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Let your winners run kcchongnz

kcchongnz
Publish date: Thu, 19 Nov 2015, 06:05 PM
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“Cut your losses short and let your winners run.”      The Golden Rule for Traders

 

This strategy of not to stay in a losing position too long and, on the other side, not close a winning position too soon is often used by experienced traders. You want to be quick with losses and patient with profits.

In behavioural finance research, one of the most prevailing biases is the tendency to hold losing stocks longer than winning stocks, or “let their losers run and cut their winners short”. This is called the disposition effect, due to the “fear of regret”.

Selling a losing stock is tantamount to admitting that one was wrong, and feeling wrong inspires painful regret. To avoid regret, investors hold on to losing stocks while hoping for a comeback that will vindicate their initial buy decision. On the other hand, they sell winning stocks too soon for the fear that the stock will drop, giving back their gains, and they will regret not having taken their paper profits off the table while they had the chance.

I would think that this strategy of "cut your losses short and let your winners run" is absolutely essential for traders as traders mainly look at the price and volume actions in the market place, aiming for quick profit, and not so much about the fundamentals of businesses they put their money in. They hate to have to wait for three years, or even three months. Day traders even can’t wait for a day!

 

If they are wrong in a trade, often can be very wrong because they basically depend on the greater fool theory; you buy, I buy, you sell, I sell. Why? I don’t care. Hence cutting loss is a must to limit losses. And yes, the winning can be very big, and it is a good strategy to ride on the winners. It is not necessary to bother about the fundamentals too.

 

But how many traders actually made money using this trading strategy? What are the statistical evidences available showing the success of this strategy. You can do your research on it as there are plenty of resources and research available in the internet.

 

For my own experience in early 2000, I did let my remisier the freedom to handle my investment with this strategy as he introduced to me. The results were not encouraging. Here, we will not deal with it. I would be happy if other traders can share their experience here.

 

As I am a fundamental investor, I will discuss this from my own experience in fundamental investing if this strategy of “cut your losses short and let your winners run” is useful for me.

 

I will address these two questions:

 

  1. Should I continue to ride on winners, or buy more even though they appear overvalued?
  2. Should I cut loss?

 

My investment philosophy and strategies

My philosophy of investing follows that of Warren Buffet, i.e. to observe his two important investing rules;

 

Rule No. 1, don’t lose money (at least try),

Rule no. 2, don’t forget Rule No. 1.

 

With those rules, I generally have two major investment strategies which I have been harping on all this while;

 

  1. the Magic Formula of Greenblatt; buying good companies on the cheap, and
  2. the Graham Net Current Asset Value (NCAV), and the negative enterprise value; buying quality assets on the cheap

 

For those who are interested what they are can refer to this link below:

 

http://klse.i3investor.com/blogs/kcchongnz/56884.jsp

 

Of course these strategies are based on the past performance of companies. As I am just a small time retail investor, not a professional analyst, nor an investment bankers, what else can I base on, Paul the Octopus? Mind you, professional analysts and investment bankers on average are wrong about predicting the future most of the time, and often very wrong, as research has shown unambiguously.

 

Stocks in my portfolios

Table 1 and Table 2 in the Appendix shows the stocks I have selected for the two stocks selection contests organized by Tan KW, another i3investor forumer in 2013. The investment thesis and detail reports of those selections can be viewed from the following links:

 

The first portfolio set up on 23rd January 2013 as shown in Table 1 in Appendix is here:

 

http://klse.i3investor.com/servlets/pfs/13147.jsp

 

As at to date, the return of the portfolio is 127.3% compared to the 6.5% of KLCI.

 

And the second one set up on 1st August 2013 as in Table 2 with the total returns of individual stocks.

 

http://klse.i3investor.com/blogs/kcchongnz/68009.jsp

 

The return of the portfolio is 113.3% compared to the drop of 1.9% of the broad market.

 

As you can see from both the portfolios, there are a number of stocks which have risen for more than 100% in less than 3 years of holding period; Datasonic, 570.8%, Prestariang, 442%, SKP Resources, 367.7%, Homeritz, 361%, Pintaras 180%, and Fibon 108.1%.

 

Let us for discussion purpose, take a few stocks from there to discuss here if one should have kept those stocks until now, or should have sold them when they have reached their intrinsic values, and what would have been the results of each action.

 

SKP Resources in My First Portfolio

About six years ago, you can purchase 100,000 shares of SKP Resources for RM4500 at an adjusted price of 4.5 sen per share. If you have kept the shares for 3 years, you could sell them for RM34000 at about 34 sen a share, or for a gain of 656%.  

