market environment? (hint: they don’t exist) In any group of 4 or 5 advisors, there are probably going to be at least one that is taking a contrarian viewpoint and possibly even implementing that in their recommendations. That means you are likely absorbing opposing views that will erode your confidence in sticking with a simple and reliable plan . Let me tell you from experience what will happen. You see one guy tell you to buy bonds as a core allocation and shock absorber for your portfolio. The next guy tells you that rising rates are going to destroy the foundation of the American economy. The only reasonable course of action then is to do absolutely nothing – and you will. Sitting in cash fretting about which person to believe and then only likely implementing the correct answer long after the move has been made. The funny thing is that both of these recommendations will likely be right at some point. The problem is that we only know which one (and when) with the clarity of hindsight. Or worse, you end up going long bonds in one account and short bonds in another account, which effectively offsets both trades. There is nothing quite like the experience of paying to go nowhere. The same can be said of stocks as well. I read three articles last week talking about how consumer staples stocks were risky because of their high relative valuations. This morning I woke up to an explanation of how consumer staples are historically some of the best stocks to own during the summer months. It’s that kind of conflicting advice that permeates this industry. One argument is fundamentally driven, while the other is data-driven. Both have their own merits. Who do you believe? There Is An Easier Way My best advice is to pare down the number of advisors with a substantial influence on your portfolio. One or two professionals that have proven their worth through your experience or research should be enough to guide you through the best and worst of times. This should also include tuning out the noise of the media and allowing a specific philosophy a reasonable time to work. I’m not here to advocate for the “best strategy” because everyone has a different philosophy, risk tolerance, goals, and experience. There are many different ways you can make money in the market as long as you realize the benefits and drawbacks of your specific method. My personal view is that you should be focusing on a relatively simple framework using low-cost ETFs as core holdings. You can easily customize a well-honed list of funds to your specific needs and make small adjustments over time as conditions warrant. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article. Additional disclosure: David Fabian, FMD Capital Management, and/or clients may hold positions in the ETFs and mutual funds mentioned above. The commentary does not constitute individualized investment advice. The opinions offered herein are not personalized recommendations to buy, sell, or hold securities.

Red Bull Gives GoPro Wings, But Camera Maker Still Low-Flier

GoPro ( GPRO ) stock soared as much as 8.9% Tuesday, after the maker of wearable action cameras announced a multiyear global partnership with energy drink maker Red Bull. GoPro stock was up 5%, near 9.75, in late-afternoon trading on the stock market today . But the stock is still down 46% this year, and it has a lowest-possible IBD Relative Strength Rating of 1, meaning it’s in the bottom 1% of stocks for performance in the past 12 months. The partnership includes content production, distribution, cross-promotion and product innovation, the companies said in a press release . As part of the deal, privately held Red Bull will receive equity in GoPro, and GoPro will become Red Bull’s exclusive provider of point-of-view imaging technology for capturing video during Red Bull sporting events and media productions. “This partnership is very strategic for GoPro,” GoPro founder and CEO Nick Woodman said in a statement. “While we’ve worked closely for many years, as official partners we’ll be able to more effectively help one another execute our shared vision and scale our respective businesses.” GoPro went public at a price of 24 in June 2014 and reached as high as 98.47 in October 2014. But shares have fallen on declining sales and concerns about market saturation and lower-cost competition in the action camera market. Red Bull will receive less than 1% equity in GoPro, or about 1 million shares, Piper Jaffray analyst Erinn Murphy said in a research report. “While this extends the consumer impressions of the brand globally, we believe GoPro still is battling some challenges with reinvigorating unit sales of its capture devices,” Murphy said. “On the heels of the delayed drone launch, tepid consumer demand for action camera products over the last few quarters and a soft Q2 guide from Best Buy ( BBY ) this morning (14% of GoPro sales), we are maintaining our underweight rating” on GoPro. GoPro’s partnership with Red Bull will run for 3-1/2 years. As an exclusive partner, GoPro also will become Red Bull’s aerial camera partner, a role previously filled by drone competitor DJI, Murphy said. GoPro is scheduled to launch its Karma flying-camera drone in time for the holiday shopping season. Chinese consumer electronics manufacturer Xiaomi is expected to introduce its first drone on Wednesday. Xiaomi’s Mi Drone is expected to cost about $610, more than 20% below a comparable product from market leader DJI, Bloomberg reported Tuesday . The Mi Drone also will record ultra high-resolution 4K video. RELATED: Best Buy Latest Retailer To Disappoint, Gives Soft Profit Outlook Drone Market Positive For AeroVironment, Not GoPro, Piper Says .