Classic wisdom from our founder Porter Stansberry... All the best investors do the same things... You can time the market... The risk of 'buy and hold'... A big lie... Don't miss Porter's latest outlook... [Stansberry Research Logo]
Delivering World-Class Financial Research Since 1999
[Stansberry Digest] Classic wisdom from our founder Porter Stansberry... All the best investors do the same things... You can time the market... The risk of 'buy and hold'... A big lie... Don't miss Porter's latest outlook... --------------------------------------------------------------- Editor's note: As we've been sharing over the past few days, Stansberry Research founder Porter Stansberry is going live with his latest market outlook tomorrow morning at 10 a.m. Eastern time... and he has got a lot to cover... You'll hear Porter's take on today's market madness... why the crash he predicted last year hasn't happened yet... when he thinks the current bull market will end... what he's doing with his own money today... and much more. You can [register here for this free event right now]( to make sure you don't miss a minute. In the meantime, I (Corey McLaughlin) want to share part of an all-time classic piece of research from Porter... This essay is from 15 years ago and originally appeared in the August 2009 issue of our flagship Stansberry's Investment Advisory newsletter. It has been lightly edited, but as you'll see, the lessons about successful investing are timeless. In fact, one of our recent Stansberry Investor Hour podcast guests, Erez Kalir – a savvy biotech investor who works with Porter at his boutique firm Porter & Co. – mentioned this piece to Dan Ferris and me as a source of inspiration for his own investing career. So I want to pass it on. --------------------------------------------------------------- It looked like a 'leak'... When Eduardo Elsztain first read Steve Sjuggerud's True Wealth, he honestly thought someone was leaking his private memos to Sjuggerud. "Steve, your ideas... your thinking... When I first saw your letter, I honestly thought I had written it myself. I couldn't believe someone else was having all of my same thoughts." Steve and I were sitting in the main boardroom at the New York Stock Exchange. We'd been invited there by Elsztain, a wildly successful Argentine investor, to ring the opening bell of the exchange. For those of you who don't know his reputation, Elsztain got his start making a pile of money for George Soros in Argentine stocks in the early 1990s. Then, he began compounding his wealth by buying up distressed real estate in Argentina, becoming the country's largest landowner. We were in New York to celebrate his first U.S. real estate deal, a deal that would net the Elsztain group of investors 20% of one of the country's largest hotel groups (Hersha) for roughly 10 cents on the dollar. While Elsztain is focused on doing real estate deals, he is still an active investor in gold and stocks, too. He has been a subscriber to our letters for many years because he recognized immediately that we shared the same strategies and core ideas about investing. That's why he wondered at first if someone was sending Steve his memos. Keep in mind, when I started working with Steve as a financial analyst in 1996, I hardly knew the difference between a stock and a bond. But after a few years of working 14-hour days, six days a week, and after reading hundreds of books about finance and financial history... I still knew almost nothing. Just enough to be dangerous, really. I kept at it, though. And through the terrible emerging market collapse of 1998-99 and the tech bear of 2001-02, I finally began to acquire the knowledge and the confidence in my own thinking that I needed to make the kind of investment calls I've made since then. Like buying right at the bottom in October 2002. Like calling the top in February 2007. Like predicting General Motors' bankruptcy. And urging my subscribers to buy stocks in November 2008. So... how did our thinking and Elsztain's end up so closely aligned? Successful investing involves only a few real secrets... Almost all of the world's best investors use the same basic principles. Nobody teaches these principles. But everyone who stays in the markets long enough and succeeds eventually discovers them on his own. Our meeting with Elsztain was a vivid reminder of this fact. It's something I'd taken for granted over the years because I'd seen it so many times. You can put a group of the best investors together anywhere in the world, and nine times out of 10 they will be able to finish each other's sentences. They're all looking at the same things. They are all waiting on the same things. And they all see the same opportunities. Unless I'd lived through dozens of experiences like this, I wouldn't have believed it. But I know from firsthand experience that it is absolutely true: All of the world's best investors use the same handful of techniques and strategies. And as a result, they frequently end up in the same positions. The purpose of my letter today isn't merely to give you a stock pick, but to do something I've never seen done before. I'm going to teach you these core strategies. The real secrets. And I'm going to show you how to use them – just like I do with my own money. While this information probably won't make you a great investor overnight, it will surely improve your results dramatically over time... All you really need to know is right here. You can time the market... Please take a moment to look