Search

 

 

New Page 1 New Page 1

Informative Articles

A Guide To Investing
Everyone seems to have their own secret or strategy or trick to making money in the stock market. Here are two strategies that have helped many people. 1. It's your time, how do you want to spend it? Some people suggest high risk investments...

Advantages and Disadvantages of Mutual Funds
Outlined below are some of the advantages and disadvantages of mutual funds. Every investment has advantages and disadvantages. But it's important to remember that features that matter to one investor may not be important to you. Whether any...

PARACHUTE INVESTING
PARACHUTE INVESTING by AL THOMAS Ever jumped out of an airplane? It’s OK if you have on a parachute. Pretty dumb if you don’t. Every buy any stocks, mutual funds or Exchange Traded Funds? It’s OK if you know how much you are willing to...

Santa Claus Rally: Is a Year-End Stock Recovery Coming to Town?
Now that we are in the holiday season, you will be hearing more about the so-called "Santa Claus Rally." It is a well-known phenomenon, first discovered by Yale Hirsch and published in his Stock Trader's Almanac. During this year-end rally,...

Top Investments and Stock Picks for 2006
If you read the headlines today you will hear everything from recession, decline, slow start, etc... Everyone is commenting on losses or very marginal gains. Yet there are some investors like me that did really well in the last few years and are...

 
Should You Get Out?

Pretend, for a moment, that you have a gut feeling the market will be falling. You think that oil, the hurricane, the economy, whatever, is going to ultimately bring down the market.

Should you get out of the market entirely?

Making a decision to "get out of the market" and sell all your stocks is an incredibly risky wager! You are essentially drawing a line in the sand and deciding the market will never again go higher. I say this is a risky bet because, historically, the market goes up two thirds of the time and down one third of the time.

Which would be the better direction to go?

Well, Step One would be to determine if we are currently on "offense" or "defense" in the market. Markets go up and down whether or not there is an oil crisis, a war, or economic hard times.

Knowing who has control of the football allows you to run the proper plays in your portfolio. You wouldn't punt and give the ball away on first down in football; likewise you would not want to sell everything while on offense in the market either. When we are on offense, we want to run plays (use strategies) that will help build the value of our accounts.

Now, when the market is on defense, the play-calling changes. On defense, we'll use strategies that will help us protect our investment. We do this so we can be ready to play when we regain control of the football.

Step Two would be to examine which sectors are currently in favor and where our investments stand in relation to this analysis.

These two steps are crucial to determining whether the odds (the risk) are with you or against you. They must not be skipped!

Let's say the market is moving from offense to defense. What would be the next step? Sell everything? As we said earlier, we know the market goes up two thirds of the time and down one third of the time. Selling everything implies a doomsday scenario and is usually a bad idea.

If you've completed the first two steps, go to step three.

Step Three, sell any stocks (or mutual funds) that have poor relative strength. What is relative strength? How a stock (or fund) performs compared to the overall market.

Stocks are either on a relative strength BUY signal or a relative strength SELL signal. Did you know that relative strength signals (buy and sell) last, on average, for TWO YEARS? Meaning a stock that gives a

Associated Websites

Associated Websites

 

Our Blogs are on UK small business and being a UK freelancer or contractor as well as website marketing and web design. If you are a biker we can help with your motor bike insurance.

 

We have a site for contractors  and sites for HomeloansUK and PR-Help. We provide Branding help and offer Free-Marketing-Help and help for IT contractors. For E-commerce information, visit Small-Business-Web. We offer Page Rank Web Links and Cheap Home Loans Direct plus 0-BadDebtLoans and more Cheap Home Loans Direct. Our sites also help with Negotiation of any Personal-Secured-Loans. Our site called Management-Today can help you Innovate-Today, but for more loans go to 1st4HomeLoans.

 

Our HomeLoansUK site is affiliated with Branding and TrafficBuilding sites and Sales technique site. Also on offer is Beauty-Online and FreeNetDesign. If you are a  contractor and need help with a Small-Business-Web then our E-Commerce site is great. If you want Easy-Mortgages or even 1st-4-Tenant-Loans go to 5-Star-Mortgages. We help find Cheap Kitchen Appliances and Low Rate Home Loans. For the IT contractor, EstuaryFinance can refer you to our Online IR35 Compliance site for help with IR35.


relative strength buy signal today will usually outperform the overall market for (on average) two years. That's a long time!

Next, Step Four. Examine the stocks or funds that have good relative strength. Stocks (and mutual funds) with good relative strength tend to snap back quickly when the market rebounds.

On the flipside, stocks with poor relative strength tend to fall with the market (and many times will fall further than the overall market).

Relative strength is a very important part of the decision process we use at Mullooly Asset Management. Knowing the relative strength of a stock or a fund will clue you in on its potential performance during rough times.

Let's take relative strength two steps farther. We now know we can measure relative strength for an individual stock (or mutual fund) versus the market. But did you also know that we can measure a stock (or mutual fund's) relative strength against its peer group too? That would help us decide if we should jump over to another horse in the race. Perhaps you have money in a stock that is in a favored sector; but the stock you own has poor relative strength. You want to stay in the sector. Moving within the sector to another stock in the group with better relative strength is a smart way to go.

We can also plot the relative strength of a sector compared to the market as well. Knowing a sector's relative strength versus the market is VERY important! Often times, when a sector turns up, it can be like watching a school of fish move...they all move at once. And today, you can instantly have money in that sector through buying an exchange traded fund (ETF).

Likewise, when a sector gives a relative strength sell signal versus the market overall, the whole group usually moves again. You'd want to reduce the amount of money in that sector as soon as possible, and perhaps get out of the group entirely.
About the Author

Thomas P. Mullooly, President of Mullooly Asset Management, LLC (www.mullooly.net) has spent over twenty years in the investment industry, as a broker and as an investment advisor. Mullooly Asset Management is a fee-only registered investment advisory firm based in New Jersey, specializing in retirement plan accounts, particularly managing 401k, 403b, and deferred compensation accounts for individuals. Feel free to contact us to check ou