Wikinvest Wire

Saturday, October 08, 2005

The Big Picture For The Week of October 9, 2005

A neighbor of ours subscribes to a newsletter type of magazine called Bottom Line. She gives me a stack of them every so often because there is usually an investing article or two in each issue. Every so often there will be a very interesting article.

I just went through a stack of them and found two model-ish portfolios, one from Jeremy Siegel and the other from Ben Stein.

Ben Stein's portfolio was a little more specific;

40%-60% of your retirement account allocated over three ETF, two of which should be foreign;
  • Diamonds (DIA)
  • iShares EAFE (EFA)
  • streetTRACKS Dow Jones Euro Stoxx 50 (FEZ)
He says the rest should be in REITs/Mutual Funds;
  • Cohen & Steers Quality Income Realty Fund (RQI)
  • Alpine Dynamic Dividend Fund (ADVDX)
  • iShares TIPs Fund (TIP)
  • Templeton Emerging Markets Income Fund (TEI)
  • Pimco Corporate Income Fund (PCN)
  • Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Fund (VBMFX)
Professor Siegel's portfolio idea is a little fuzzier;
  • 10% in "El Dorado" stocks which represent golden opportunities. He cited ABT, AZN, BP, KO, CL, DEO, NVS, PFE and RD.
  • 10% in "well-established" companies that have attractive P/E ratios, make everyday products and have good dividend yields. No names were mentioned.
  • 30% in ETFs of the three sectors likely to lead the stock market in the next decade which he feels will be energy, consumer staples and healthcare
  • 30% in an index fund like Vanguard Total Stock Market Index fund (VTSMX)
  • 20% in iShares S&P Global 100 (IOO) or streetTRACKS Global Titans Index Fund (DGX)
Both portfolios have flaws and positives as would any model portfolio. Without looking under the hood, both are very heavy in mega cap and the foreign is very heavy to western Europe. Mega caps have lagged for a while and may continue to do so. Western Europe, I believe, has a tighter correlation to the US than it used to and I think will continue to get tighter which means less potential diversification .

3 comments:

Mike_Writes_IT said...

Roger:

Which 3 ETF sectors do you believe will lead over the next five years?

Thx . . . this is a great posting.

JSH said...

Ben Stein is a great American, thought leader and a prolific writer. I've read a number of the books he has written along with Phil DeMuth - Yes, You Can Time The Market!, Yes, You Can Be a Successful Income Investor!, Can America Survive, How to Ruin Your Life and his monthly musings in Ben Stein's Diary in American Spectator. I don't always agree with his thoughts or recommendations but I generally find his writings thought provoking and he generally has the best interests of the retail investor in mind. For example, in Yes, You Can Be A Successful Income Investor!, he had several thoughtful recommendations for new funds from the mutual fund and ETF industries for retail/individual investor, such as an unhedged basket of currency funds. I recently attended an Barclays iShares seminar where they indicated they have plans to develop such a fund.

Barclays appears to be the leader in bringing institutional like investment products to retail investors. In fact, Barclays has a couple of pending registrations for commodity indexed debt offerings under the iPath name. Keep an eye on this firm.

As for 3 ETF sectors, I am in agreement with Siegel's sector selections for the long term - healthcare because of current valuations and favorable demographics and energy and consumer staples due to the emergence of the economies of China and India and their enormous populations. Short term, however, the energy and broader commodities sectors in particular may have run up too far too fast and gotten ahead of long term trends.

Anonymous said...

great post.

Are these portolios "buy and hold" or "what looks good at this moment"?

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