Open Book
Seizing Opportunity Investing
03/12/07 - 12:46 PM EDT
As many investors, who were both lulled and seduced by the performance of the stock market during the 1980s and 1990s, learned as the new century got under way, the American stock market carries risks as well as rewards. This is particularly the case for investors who lose track of the true values of securities, whose portfolios are relatively nondiversified and who have not become familiar with and do not use opportunities across the investment universe and across the geographic globe. I wrote Opportunity Investing to acquaint readers with the many areas in which to profitably place their capital, to provide to potential investors the information needed to determine when, where and how to take advantage of different investment opportunities, and to offer ways to blend various investment vehicles -- domestic and foreign -- into stable, diversified and profitable portfolios. In short, Opportunity Investing reflects the strategies that my firm employs in the management of client investment accounts, large and small --strategies that rely on certain techniques relating to market-timing as well as to the selection of investment vehicle. Diversification is a key theme of Opportunity Investing. Diversification is the creation of investment portfolios that consist of various forms of investments so that risks are not concentrated in any single area, such as portfolios made up solely of technology-oriented stocks that became so popular just before the crash of 2000 to 2002. That market decline brought down the technology-laden Nasdaq Composite Index by more than 77%. (In early 2007, this index still remained about 50% below its peak reading in 2000.) Diversification involves placing portions of investment capital into areas where price movement is not necessarily uniform, so that some portions of your investment portfolio rise in price while others may be just flat or even in decline. The various segments of your investment portfolio are relatively uncorrelated, which means they do not rise or fall in price at the same time. Uncorrelated portfolios, all else being equal, carry less risk and provide more consistent profits than correlated portfolios, or portfolios in which all portions tend to rise and fall at the same time. In Opportunity Investing, you will learn how to create uncorrelated portfolios of American mutual funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs), how to employ real estate investment trusts (REITs) to offset technology issues, and how to select real estate investment trusts that really pay as well as collect the rent. You will learn how and when to employ short-term, safer bonds to provide income diversification and when to employ higher-yielding, longer-term bonds, or even the highest-yielding "junk" bonds, for which this book provides a specific timing model to reduce the risks and increase the returns of these more speculative income instruments.
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