Key Investment Results and Findings From 2014 and Refinements to Investment Strategies and Techniques

This article offers a reflection on key investment related results and findings from 2014 and informs how to make the most of investment situations through pre-planning and the development and refinement of investment strategies and techniques.

 

So… The results are now officially in. I was able to beat each of the major stock market indexes in 2014. My personal investment account earned 20.8% while my much smaller Roth IRA account (which is subject to more stringent rules, such as no margin and more stringent buying and selling rules, making investing a bit more challenging) earned 9.0%. Between the two I collectively earned a 19.2% gain, which is nearly a 3 year gain on average, and was over five times the Russell 2000 index’s year end gain of 3.6%, nearly triple the Dow Jones Industrial Average index’s year end gain of 7.5%, and almost double the S&P 500 index’s gain of 11.4%. So, overall, this was a highly successful investment year for me. Especially since 85% of actively managed fund managers lagged the benchmark indexes they were seeking to beat in 2014 making it their worst year in 30 years.

The key to my investment success this past year was strong discipline and the active assessment and refinement of my investment strategies and techniques. Early in the year my investment account was down 33% due to some stocks which continuously declined, but I kept buying into them, because the risk-reward indicators that I generally look at were highly favorable in nature and often lagging stocks eventually become leading stocks. So I patiently waited for the rebound to happen and sure enough it did. Years ago, as a young investor, I might have made the classic investing mistake by panicking and selling at the bottom; fully realizing the 33% loss in the process. However, strong discipline allowed me to continue executing my investment strategies. And it takes a lot of discipline to keep buying into stocks which sharply decline in value and to patiently wait for rebounds to happen.

Once I was able to fully recover from my early losses, I made adjustments to my investment strategies and techniques to better align them with my desired investment risks. I made adjustments to my risk-reward thresholds as well as my investment trade execution amounts. These refinements allowed me to greatly capitalize on the mid September-to-mid October market slump where the overall stock market lost nearly 10% and then rapidly gained over 11% over a period of about 3 weeks or so. During that period of time my investment account lost 6%, but then rose 22% over the three week recovery period; beating the S&P 500 Index both on the way down and on the way up. So my refined investment strategies and techniques allowed me experience less downside as well as greater upside with respect to the overall S&P 500 Index which indicates that the refinements I made were fairly effective overall.

One key message here is that it is important to maintain a sense of discipline by defining your investment strategies and techniques “up front” and executing these accordingly. Solid investment strategies and techniques need to define what actions you will take either way things might go: whether the stocks you purchase rise or whether they fall. Because, in the investment world, things do not always play out the way you might initially expect, but either way things go your investment strategies and techniques should allow you to frequently capitalize. Mine do. Another key message here is to always seek to refine your investment strategies and techniques so that you continue to maximize the benefit you get out of these. When I experienced the 33% loss early in 2014, I came to realize that my investment strategies and techniques were a bit too risky for my purposes, so I made refinements to these. Refinements which allowed me to greatly capitalize later in the year. I’ve made several refinements to my investment techniques and strategies over the years. The investment techniques and strategies that I use today look nothing like those that I used during my early investment days. So make it a regular practice to evaluate and refine the investment techniques and strategies that you use over time.

This article informs how to make the most of investment situations through pre-planning and the development and refinement of investment strategies and techniques. Part of being a solid investor involves effectively performing pre-planning and executing in accordance with your pre-defined strategies and techniques in a disciplined fashion; taking actions to exit investments which become unfavorable in nature (as a seller) and capitalizing on new investment opportunities which become favorable in nature (as a buyer). By periodically rotating out of investments which become less favorable and into investment opportunities which become more favorable in nature you will realize consistent investment success over time. You won’t make winning investments all of the time, but the point is to use strategies and techniques which allow you to make winning investments for much of the time. Being a solid investor also involves recognizing opportunities when you see them and promptly capitalizing on them when the risk-reward of securities you are tracking become highly favorable (as a buyer) or highly unfavorable (as a potential seller or short seller) in nature. You always want to be thinking several “moves” ahead of the stock market and have an idea of what you might do at every turn. Solid investment strategies and techniques will allow you to do this such that you become a disciplined investor who realizes consistent success over time instead of being an emotional investor who frequently loses money and misses out on key opportunities. I can work with you to help you determine which techniques and strategies might be the most appropriate for you to use for your particular investment situations, risk categories, and time horizons.

Please contact me if you need any assistance with any of your financial planning, management, and/or investing needs as this is one of the areas that I actively perform life coaching and training in. Also feel free to click on “Financial Planning, Management, and Investing Related Posts” to the sidebar on the right or below (depending upon which device you are using to view this article) for helpful tips on how to become a solid investor to include some of the topics that I have alluded to in this article such as pre-planning, strategy development, and risk management. These articles provide helpful tips on how to become a solid investor so read through some of these if you think they might be helpful to you or to others in your life. In addition, in case some of you would like to follow along, here is where I regularly post about my stock market activities. So feel free to visit this page if you would like to follow what I’m doing in the stock market at any given time. Some people like to monitor my investment activities and if stocks that I purchase on any given day decline then they seek to buy and if stocks that they own that I sell on any given day rise then they seek to sell since, in either case, they would have gotten a better deal than I. So feel free to follow along and execute your investment strategies accordingly if you so desire.

For those that do not know, I perform life coaching and training services in two primary areas: 1) Personal and Professional Improvement, Development, and Growth, and 2) Financial Planning, Management, and Investing. As such, I generally alternate the articles that I write via my blogs between these two topic areas. This particular article is associated with the second area that I life coach in. So if you don’t have much interest in financial planning, management, and investing rest assured that soon I will write an article which will be in the area that you might have greater interest in; the personal and professional improvement, development, and growth area. You can also follow me on Twitter if you like at: Joseph M Brennan Jr @ BrighterDaysLC

Please contact me if you, or someone else in your life, could use some assistance with either of the two primary areas that I actively perform life coaching in. You can learn more about each of these areas by clicking on the menu, footer, and sidebar items.

Joseph M. Brennan Jr.
CEO/Life Coach – Brighter Days Life Coaching
“Your Brighter Days Life Coach for Life”

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