carefully at this chart. These are the daily closing prices of the Templeton Russia & East European mutual fund (TRF) over the past 15 years. [Editor's note: This refers to 1996-2009. This fund is now liquidated, which only supports the points ahead about the importance of market timing.] This is one of the oldest and most established emerging market mutual funds. This is the kind of fund people invest in heavily through 401(k) allocations. It is a closed-end fund. It trades like a corporation – like a regular, publicly listed stock. Sometimes it trades at a premium to its net assets and sometimes at a discount. That attracts traders and speculators. In this one investment vehicle, we have both sides of the investment world. Typical individual investors (lemmings, if you will) are dripping capital into this fund, month after month, regardless of the premium or discount and oblivious of critical factors in the marketplace. Meanwhile, the world's best investors follow this fund closely... waiting. They are like sharks. They know this is one of the most reliably volatile funds in the world... and one of the easiest to trade successfully. So in this one fund you have a good litmus test to compare the two major philosophies of investing. Should you buy and hold? Should you pour capital into your 401(k) blindly each month? Or should you time the markets? Should you know the factors that lead funds like TRF to soar to absurd levels and then crash? Looking at this chart, you easily can see the fund peaked twice in 2006 – once in the spring and again at the end of 2006/beginning of 2007. Both of these times, TRF was trading at such an extremely high premium that we noticed it immediately. Here's exactly what we said: The Templeton Russia Fund (TRF) is about to get crushed again. Stuffed with Russian oil and bank stocks, this [exchange-traded fund ("ETF")] is one of the few direct Russia plays in the market... This spring, the premium on TRF hit a whopping 35%. You had to pay $1.35 for every $1 of real value. This huge overvaluation was corrected when emerging markets got obliterated in May. The Russia Fund fared the worst, falling 47% from its peak. With emerging market speculation heating up again, TRF is trading for a 24% premium right now. If that premium climbs any higher, we predict another obliteration. – Brian Hunt, DailyWealth, December 21, 2006 When we published that note in December 2006, the Templeton Russia & East European Fund traded just shy of $95 per share. After falling in nearly a straight line for two years, it was trading for less than $7 per share in March 2009. That's a decline of more than 90%. Perhaps more importantly to any long-term, buy-and-hold investor, the decline we foresaw in the fund would have wiped out more than 100% of the accumulated capital gains, assuming you invested as long as 15 years ago. Now... I'd like you to look at the chart one more time. Look at what has happened to the fund over the past six months. [Editor's note: from February 2009 to August 2009.] It has gone nearly straight up. On April 17, 2009, we told subscribers to buy Russian stocks. Instead of using TRF, Steve Sjuggerud recommended a nearly identical Scudder fund, the Central Europe and Russia Fund (CEE). Both are up 150% since their March lows. [Editor's note: from March 2009 to August 2009.] So if you followed the buy-and-hold strategy in Russian stocks over the past 15 years, you would have made a very small amount of money – or lost money, depending on when you sold your shares. On the other hand, if you applied a few of our secrets, you could have easily traded this fund for more than 100% gains in only a few weeks... All you're looking for are extremes in the premium or the discount to net asset value in closed-end country funds. Barron's publishes a complete list of these premiums/discounts in every issue. Or you can use [CEFconnect.com]( which publishes them each day. And let me tell you one more thing about this situation. In January 2007, when TRF was widely overvalued and when most individual investors were clamoring to buy shares – despite the premium valuation – we checked to see if we could sell the fund short. We knew it was going to collapse and wanted to profit directly as it fell. But we couldn't. Why not? Because other professionals had already borrowed all of the available shares to short. In other words, while 401(k) investors were buying and holding a time bomb, Wall Street's pros were lined up, waiting to take their money. That's why we call "buy and hold" "buy and fold." That's what happens. People think they're investors when they buy. But sooner or later, the pain gets so bad and the loss is so big that they panic and sell. Wall Street wins. Why does anyone believe 'buy and hold' works?... The mutual-fund industry, which has boomed since the 1980s, used a bunch of faulty academic research to "prove" you couldn't time the markets. According to these folks, we shouldn't have been able to do the kind of trading we did with the Templeton Russia & East European Fund. They would tell you we didn't have any real edge against the other investors in the fund. They would tell you we just got "lucky" – despite the fact that we do these kinds of trades year after year. Why would they promote the idea that you can't time the markets? Because they get paid based on assets under management. They need you to leave your money with them, good times or bad. No matter what, a mutual-fund manager isn't going to return your money and tell