By William E. Donoghue:
Chairman,
W.
E. Donoghue & Co. Inc. and contributing
columnist and Editor, The Proactive Fund Advisor with
Bill Donoghue at
www.marketwatch.com.As a thirty-year advocate of objective, patient and
profitable proactive fund investing, I would like to add some
alternative perspectives to consider in your discussions of
frequent trading.
1.
Buy-and-Hold is Not Good Enough.
As a long-term benchmark, the S&P 500 has averaged 1.8% this Century
(since the end of 1999). While others have chosen other time periods,
this eight year period recognizes the full bear and bull cycle to date.
The mutual fund public relations machine has convinced many journalists
who don't manage money and load fund advisors to focus on costs and not
on the funds unwillingness to add value by addressing down market
opportunities.
Investors Should Make Their Own Choice.
Passive investors have their beliefs, mostly promoted by Vanguard's John
Bogle; the rare experienced proactive advisors who do manage separate
accounts know that some objective trading is more than appropriate.
2.
We Have Enough Investment Extremists; We
Don't Need More.
Both Day Traders (so-called "market timers") and Passive Investing
have troubling costs.
Too frequent daily trading tends to be unfair to fellow investors and
to take advantage of unintended accounting anomalies; passive investing
without a net is just as frightening without an inverse stock
alternative to profit in the face of a probable two-three year downturn.
The 2000-2002 bear market cost retirement savers as much as $6 trillion.
Cash is just not a good enough alternative to build retirement assets
and even encourage savers to "stay the course." It was a long wait from
2000 to 2007 before investors finally broke even. If they retired in the
interim, the likelihood that their savings will last their remaining
life is lowered.
3.
Remember It's Your Money and Your Peers'
Money.
With all due respect, TSP's Board should be proud to have taken a
bold and rare initiative empowering investors to trade among TSP's
funds. The "independent" mutual fund directors have not been so
sensitive to shareholder needs.
The TSP is A Revolutionary Plan; But, It's
Still Incomplete. TSP is an excellent traditional retirement program
with some unique portfolios; you should be proud to have access to it.
However, it needs an inverse fund alternative.
Two trades a month is probably a "good enough" middle ground; however
in exchange for accepting this restriction, TSP should take the
leadership and offer you a bear market stock alternative (inverse fund)
to profit during a bear market.
Rydex and ProFunds, the rare experienced fund families offering such
funds and ETFs and are both conveniently located in the DC area. You
don't have to use the alternative but you should want it available.
4.
Get Thee To A Roth IRA.
A convenient path to a Roth IRA conversion to at least allow you to
shelter your future profits should be offered. If you get laid off
and/or have a low-income tax rate year, that year might be a good time
to convert your IRA to a Roth IRA. The income and age test that restrict
these conversions should be waived ASAP. I suspect the Treasury could do
that on their own or modify rules to facilitate conversions.
5.
Three Things To Keep Clearly In Mind:
(1) Your principal and profit, if any, will eventually be taxed
as ordinary income when you retire – no tax-preferred long-term capital
gains rates or dividend exclusion rules; hence, the Roth IRA conversion
recommendation, Tax-deferred is not tax-free and (2) You should demand
an inverse stock fund alternative (in the event we face an extended bear
market) and (3) this generation, the best-educated generation in human
history, should not be treated as investment illiterates and empowered
to manage their money as professionals.
6.
A Taxable Fund Might Be A Better After-Tax
Alternative.
ETFs make proactive management economical and their ability to "trade
like a stock" makes them viable as trading vehicles. Taxable ETF
portfolio might produce superior after-tax returns.
My best New Year wishes,
William E. Donoghue
©
2008 FedSmith Inc. All rights reserved. This article may not be
reproduced without express written consent of FedSmith Inc.
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