[Read this article on our website.]( [Smart Money Monday]  You are receiving these email messages every Monday because you requested information from Mauldin Economics. If you'd prefer not to receive Smart Money Monday , [click here.]( Oct 11, 2021 Here's what happens when you beat the market by 5% (and how to do it) Wall Street is a strange place. In 2017, the top Wall Street banks published over 40,000 pieces of research⦠every week . Yet investors read less than 1% of that, according to Quinlan & Associates. Less than 1%! This little quirk is part of a bigger transformation on Wall Streetâone that has huge implications for you as an investor. See, the way Wall Street makes money has fundamentally shifted in recent years. So has the way information flows to individual investors. And today I want to show you how savvy stock pickers can profit from these shifts. - Wall Street used to make a lot of its money from trading⦠A broker would call you up, pitch a âhot stock,â and hope to win your business. If you made a trade, he got a commission. Probably 3% or so on the purchase. Those hot stocks often came from the bankâs army of analysts. They would pore over financial statements, talk to management teams, and hunt for the best ideas. Then theyâd feed their ideas to brokers, who pitched them to investors. It was a lucrative business model. The bank and the broker made money whether you did or not. But those days have ended. In 2012, the top investment banks earned $103 billion from trading. By 2016, that figure had plunged to $73 billion, and itâs continued to fall since. - Youâve likely noticed that brokers donât call to sell you individual stocks anymore. Commission-free trading ended all that. Today, youâre more likely to work with a financial advisor. He probably wonât pitch you on individual stocks. But heâll help you with asset allocation and long-term planningâand take a percentage of your portfolio for his services. But what about all those Wall Street analysts? Who needs them if theyâre not pitching stocks to brokers⦠who pitch them to you? Today, theyâre just highly knowledgeable reporters. They have widespread industry contacts, and they know individual companies well. But they mostly help facilitate investment banking deals (which is how Wall Street makes most of its money now). And, like I mentioned earlier, the analysts also produce a ton of research that no one reads. So, itâs no surprise that Wall Street is thinning its army. Since 2012, the analyst headcount at the 12 largest investment banks has dropped 30%, from 4,400 analysts to just over 3,000 in mid-2020, according to consulting firm CRISIL. The new business model just doesnât justify keeping them around. - So, where does that leave investors like you, who donât get those âhot stocksâ from brokers anymore? If your goal is to own the market, itâs simple. Just buy an index fund, and youâre doneâyour fate is the fate of the market. There will be good years and bad years. But over time, if you stay invested, you will probably make 8% per year. Of course, we want more than that here at Smart Money Monday . Thatâs probably why youâre reading thisâbecause you want to outperform the market, too. And it doesnât take much to make a huge difference. Imagine you have $100,000 to invest. You drop it in an index fund, earn 8% a year, and 10 years later you have $216,000. But what if you could outperform the market, even just a little bit? If you did 5% better, and made 13% a year, your original $100,000 would turn into $339,000 over the same period. An extra $123,000 is real money. It could mean the difference between traveling during retirement, or not. Paying for your children to go to college, or not. Buying a vacation home, or not. And thereâs only one way to do it. You have to pick individual stocks. Not just any stocks⦠[the right stocks](. Which means you have to do your homeworkâor know someone who can do it for you. - Beating the market by 5% is more doable than you might think. Just look at the S&P 500âitâs risen about 17% this year. But nearly 40% of the stocks in the index have shot up 23% or more. Thereâs your outperformance. Of course, you have a job and a life. Itâs probably not realistic for you to analyze mountains of dense financial data, talk to countless CEOs, and fly around the country doing your own boots-on-the-ground research to pick the best individual stocks. That is where I come in. One of my goals here at Smart Money Monday is to help you pick the individual stocks most likely to outperform the market. Stocks like [Bayer (BAYRY)]( or [Cleveland-Cliffs (CLF)](, which weâve talked about before and Iâm still bullish on. Next week weâll zero in on a small subset of the market thatâs fertile ground for these market-beating stocks. Until then⦠[Thompson Clark] âThompson Clark
Editor, Smart Money Monday [Thompson Clark]Thompson Clark is a small-cap expert and value-focused investor with nearly a decade of experience in financial publishing. Thompson graduated from the Goizueta Business School at Emory University in 2010 with a focus in finance and accounting. He lives in North Carolina. He is the editor of Mauldin Economicsâ free research service, [Smart Money Monday]( . Don't let friends miss this timely insightâ
share it with your network now. [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [Email]( Share Your Thoughts on This Article
[Post a Comment]( [Read important disclosures here.](
YOUR USE OF THESE MATERIALS IS SUBJECT TO THE TERMS OF THESE DISCLOSURES. Â This email was sent as part of your subscription to Smart Money Monday . [To update your email preferences click here.]( Mauldin Economics, LLC | [PO Box 192495 | Dallas, TX 75219](#)
Copyright © 2021 Mauldin Economics. All Rights Reserved.