you, "Sorry, it's just not a good time to buy stocks... " So they have to invent a world where it is always a good time to buy stocks. You undoubtedly know their mantra: buy and hold. But it's all a lie. It doesn't work. And even if it did work, few people would be able to apply the strategy because most individual investors do not have the risk tolerance required to actually buy and hold. Would you have been able to continue buying the Templeton Russia & East European Fund through the collapse of 2008? Not many people could. Instead, they chase hot sectors and investment fads and buy in at the worst possible time. Then after prices collapse, sooner or later, the pain and fear become unbearable, and they liquidate their investments – usually at the exact bottom. Believe me, the pros know that's what individual investors are going to do. That's how they make their living. Meanwhile, the big mutual-fund companies spend millions on "buy and hold" advertising each year. They give more millions to academic researchers – all of whom "prove" you can't time the market. It's a big lie... When researchers study actual mutual-fund returns, the results are nothing like the averages you find in the prospectus. The truth is, most people who invest in mutual funds never make more than 5% a year on average because they buy the wrong funds at the wrong times and sell at exactly the wrong times... Buy and hold doesn't work for two reasons: It ignores valuation and sentiment (I'll explain these two factors next), and it ignores human nature. (Even if buy and hold did work, it would be a less-than-optimal strategy because, as should be readily apparent to everyone who watches the stock market, the market isn't as "efficient" as so many academics claim.) The intellectual rationale for buy and hold is the idea that securities prices instantly reflect all the information available. You can't get an advantage on the market. The best investors can hope to do, therefore, is to get the market's average return. And the only sure way to do this is to buy an index fund, year after year, and hold it forever. This idea – that information is reflected accurately and instantly in the market – is preposterous. In the first place, lots of people trading stocks don't know what they're doing. They can't accurately handicap stock prices because they don't know the first thing about valuation. But even more than this, most of what's important to stock prices is unknowable. Nobody knows what the future holds for things like interest rates and economic growth. People's emotions about these unknowable variables – what we call "sentiment" – make a far bigger impact on stock prices than the latest earnings report. And people's emotions are anything but rational or efficient. You can dramatically increase your returns in common stocks if you're simply more disciplined about when you make major investments. You only want to commit a substantial amount of capital when both valuation and sentiment are in extremely bullish ranges. In short, you want to buy when stocks are cheap and most people are afraid to buy them. Unfortunately, these opportunities don't arise often in U.S. blue-chip stocks. But you can almost always find these conditions somewhere else or in some part of the U.S. market... --------------------------------------------------------------- Editor's note: All these years later, I can tell you Porter still doesn't believe "buy and hold," as most Americans understand it, is the strategy to use to be a successful investor. We expect this will be one of the ideas Porter plans to discuss in his briefing tomorrow... As Porter mentioned in this essay, timing the market is how he has been able to make prescient market calls like buying at the bottom of the dot-com bust or calling a market top in February 2007, more than a year before the financial crisis. Porter has made more calls since, like nailing the bottom – nearly to the day – of the COVID-19 panic in March 2020. Back then, Porter was a rare voice saying the market was in a temporary panic and stocks would hit new all-time highs by the end of the year. They did. Tomorrow, Porter plans to share his latest outlook... and we suspect he'll share a few tips for navigating what he sees coming next. So check out tomorrow's free presentation. [Sign up now to watch right here](. And we'll share some more of Porter's "secrets" of successful investing in the Digest later this week. Good Charts and Bad Charts In this week's Diamond's Edge, Ten Stock Trader editor Greg Diamond takes viewers through what he likes to do after seeing a week of volatility like the markets just experienced... and what he's seeing from "good" and "bad" charts today... As a Digest reader, you get the first look at Greg's new Diamond's Edge video each Monday. For more free videos, [check out our YouTube page](... And if you're interested in more research and analysis from Greg, [click here for information]( on how to get started with a subscription to his Ten Stock Trader advisory. --------------------------------------------------------------- Recommended Links: [Urgent Announcement From Porter Stansberry]( The S&P 500 has posted 26 new all-time highs... the Federal Reserve is expected to cut rates... and Nvidia has experienced an incredible run-up. But what should you do next? This Tuesday, July 30, Stansberry Research founder Porter Stansberry will walk you through his next big prediction and how he's personally preparing (which you can do, too). [Click here for the details](.