 

The share price of SKP Resources stayed at around that price, i.e. 34 sen for another three years until the beginning of 2014. I started invest in it somewhere at that time and I remembered, the fundamentals of SKPR was very strong and it was selling cheap. That was why I have included it as a stock in my first portfolio.

 

And how many investors who have bought it at 34 sen at the beginning of 2012 held it for 3 years without any movement of its share price? How many speculators were willing to wait “left of three years and right for three years”? I guess very few.

 

SKP Resources share price shot straight up from 34 sen from then on to RM1.52 within one and a half year at the end of July 2015 as shown in Figure 1 below. The gain from there was 347%! The RM34000 invested in 100000 shares of SKPR has become RM152000. For those who have invested in it during early 2009 would have made 2071%, just in 6 years!

 

How many investors let the winner runs and have kept the shares for so long? I have to admit that I am not one of them as when its share price doubled from 34 sen to 68 sen in October 2014, it appeared that SKPR was already overvalued.

 

Letting your winner runs would have made an investors very well investing in SKP Resources as shown.

 

Let us look at another share which is in My Second Portfolio as shown in the Appendix, Datasonic.

 

Datasonic, the supersonic

 

Datasonic caught my attention in mid-2013. At that time, its share price was about RM3.00, or at an adjusted share price of about 24 sen, with all the bonus issues and share split. At that time, it share price has already risen by 220% in less than a year ago.

 

Soon after that the share price shot up by 870% in 7 months from 24 sen to RM2.33 on 2nd April 2014, before retreating to half its peak price to RM1.03 in 6 months on 4/12/2014!

 

At the close at RM1.57 on 18th November 2015, if I have kept my shares until now, my gain is still a whopping 554%, in less than 2 years, even after the steep drop in early April this year!

 

Those who have time the market right by selling of at the peak of RM2.33 would have laughed all the way to the banks. But just wonder how many have done that?

For those who chased the shares when it was at its peak would still suffer a big loss of 33%.

 

Let us look at another one in My First Portfolio, Prestariang.

 

Prestariang

Prestaring first caught my attention when it was selling at an adjusted price of about 50 sen in mid-2013. Its price has in fact stayed at around that since listing about a year ago as shown in Figure 3 below. It had fantastic fundamentals in terms of very high returns on capitals, and abundant cash flows. Its dividend yield then was very attractive too. At 50 sen then, it was a real steal!

 

Prestariang’s share price shot up suddenly to RM2.30 within a year for a gain of 360%. Most investors would have sold it of for a handsome gain by then, and felt happy when its share price retreated by 40% in mid-December 2014 when the bear strikes. Little did they know that it jumped again to a close of RM2.60 on 18th November 2015.

 

How many investors managed to invest at its trough at 50 sen 2 years ago, sold at its peak at RM2.30 a year later, and bought back 6 months later and hold it until now and make tons of money? I believe there is none.

 

 

 

Lessons taught on “Let the winner runs”

Most fundamental investors who make their sell decision based on business valuation would have missed out the continued uptrend of the stock prices above, unaware with the investing maxim of “Let the winner runs”.

 

This brings to the subject that, investing is not an easy thing. Theoretically, all investments are for sale for the right price. Practically though, it's very hard to know what a stock is truly worth. Fundamental investors make their "sell" decisions based on "overvalued" criteria which is a difficult subject. Consider these points:

  • Company value is subjective, it depends on who is valuing it, what are the assumptions, and for what purpose. Value, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder;
  • Value is vague - it's not a precise static number, it's a constantly changing range based on "educated assumptions" about the uncertain, unknowable and ever-changing future;
  • Under-valuation is easier to identify because there is an objective floor (liquidation value). Over-valuation, on the other hand, is far less certain - there is no clear ceiling;
  • Over-valuation is also a range, data and assumptions will play out differently for different people.


Naturally, as over-valuation increases, it becomes more obvious, and the decision to sell becomes easier. The problem is - where do you draw the line? How "over" should be overvaluation?
 

The above example of stocks in my portfolios have shown why one should not sell stocks of good companies for the reasons below.

 

  1. Great companies are rare and very hard to find and get in
  2. Once you sell a long-term investment, you are leaving a business you know well.
  3. You are leading yourself to a reinvestment risk, what other better businesses you can buy and confident about with the proceeds of the sale?
  4. One of the worst things that can happen to a long-term investor is the loss of perspective and leads you to a speculative mentality. The more you try to exit and re-enter, the more you will think like a speculator and less like a business owner. It might damage your ability to make good long-term investments.

 

What about cutting loss?

