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You've Gotta Have a Plan
by Dr. Steve Sjuggerud
May 23, 2006

“Thanks for the plan, Steve…” a longtime family friend and True Wealth reader wrote me this weekend…

The market had fallen.  And our friend was unsure what to do.  Actually, he knew what to do, but he was afraid to follow it.

He’d created a plan this year, based on what he’d learned from my newsletter over the years.  He’d promised himself he was going to methodically cut his losers, and let his winners ride.  This way, he’d never risk a big loss of his investment money.

His strategy hadn’t been tested, until last week.  And he found that when the time came to actually sell, it was hard…

“I bit the bullet and sold,” he told me in his email.  “To my surprise, it didn’t hurt that much. It sort of felt good putting the profit in the bank.”

Then he said: “The game is unreal.  But the money, that’s real.”

I don’t know what he owned or sold.  It doesn’t matter.  What matters is that he finally has a plan… HE KNOWS WHEN HE’LL SELL.  He limits his worst-case scenario.  And that puts him head and shoulders above 99% of investors, who tend to sell at the worst possible times.

Most people don’t think about it this way, but it’s important that you do…

My family friend is right, it is a game.  Think of it like poker.  You’ve got to know how to play the game, but the game isn’t about the cards you’re dealt.  The game is about how you manage your money… Knowing when to play it safe, when to bet big, and most importantly, when to fold.

Poker is not a card game, it’s a game about making smart decisions with your money 100% of the time.  Investing is the same way.  It’s not about picking stocks… it’s about making smart decisions with your money, 100% of the time.

What matters in investing and in poker is avoiding the “catastrophic loss.”  Always.  You never want to be in a position where you’re down 50%, and you need to double your money just to break even.

The most catastrophic loss I can think of is a Colorado couple I know.  They invested millions of dollars – most everything they had – in risky, pre-IPO dot-com companies in the late 1990s.  Their plan was to leave a million dollars to each of their grandkids.  They had retired, and were traveling the country by motor home.

The problem was, they had no exit plan if things went wrong.  They didn’t even have the ability to get out early and save at least some of their money if necessary.  As it turned out, the worst-case scenario happened.

That motor home is probably parked next to one of their grandkids’ houses right now.

In True Wealth, we rarely take losses that are more than 10%.  If we’re wrong, we move on quickly.  We sell things when the time is right.  To put it in brutal terms, for a trade or investment to be successful, you have to have both a good buy AND a good sell.

For example, I just issued a sell on one of our True Wealth stocks, Rayonier.  Rayonier is a boring timberland company… that was up by 200% since the beginning of 2003.  (We didn’t buy it that early, but we’re still up 66% since entering the investment in 2004… a heck of a nice gain.)

As I put it in this month’s issue: 

“Rayonier is acting more like a Florida land stock instead of a timber stock. And Florida land stocks like St. Joe and Consolidated Tomoka are getting crushed.  We may end up buying Rayonier again someday if it becomes a cheap timber play again. But right now, it’s not that cheap, and the shine may be off Florida land now.”

We had a plan… we entered the trade with our usual thinking… timberland stocks were cheap, unappreciated, and just entering an uptrend.  And we exited with a nice profit, getting out at 15% off Rayonier’s recent closing high.

The quicker you recognize that investing, like poker, is more about money management than your current hand, the quicker you’ll be on the road to making a fortune.

I’d like to thank my family friend for reminding me of this old lesson… and to congratulate him on sticking with the plan he made.

I’m certain he will be successful from here on out.  And if you do the same, you will too…

Good investing,

Steve

Editor's note: Steve Sjuggerud is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Steve Sjuggerud.

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THE OBLITERATION OF THE DUBAI STOCK MARKET

The secret phrase was dead on this time…

In our February 15th edition, DailyWealth mentioned how the phrase “The National Bird here is the construction crane,” signals a market is due for a big correction. 

The phrase indicates a large amount of optimism towards a region… and tells us the big investment gains have already been made.

Dubai is the “national bird” favorite of the world right now.  The tiny emirate has an indoor ski resort.  It also plans to build the world’s tallest building by 2009. 

Investors are wild about the place. They’re also getting killed. When things look the rosiest, they’re usually the most risky. The Dubai stock market has plunged 60% from its highs.

Dubai stocks crash… the “National Bird Sell Signal” works again:

-Brian Hunt


“Emerging-market stocks declined for a 10th day, the longest losing streak in almost eight years, as investors fled riskier assets because of sliding commodity prices and speculation about rising interest rates.

India's Sensitive Index plummeted more than 10 percent, triggering one-hour trading halts on both the Mumbai Stock Exchange and the National Stock Exchange. Shares recouped most of their losses after the government said banks will help investors meet calls for cash.

‘We have a lot of speculative excess in every market,’ Marc Faber, the Hong Kong-based money manager who told investors to bail out of U.S. stocks a week before the 1987 Black Monday crash, said in an interview in Zurich.

‘A big correction was long overdue.’”

-Bloomberg

“An American futures trading guru and promotional speaker who promises to show people how to ‘beat the share market’ has been arrested in Sydney for alleged tax evasion.

Larry Richard Williams, 64, had just arrived on a Qantas flight from South Africa on Saturday when he was escorted from Sydney Airport by Australian Federal Police.

The US Internal Revenue Service is seeking his extradition for $US 1.5 million in alleged tax evasion between 1999 and 2001.”

-Syndey Morning Herald

How The Patels Conquered America
May 22, 2006

Worldwide Zinc Crisis: How to Play it
May 19, 2006

The Strange Irony of Investing
May 18, 2006

Gold's Down $50! Time to Sell?
May 17, 2006

Notes From The Miami Metals Conference: Part II
May 16, 2006

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