--------------------------------------------------------------- [New Government Strike Force Patrolling America]( The government's new Strike Force is patrolling America as we speak – and this time, they're going much further than telling you to wear a mask and stay inside. It has nothing to do with the leadup to November. This is already in motion... and it's escalating quickly. [Get the full story and learn how this could impact your money right here while there's still time](.
--------------------------------------------------------------- New 52-week highs (as of 7/26/24): AbbVie (ABBV), Alpha Architect 1-3 Month Box Fund (BOXX), Brown & Brown (BRO), Coca-Cola Consolidated (COKE), Danaher (DHR), Enstar (ESGR), Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), iShares Core S&P Small-Cap Fund (IJR), iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense Fund (ITA), iShares Russell 2000 Value Fund (IWN), Coca-Cola (KO), Lockheed Martin (LMT), Grand Canyon Education (LOPE), Lonza (LZAGY), Altria (MO), VanEck Morningstar Wide Moat Fund (MOAT), Invesco High Yield Equity Dividend Achievers Fund (PEY), Sprouts Farmers Market (SFM), Sherwin-Williams (SHW), SPDR S&P 600 Small Cap Value Fund (SLYV), Terex (TEX), Thermo Fisher Scientific (TMO), Tyler Technologies (TYL), and Veralto (VLTO). In today's mailbag, feedback on [Dan Ferris' latest Friday essay](... Do you have a comment or question? As always, e-mail us at feedback@stansberryresearch.com. "Dan, this [Brad Jacobs is a 'stone cold' business genius] article was worth the Stansberry subscription price alone; stone cold market history from the not too distant past with parallels to today. Unfortunately, the loneliest man on Wall Street is a bear in a bull market." – Subscriber Ross W. Good investing, Porter Stansberry
Baltimore, Maryland
July 29, 2024 --------------------------------------------------------------- Stansberry Research Top 10 Open Recommendations Top 10 highest-returning open stock positions across all Stansberry Research portfolios. Returns represent the total return from the initial recommendation. Investment Buy Date Return Publication Analyst
MSFT
Microsoft 11/11/10 1,382.8% Retirement Millionaire Doc
MSFT
Microsoft 02/10/12 1,354.0% Stansberry's Investment Advisory Porter
ADP
Automatic Data Processing 10/09/08 919.2% Extreme Value Ferris
WRB
W.R. Berkley 03/16/12 745.7% Stansberry's Investment Advisory Porter
BRK.B
Berkshire Hathaway 04/01/09 676.0% Retirement Millionaire Doc
HSY
Hershey 12/07/07 478.4% Stansberry's Investment Advisory Porter
AFG
American Financial 10/12/12 449.2% Stansberry's Investment Advisory Porter
TT
Trane Technologies 04/12/18 427.8% Retirement Millionaire Doc
TTD
The Trade Desk 10/17/19 361.5% Stansberry Innovations Report Engel
NVO
Novo Nordisk 12/05/19 358.6% Stansberry's Investment Advisory Gula Please note: Securities appearing in the Top 10 are not necessarily recommended buys at current prices. The list reflects the best-performing positions currently in the model portfolio of any Stansberry Research publication. The buy date reflects when the editor recommended the investment in the listed publication, and the return shows its performance since that date. To learn if a security is still a recommended buy today, you must be a subscriber to that publication and refer to the most recent portfolio. --------------------------------------------------------------- Top 10 Totals
5 Stansberry's Investment Advisory Porter/Gula
3 Retirement Millionaire Doc
1 Extreme Value Ferris
1 Stansberry Innovations Report Engel --------------------------------------------------------------- Top 5 Crypto Capital Open Recommendations Top 5 highest-returning open positions in the Crypto Capital model portfolio Investment Buy Date Return Publication Analyst
wstETH
Wrapped Staked Ethereum 12/07/18 2,291.8% Crypto Capital Wade
BTC/USD
Bitcoin 11/27/18 1,707.2% Crypto Capital Wade
ONE/USD
Harmony 12/16/19 1,154.7% Crypto Capital Wade
MATIC/USD
Polygon 02/25/21 757.7% Crypto Capital Wade
AGI/USD