 

Cutting loss

What would traders do in speculating? As I have mentioned above, it is an essential action to take if one is speculating and trading stocks. If you refer to my “Model stocks’ in the link below, traders who cut loss would have saved a fortune. It is like the difference of becoming a bankrupt, and one who can still survive in this market.

 

http://klse.i3investor.com/blogs/kcchongnz/67199.jsp

 

What about cutting loss in fundamental investing?

 

Well if one looks at the return of the stocks in both portfolios in the Appendix, does he think cutting loss is necessary if one is investing based on a fundamental sound and safe approach?

 

The biggest loss is Daiman at 11.9%, and the other two out of 21 stocks, Haio at -7.8%, and Kumpulan Fima at -1.4%. The losses are all minimal. They are all in My Second Portfolio which was formed after the run up after the General Election in 2013.

 

Selecting fundamental stocks based on the principle of investing in great companies at cheap prices doesn’t really need the cut-loss action as shown in the return of stocks in the portfolios. In fact cutting loss can be detrimental to the investing outcome of fundamental investing.

 

Considering the case of Prestariang as shown in Figure 3 above, most traders would have cut loss when Pretariang fell to 85 sen on 2nd September 2013, or RM1.70 in Mid-2014, or RM1.30 at mid-December 2014.

 

Once cut-loss, very few speculators would have bought it back when seeing its prices rises abruptly again and would have missed the boat at the price of RM2.60 now. That is human nature.

 

Maybe i should say even if we have considered the safe way in fundamental investing, we can still go wrong and cutting loss may be necessary. But the probability in very low, in my opinion.

 

What to do in fundamental investing on price change?

From the above experience, when we buy stocks, we can add Margin of Safety (MOS) to the conservative end of the estimated fair value range to absorb the impact of uncertainties and mistakes. Similarly, when selling stocks, we can add MOS to the optimistic end of the fair value range, for the same reasons as illustrated in Figure 4 below.

 

For those who want to know the concept of MOS, please refer here:

 

http://klse.i3investor.com/blogs/kcchongnz/82758.jsp

 

Figure 4: Margin of safety when buy and sell stock

 

This will avoid from selling the winner too soon.

 

But would I buy more if the prices continue to go up above the upper limit the "Sell" MOS? No, I won't.


“All there is to investing is picking good companies at the right times and staying with them as long as they remain good companies.”      Warren Buffett

 

Again for those who are interested in the philosophy of fundamental investing and wish to learn the methodologies for stock selection the fundamental way, please contact me for an online investment course for a small fee at

 

ckc14training2@gmail.com

 

K C Chong (19th November 2015)

 

Appendix

 

Table 1: Stocks and their returns in my first portfolio

 

Table 2: Stocks and their returns in my second portfolio

Discussions
8 people like this. Showing 18 of 18 comments

Tom

我买股之后最喜欢做的事就是每天盯着股价不断鬼叫 "huat ah","lai liao"比较有气氛

2015-11-19 19:17

Tom

哦我忘了,还有“rise liao,wahaha,can laugh die liao”

2015-11-19 19:19

Pusher_Punisher

Again. Another great article from you kcchong. Tq very much. Issues discussed in this article really important to be a great investor.

2015-11-19 21:37

Probability

yup...these thoughts had been going on my mind especially on the furniture stocks.... he said exactly what went through my mind. People simply sell when the price goes up by say 15%...without having any idea on the - probable Intrinsic Value

2015-11-19 23:11

BearbearDrop

I had see the price went up quicker after I sold them
And I swear to myself unless it went down to x or I won't buy it and you know it went even higher and it is no turning back to me anymore

2015-11-19 23:59

kcchongnz

Posted by BearbearDrop > Nov 19, 2015 11:59 PM | Report Abuse
I had see the price went up quicker after I sold them
And I swear to myself unless it went down to x or I won't buy it and you know it went even higher and it is no turning back to me anymore


You are not alone

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pAyKJAtDNCw

2015-11-20 08:30

winnicenice

great write up....exactly true.........

2015-11-20 10:54

fayeTan

brave to admit mistake by selling losing counter is a good habit... i generally put it at 5% loss. if it reach there, will do another round of evaluation whether to SELL

2015-11-20 13:49

oregami

Shall we consider the following factors:
1. Cyclical stocks. If the business is cyclical in nature there's no point to keep it if it's overvalued. Downturn is usually around the corner once it reached the peak.
2. Economic moat. For businesses that have foreseeable economic moat, keeping the winners is reasonable.
3. Alternative investment. After a few years for supernormal growth, it's inivitable to revert to mean. Under this circumstance we can invest in newcomers in the same industry, provide the industry is still bullish.

