I was interested to see if this phenomena of larger cap stocks doing better was throughout all 7+ years or just for a specific stretch.
Purchase Year | Largest | Smallest | Total |
2006 | 23.4% | 7.2% | 13.9% |
2007 | -15.0% | -23.1% | -20.5% |
2008 | -2.8% | -10.2% | -8.2% |
2009 | 32.2% | 42.5% | 39.3% |
2010 | 15.9% | 3.5% | 8.0% |
2011 | -1.9% | 0.2% | -0.8% |
2012 | 38.1% | 18.8% | 27.5% |
2013 | 25.3% | 13.0% | 19.9% |
2014 | 2.8% | 2.3% | 2.6% |
Grand Total | 15.1% | 5.9% | 9.6% |
So you can see overall the 15% per year performance at the bottom. If you look at the 8 years, you see larger stocks have "won" 6 of the eight year (2009 and 2011 being the exceptions). If you dig in, you see 2011 larger stocks were crushed by for profit education (think CECO - yes it was a larger cap stock at one time).
Now you can say that you have learned something new today.
Happy Easter!
2 comments:
Hi Marsh,
If the larger market cap stocks outperform the smaller MC stocks, have you ever researched how buying the top 5 MC stocks would do? Do you think that's a viable strategy in the future?
Those stocks on the to 30 > 50mm MC
are
aapl
csco
coh
hlf
king
as of today.
Any thoughts?
-Brian
Brian, I have never researched that. I would be surprised if it worked - just thinking about the large cap stocks that have been out there.
Post a Comment