Stocks Are the Place to Be - Google and Apple in Particular
It was a wild first quarter marked by strong downward market pressure and huge volatility. The media talking heads seem to gradually be coming to the general consensus that the market has bottomed. Obviously, there are no guarantees, but I tend to agree we have probably seen the worst, and I am positioning my portfolio accordingly.
I intend to keep my cash positions low and my long positions high. I think stocks are the place to be right now. I don't necessarily expect the market to be up huge everyday, and I don't necessarily think it will be up huge over the next quarter. However, I do think we have probably bottomed, and I expect a general upward trend in stocks over the coming quarters (as opposed to the downward trend in stocks that we have seen over the last two quarters).
I like selective financial stocks ON THE DIPS. Financials have demonstrated HUGE volatility over the last six months. I expect this to continue because of the never-ending stream of doomsayers in the media, and I think it will provide a great opportunity for long term investors to buy in on the dips.
As frequent CNBC guest Dick Bove likes to suggest, the broker banks are trading at once in a generation discounts. He categorized Goldman Sachs' recent prediction of over one trillion dollars in write-downs as an insignificant portion of the total credit market. CNBC host Dylan Ratigan was wondered how long it will be before we start seeing write-ups instead of write-downs. I seriously doubt we'll be seeing write-ups anytime soon, but I do like the financials right now.
I like technology stocks because they are historically strong performers coming out of troughs in the business cycle. I think companies like Apple (AAPL) and Google (GOOG) are becoming very attractive as they both continue to generate very strong revenues and they are both down significantly more than the market over the last six months.
From a risk standpoint, I continue to believe in the importance of diversification. Aside from assembling a diversified group of US stocks, I have also allocated a portion of my investments to global developed markets (mainly Europe via an ETF and multiple stocks with global operations), emerging markets, agricultural commodities (I believe the recent appreciation is a long term trend), metal commodities (gold and aluminum), and energy (heating oil and light crude).
Overall, many investments are looking cheap to me right now based on our current market environment. Let's hope for a reversal in the recent downward market trend, and a great second quarter 2008!
Disclosure: Author owns shares of Apple and Google.
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This article has 15 comments:
- John Pseudonym
- 225 Comments
Apr 10 10:12 AM"Obviously, there are no guarantees, but I tend to agree we have probably seen the worst, and I am positioning my portfolio accordingly."
Spoken like a true stock salesman...lol...I don't know what will happen, but give your money to me, I'll get a nice commission and maybe you'll make some money.
There are so many dangers right now that being fully invested is way too risky for the minimum reward potential.
For the average Joe, it's best to get out of the way and let things play out. When all seems lost, that's the time to start moving back in to stocks with a "buy and hold" strategy.
- NO DooDahs
- 185 Comments
My Website
Apr 10 10:16 AM:-)
Mark has 10 months of posts on Seeking Alpha, and a market blog at www.vestopia.com/Blogs... that goes back about a year.
I suggest you do some "due diligence" by reading his material and judging the quality of the content for yourself, without regards to his pedigree.
- buyitcheap
- 422 Comments
Apr 10 10:24 AM- theauthor
- 10 Comments
My Website
Apr 10 10:30 AM- Old Bull
- 11 Comments
My Website
Apr 10 11:04 AM- goinbroke
- 6 Comments
My Website
Apr 10 12:06 PM- punk_ash
- 88 Comments
Apr 10 01:28 PM- jegan ;-)
- 672 Comments
Apr 10 01:30 PMAnd on another note..Just to keep everyone honest, I'd like to see Alpha have their authors post their and their company's positions on any comments... **And** I'd really like to see a running total hit/miss rate for the author on every post.
Thx jegan ;-)
- karchad
- 70 Comments
Apr 10 02:43 PM- karchad
- 70 Comments
Apr 10 02:45 PM- mark.d.hines
- 31 Comments
My Website
Apr 11 12:24 AM- lytle
- 11 Comments
Apr 11 08:49 AMMost people log onto these blogs to read and perhaps to find interesting news or advice. If you don't like his viewpoints then don't read it.
- brewer
- 382 Comments
Apr 11 10:31 AMMeanwhile, OS X is rocking Windows to it's foundation. No one wants Vista, and it's an embarrassment compared to OS X 10.5 Tiger, which runs XP or Vista (or both should you need to), and even runs them FASTER than any PC, on hardware that is very cost competitive with even the ugliest, poorly designed 'clones' from Dell, HP etc...
Personally, I don't think most investors have much idea about the technical merits of these companies. And I think many are deluded into thinking that MSFT is going to continue near $30 (where it's been flat-lined already for, what? five years.) Wake up, people, we kind of need computers these days. And, who else has the mobile web even CLOSE to Apple? Answer: no one. iPhone will be BIGGER than iPod (and it IS an iPod, so iPod sales are not down...)
- User 164492
- 6 Comments
Apr 11 12:10 PM- sumdumguy
- 1 Comment
Apr 12 10:43 AMBut the overall consumer sentiment is still so overwhelmingly negative, that I still think our economy and likewise the US stock market is likely to be in trouble. That consumer sentiment index is particularly worrisome because if John Q Public stops buying, then we will be in a recession even with the upcoming rebate checks.