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Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Buy And Hold Is Not Buy And Forget

We have all heard it. Mainstream media pundits talking about 'the lost decade' and that 'buy-and-hold as a strategy is dead and gone, if ever it was a viable strategy.' Sorry folks, but I am not buying or holding their position on buy-and-hold. Buy-and-hold is neither dead, gone or even sick, but I will concede - it is misunderstood.

Walt Woerheide, a professor of investments at American College and co-author of the financial professionals' textbook "Fundamentals of Investments for Financial Planning," shared his views on buy-and-hold in an interview on BankRate.com. Here are some of his notable comments when asked 'is buy-and-hold dead?':
No, absolutely not, and it never will be. It comes back to the fact that anybody who thinks they are going to outguess the market is going to be wrong as often as they are right.

You had to be correct about 80 percent of the time to beat a buy-and-hold strategy.

The biggest danger in trying to guess the market is being out when the market makes a big jump.

Every time you are jumping in and out, you're paying commissions.
However, buy-and-hold is not buy-and-forget. We must constantly monitor our holdings to ensure there is no deterioration in the underlying fundamentals of the stocks we hold. This concept was reinforced recently when I came across a couple of articles I wrote back in August 2008.

The first article listed my top 5 performing stocks for 2008 through July 31st. The stocks were:

Wal-Mart (WMT) | Yield: 2.8%
Canadian National Railway Company (CNI) | Yield: 1.8%
Health Care Property Investors Inc. (HCP) | Yield: 5.1%
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) | Yield: 3.5%
McDonald’s (MCD) | Yield: 2.8%

An interesting note is that I still own each of these stocks and they continue to provide excellent life-to-date returns ranging from WMT's 5.2% to MCD's 23.9% (annualized). In addition HCP and CNI have provided double-digit annualized returns since I purchased them. Buy-and-hold continues to work well for all these holdings.

The second article focused on my bottom 5 performing stocks for 2008 through July 31st. The stocks were:

iStar Financial Inc. (SFI) | Yield: n/a
American Capital Strategies, Ltd. (ACAS) | Yield: n/a
SunTrust Banks, Inc. (STI) | Yield: 1.0%
First Industrial Realty, Inc. (FR) | Yield: n/a
General Electric (GE) | Yield: 3.7%

This group also shared an interesting commonality - I no longer own any of them. Each stock was sold when the company announced a reduction in their dividend rate. This was a fundamental change in the companies that resulted in each stock no longer meeting my criteria as an income investment.

Fortunately, I was able to get out before the worse part of their decline. Several of the companies have not recovered to where they were prior to the dividend cut.

Buy-and-hold is a winning investment strategy when consistently applied over the long term. What is misunderstood by the detractors is that pruning your portfolio of investments that no longer meet your objectives, is just as important as the original selection (and holding) of the stock.

Full Disclosure: Long WMT, CNI, HCP, JNJ, MCD. See a list of all my dividend growth holdings here.

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- Why We Are Dividend Growth Investors
- What Determines A Dividend Stock's Yield
(Photo Credit)
Tags: [WMT] [CNI] [HCP] [JNJ] [MCD] [SFI] [ACAS] [STI] [FR] [GE]