I was looking at the exact same thing myself a few weeks back. I think our investments since BREXIT was announced back mid last year have been a) a little more risky and b) in a market that has seen some big sways that have accentuated gains/losses.
First off the bat though, I personally think we have been extremely unlucky with the NCC situation - there simply is no doubt we were misled by the board's report, which turned out to be masking (whether deliberate or not) some fundamental shortcomings in parts of the company. Had we know that we would not have been investing - I'm quite sure about that as we have traditionally been more cautious in approach. My gut feeling is we'll see a recovery here to some extent. Just not sure how much. It might need to go down a bit more before going back up though, as the new management has to recover the situation and might need to make some markdowns and changes that could potentially hit the price negatively. Then again, it is not unusual for such decisions to actually improve the price.... On the plus side - there is plenty of chatter that even without the part of the business that has been hit with issues the share price reflects at least the value of the better performing parts alone. This is why I think our best call here is to stick with this one and see what happens, even if it takes a fair bit longer than we'd have liked.
From the 30th June selections - two of those listed were shares we had identified as having potential to gain having made massive price drops - in construction and airlines, both due to BREXIT. We could consider ourselves unlucky not to have chosen one of them. The result was probably my fault. In effect I think I had a big bearing on the choice we made as I had originally voted for Taylor Wimpey but as I was the only one to have done so and the choice was too close between the other two to have a clear result I changed. If I had chosen IAG then we might have made more money at the point we'd have sold. I'll come back to that point right at the end.
The above also isn't necessarily a fair comparison for the decisions we made, as we did select some shares as income and others as short-term gains. Comparing one to the other is not ideal. However, what it does show is we'd have been better off, at this point in time, purchasing all but two of the short-term gain ones over any of the long-term ones. It does not take into account dividends received but even so it still shows that.
How I see the above is:
- 30 June - it was a crazy market at the time and we played the cautious card not choosing the share that had crashed in price
- 22 Sept - we did OK choosing the share that had crashed in price
- 10 Jan - we were plainly misled
- 12 Jan - we played the cautious card again
When we come to invest next time I think we really need to be checking out whether the shares are being shorted. We have both ITV and Carillion, which are both heavily shorted right now and are both price depressed. With these two we have really good dividends so it is less of a worry.
The final thing I would like to mention is expanding on the point I raised earlier - we would have sold Taylor Wimpey, IAG, Inmarsat and Costain (had we bought them) and I am 100% certain we'd have done for less than the current percentage premium prices shown. I think 15% would have been the target for each. As as we have seen from owning Essentra and Mitie - the prices can fluctuate and any trackers you have set can result in them being sold before you reach +15% premium point. Therefore, as much as it would have been marvelous for us to have bought Taylor Wimpey, for example, at the time it is highly likely to have been sold well short of the headline 55.21% premium price. In fact the prices were so volatile at the time it may even have meant we didn't make much at all. Maybe a lesson here is to reconsider how we use trackers....
This is the reality of investments
