As my readers know, I do not really "track" my discretionary purchases. Not sure why, but I guess I have just never gotten around to it. So, I suppose there is no time like the present. I will attempt to measure my open discretionary holdings against the R3K.
Ok, I have created a table showing the R3K gain by stock (if bought on same day) through today. It is a telling table.
Stock | Gain | Cost | Price | R3K Gain |
GTAT | 63.7% | 5.23 | 8.57 | 9.0% |
GNW | 118.3% | 7.10 | 15.51 | 37.4% |
HIMX | 50.4% | 8.94 | 13.45 | 4.6% |
ATHM | 21.2% | 28.80 | 34.91 | 3.2% |
CS | 7.8% | 28.75 | 30.98 | 3.5% |
18.6% | 11.15 | 13.22 | 16.4% | |
HIG-WT | 29.9% | 21.24 | 27.60 | 12.4% |
BAC-WTA | 20.2% | 5.35 | 6.43 | 16.9% |
GA | 3.0% | 11.16 | 11.27 | 2.1% |
Grand Total | 44.0% | 9.18 | 13.21 | 11.1% |
Hmm, all the open discretionary buys have worked out extremely well thus far. You can see that the old faves, GTAT and GNW are blowing off the doors of the competition. But HIMX is up 50.4% versus a paltry 4.6%. ATHM is now up 21.2% (had another decent day today) versus 3.2%. Even sleepy CS is now up 7.8% pour moi.
Of course, there is a little selection bias here. I have sold some of the lesser performing discretionary stocks. Still the overall 44% to 11.1% is quite telling. I think we can safely say I have had a satisfactory performance with my discretionary picks.
2 comments:
Sorry... I follow your site - but I barely passed my only economics course (long ago). So... what is R3K?
R3K is my shorthand for Russell 3000 Index. It is the primary benchmark I use as a metric to determine if my stocks/portfolios do well.
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