How To Buy Low, Sell High - YouTube

Channel: unknown

[4]
Rebalancing simply means that you've got a particular asset allocation.
[11]
And when market prices change and therefore, your portfolio has a different mix than your
[20]
preferred asset allocation, that you simply rebalance.
[25]
That is to say, bring the mix back to your preferred allocation.
[31]
And again this is a wonderful technique because it forces you to do just the opposite of the
[43]
mistakes that people make.
[46]
One of the little simulations that I've done is I've looked at the last 15 years.
[54]
The last 15 years were not bad years for investing.
[61]
And if you started off with what people would call a 60-40 portfolio, 60% common stocks,
[70]
40% bonds, you made an average rate of return by doing nothing, just leaving it six-- the
[78]
60-40, and you'd make about 9%.
[82]
Now, suppose instead, you started off 60-40 and every year in January, let's say, you
[92]
bring it back to 60-40.
[95]
Whatever it is, if it was 55-45, you bring it back to 60-40.
[104]
It turns out that portfolio gave you a 10.5% rate of return.
[110]
And you might say, "What is this alchemy that actually produced another point and a half
[117]
of return?"
[118]
Well, think what was happening to markets during that 15-year period.
[124]
Say you got to-- I did this-- happened to do it in January.
[130]
You could do it any month you wanted.
[133]
In January of 2000, the stock market was way up because we were at the top of the Internet
[139]
bubble.
[141]
And bonds were way down because the monetary authorities were goosing interest rates up
[147]
and bond prices had fallen.
[150]
So instead of 60-40, you were much more like 75% in common stocks and 25% in bonds.
[158]
What does rebalancing mean?
[161]
Sell enough stocks to bring the stocks down to 60% and buy bonds.
[168]
Well, what that did was it took some money off the table right at the top of the boom,
[173]
just when people were putting money in.
[176]
So now, it's January of 2003.
[179]
You don't know that the bottom of the market was a month before.
[184]
But what you know is that the monetary authorities were driving interest rates down, so bond
[192]
prices were way up and stocks were in the tank, and you were much more like 60% bonds
[200]
and 40% stocks, so you sell some bonds and buy some stocks.
[205]
And similarly what you would do in January of 2009, you didn't know that October/November
[214]
of 2008 was the low, but you know that the stocks were in the tank and the Federal Reserve
[221]
had brought interest rates down to zero, so bond prices were way up.
[227]
You sell bonds and buy stocks.
[229]
And that's the alchemy, if you wish.
[232]
It for-- you-- you can't time, but it forces the investor to do exactly the opposite of
[239]
what the investor does.
[241]
What the investor typically does is buy high and sell low.
[244]
This forces you to sell high and buy low.