In order to do the above, one should have board reading, and have interest in both macro and micro economy. One should be alert and aware to business trend and changes.

2015-11-20 18:03

GenghisHoe

oregami could we make a friend? If interested, please drop me an email at bosx8989@gmail.com.

2015-11-21 13:48

digiuser016

Hi Kcchong

Peter Lynch also emphasized that keep your winner stocks in the portfolio, no point to sell a good stock after it has shot up tremendously.
My question is, as an investor, will you fall into "endowment effect" if you hold only winner stocks?
My next question is, will you buy a good quality stock that you had never owned after the stock has shot up tremendously but appears overvalued?

2015-11-26 19:44

kcchongnz

Posted by digiuser016 > Nov 26, 2015 07:44 PM | Report Abuse
Hi Kcchong
Peter Lynch also emphasized that keep your winner stocks in the portfolio, no point to sell a good stock after it has shot up tremendously.
My question is, as an investor, will you fall into "endowment effect" if you hold only winner stocks?
My next question is, will you buy a good quality stock that you had never owned after the stock has shot up tremendously but appears overvalued?

I never say I only keep winner stocks in my portfolio. I do have a couple of losers. I analyze most stocks i have bought before buying. Unless the fundamentals have changed, why sell when the price of a good fundamental stock has dropped in price? I am a fundamental investor, not a momentum trader as you would have noticed.

"That’s because in the world of investing, being correct about something isn’t at all synonymous with being proved correct right away.” Howard Marks

Your last question is found in my article here.

http://klse.i3investor.com/blogs/kcchongnz/86447.jsp

"But would I buy more if the prices continue to go up above the upper limit the "Sell" MOS? No, I won't."

2015-11-26 20:24

GenghisHoe

kcchongnz may I know do you have a private discussion group?

2015-12-01 07:18

kcchongnz

Posted by GenghisHoe > Dec 1, 2015 07:18 AM | Report Abuse
kcchongnz may I know do you have a private discussion group?

There is a facebook group set up by one participant of mine for all the graduates of my online course. It is a very active group. But it is a private and closed group.

2015-12-01 07:51

duitkwspkita

Dear KC CHONG sifu,

Thank you for the write up. In the investment field for instance stock market we always hear people say let winner run or let profit run.

May I ask few ques.
1) when everyone has different definition of winner, could you please share how many percent of capital gain or other key indicator baru consider as winner? more than 8% or compare benchmark or BETA count?
2) How and what to determine whether our winner can continue to RUN or halt their running. For example my SLP and SUPERLN how do I know my winners can still run or should I take profit? Other than business changes, fundamental change is there any specific key ratio like comparison of profitability ratio & efficiency ratio etc to speak on?
3) If I wan to take MMSV for case study specifically within my time frame - 2 years it indeed a winner, however it also present to me a unstable of share price performance in 1 -year period (2014 Aug' - 2015 Aug'). Can I rely on Fundamental to decide to close my investment?

Thanks in advance for your sharing. Appreciate in advance.

Warmest regards
duit

2015-12-01 16:06

kcchongnz

Duit,

1) when everyone has different definition of winner, could you please share how many percent of capital gain or other key indicator baru consider as winner? more than 8% or compare benchmark or BETA count?

Me: Winners to me are those stocks way outperform the broad market with alpha of 10%, 20%, 50%, 100% or whatever.


2) How and what to determine whether our winner can continue to RUN or halt their running. For example my SLP and SUPERLN how do I know my winners can still run or should I take profit? Other than business changes, fundamental change is there any specific key ratio like comparison of profitability ratio & efficiency ratio etc to speak on?

Me: Figure 4 in my article may give you some clues. Basically one must have a feel of what the value is compared to its price. Value can be a wide range.

3) If I wan to take MMSV for case study specifically within my time frame - 2 years it indeed a winner, however it also present to me a unstable of share price performance in 1 -year period (2014 Aug' - 2015 Aug'). Can I rely on Fundamental to decide to close my investment?

Me: For me, investing is a long-term endeavour. First one must only get into a serious relationship if there is good future. But things do change, and if the relationship is no longer sustainable, there is no point to carry on.

This again one must have a feel of value vs price.

2015-12-01 20:53

duitkwspkita

ThaNKS KC CHONG sifu for explanation.

APpreciate it

2015-12-01 21:25

GenghisHoe

kcchongnz Oh I see. Which means only your students can be in the group? If you have any group is open to whom pursue the same investment philosophy, I wish you can invite me. Thanks! Nice to meet you.

2015-12-06 08:29

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