Delysium AI 01/16/24 320.7% Crypto Capital Wade Please note: Securities appearing in the Top 5 are not necessarily recommended buys at current prices. The list reflects the best-performing positions currently in the Crypto Capital model portfolio. The buy date reflects when the recommendation was made, and the return shows its performance since that date. To learn if it's still a recommended buy today, you must be a subscriber and refer to the most recent portfolio. --------------------------------------------------------------- Stansberry Research Hall of Fame Top 10 all-time, highest-returning closed positions across all Stansberry portfolios Investment Symbol Duration Gain Publication Analyst
Nvidia^* NVDA 5.96 years 1,466% Venture Tech. Lashmet
Microsoft^ MSFT 12.74 years 1,185% Retirement Millionaire Doc
Inovio Pharma.^ INO 1.01 years 1,139% Venture Tech. Lashmet
Seabridge Gold^ SA 4.20 years 995% Sjug Conf. Sjuggerud
Nvidia^* NVDA 4.12 years 777% Venture Tech. Lashmet
Intellia Therapeutics NTLA 1.95 years 775% Amer. Moonshots Root
Rite Aid 8.5% bond 4.97 years 773% True Income Williams
PNC Warrants PNC-WS 6.16 years 706% True Wealth Systems Sjuggerud
Maxar Technologies^ MAXR 1.90 years 691% Venture Tech. Lashmet
Silvergate Capital SI 1.95 years 681% Amer. Moonshots Root ^ These gains occurred with a partial position in the respective stocks.
* The two partial positions in Nvidia were part of a single recommendation. Editor Dave Lashmet closed the first leg of the position in November 2016 for a gain of about 108%. Then, he closed the second leg in July 2020 for a 777% return. And finally, in May 2022, he booked a 1,466% return on the final leg. Subscribers who followed his advice on Nvidia could've recorded a total weighted average gain of more than 600%. --------------------------------------------------------------- Stansberry Research Crypto Hall of Fame Top 5 highest-returning closed positions in the Crypto Capital model portfolio Investment Symbol Duration Gain Publication Analyst
Band Protocol BAND/USD 0.31 years 1,169% Crypto Capital Wade
Terra LUNA/USD 0.41 years 1,166% Crypto Capital Wade
Polymesh POLYX/USD 3.84 years 1,157% Crypto Capital Wade
Frontier FRONT/USD 0.09 years 979% Crypto Capital Wade
Binance Coin BNB/USD 1.78 years 963% Crypto Capital Wade You have received this e-mail as part of your subscription to Stansberry Digest. If you no longer want to receive e-mails from Stansberry Digest [click here](. Published by Stansberry Research. Youâre receiving this e-mail at {EMAIL}. Stansberry Research welcomes comments or suggestions at feedback@stansberryresearch.com. This address is for feedback only. For questions about your account or to speak with customer service, call 888-261-2693 (U.S.) or 443-839-0986 (international) Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Eastern time. Or e-mail info@stansberryresearch.com. Please note: The law prohibits us from giving personalized financial advice. © 2024 Stansberry Research. All rights reserved. Any reproduction, copying, or redistribution, in whole or in part, is prohibited without written permission from Stansberry Research, 1125 N Charles St, Baltimore, MD 21201 or [stansberryresearch.com](. Any brokers mentioned constitute a partial list of available brokers and is for your information only. Stansberry Research does not recommend or endorse any brokers, dealers, or investment advisors. Stansberry Research forbids its writers from having a financial interest in any security they recommend to our subscribers. All employees of Stansberry Research (and affiliated companies) must wait 24 hours after an investment recommendation is published online – or 72 hours after a direct mail publication is sent – before acting on that recommendation. This work is based on SEC filings, current events, interviews, corporate press releases, and what we've learned as financial journalists. It may contain errors, and you shouldn't make any investment decision based solely on what you read here. It's your money and your responsibility.