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In two previous articles [1]
[2], I described how I have
been employing the secular trend concept for asset allocation in
my 401K. I described what allocations I had made in my own 401K
since September 3, 1999 when I moved completely out of equity in
anticipation of the beginning of the secular bear market, which
I believed had already begun the previous July. My strategy was
simple, I hold only two assets, "equity" and "cash". I increased
my cash allocation as the stock market moves "down" and increase
it as the market moves up, with a deadband in the middle in which
I do nothing. The equity component was the mutual fund American
Century Ultra (TWCUX) which functions sort of as a cross between
an S&P500 and NASDAQ index fund. The "cash" component is an
asset-backed security fund that has been paying about a 6% return
over the last 4 years or so and is still yielding (as of the last
three months) about 5.5%. Like a money market, its share price
is always a constant $1.
Since my last update in April my company's 401K has dropped TWCUX
as a fund option and I have been forced to move my assets into
an S&P500 index fund. The specific fund is an institutional
fund which has no symbol, so I will use the Vanguard index fund
(VFINX) as a proxy. Figure 1 shows a graph of the American Century
Ultra fund up to September 19, 2001. and VFINX after this date
(VFINX is scaled so that it dovetails with TWCUX on 9/19/01). The
black arrow marks my complete movement to the income fund on 9/03/99
and the red arrow mark my subsequent repurchases of stock funds
in 10% increments.
In my first article I presented I developed a series of levels
(the blue lines labeled BUY in Figure 1) at which I would move
10% of my 401K from the income fund to TWCUX and series of levels
(the black lines marked SELL in Figure 1) at which I would move
10% of my 401K from TWCUX to income fund. As of the time of that
article (May 29, 2001), I had moved 10% from income to TWCUX five
times on the dates marked in the figure and was 50% in TWCUX and
50% in income. Since that article I moved another 10% from income
to TWCUX (for a total of 60%) on September 19, 2001, as I reported
last April.
A new buy is shown on July 10, but now I am investing in the index
fund (I was required to move all the funds from TWCUX to the index
by the beginning of July and did so in June). This buy reflects
the fact that VFINX was substantially lower on that date than it
was in September, low enough to have reached another blue line.
I am employing the same buy lines as before. For now, I will retain
the same sell lines (having added another sell line).
Figure 1. Composite stock fund with buying (red arrow) and selling
(black arrow) points market.

Also shown in Figure 1 is a green line which shows how my 401K
has fared since Sept 3, 1999. Although I am now 48% richer than
if I had stayed fully invested all through the decline, I am 19%
behind where I would be if I had just stayed in the income fund.
Overall my position is down 5% from 9/3/99. On the other hand,
I am now 70% in stocks and should the market move upwards I will
participate strongly. I plan to complete the experiment and see
how it turns out, providing periodic updates as I either add positions
or sell them. Without practical demonstrations of investment strategies
based on secular trend ideas, the utility of the concept is unclear.
The presentation in Figure 1 suggests that any reliance on stocks
for my 401K is foolish. That is, I would have been better off staying
fully invested in the safe income fund, as I was before 1995. In
actuality this was not true, TWCUX handily outperformed the income
fund over the 1995-2000 period. I do not have a record of my buys
and sells before October 1997, but Figure 2 presents the total
return obtained by the actual mix of stock and income funds in
my 401K after 10/23/97 compared to that obtained from a 100% position
in stocks or a 100% position in the income fund (assumed to be
a fixed 6% return over the entire period).
Figure 2. Overall 401K return since 10/23/97 compared to stock
and fixed 6% return

Having stocks contributed strongly to total return during the
bull market. From 10/23/97 to the bull market peak on 3/24/00,
my 401K mix advanced 43% compared to 99% for TWCUX, and only 15%
for the income fund. At this time it appeared to the mix strategy
in my 401K, although far better than the straight income strategy
I used before 1995 was doomed to underperform the stock market.
Yet as of the 7/12/02 close, the total return from 10/23/97 of
my 401K mix strategy has been 35% compared to a 6% loss for
the all-stock strategy and 32% for the all-income strategy. So both stocks
and the safe investment options have a role to play in maximization
of returns. The stock accumulation begun in October 2000 has substantially
depressed my returns over what I would have gotten had I maintained
a 100% income stance. Yet if I had done so, I must also consider
the negative effect of holding the income fund instead of the stock
fund during bull market periods. I should note that the entire period
covered by Figure 2 has been a time of record stock market P/E
and a 100% income stance in the late 1990's would have been in
order. One can point out that if the S&P500 were to fall another
5% from present levels (~920) the total return of the mix strategy
from 1997 would fall below that from the income fund. This is completely
true, and as the market falls the stock allocation will increase,
accelerating the erosion of total return. Should the S&P500
fall to ~700, at which point my method calls for 100% stock allocation,
total return from Oct 1997 would likely fall below 10%, substantially
behind the income return. In this case, the blend strategy will
look decidedly inferior to the all-income strategy, just as the
blend strategy looked inferior compared to the all-stock strategy
in March 2000. But should that visit to 700 be followed by a strong
bull market, the blend strategy can pull substantially ahead of
the income strategy once again. But one can point out that by staying
in the income fund until 700 is reached and then buying, a much
better return will be obtained. This is true of course, but if
one has stayed in income from October 1997 though the 1997-2000
bubble and then through the 50% collapse that followed the bubble,
would one have the courage to go long? After all, if we use the
1929-32 bear market as a model, a 50% decline in the S&P500
could be followed by another 50% decline and the level reached
would still be some 70% higher than the 1932 bottom.
In other words, just as a bull market can always go higher (in
the short term), a bear market can always go lower. In the real
world, when faced with a powerful bear, most investors will wait
until it is clear that the bear has gone before re-entering the
market. And usually that means the bull market has to have recovered
50% or more of the bear market decline before it starts to look
like a bull market and not just another bear market rally.
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Mike Alexander
Mike Alexander is
the author of four books: (2000) Stock Cycles: Why stocks wont beat money
market over the next 20 years; (2002) The Kondratiev Cycle: A generational
interpretation; (2003) Retiring Rich: The ultimate IRA and 401(k) investing
guide (now available in paperback under the title Investing in a Secular
Bear Market) and (2004) Cycles in American Politics: How political,
economic and cultural trends have shaped the nation.
Michael is not a registered advisor and does not give investment
advice. His comments are an expression of opinion only and should not be construed
in any manner whatsoever as recommendations to buy or sell a stock, option,
future, bond, commodity or any other financial instrument at any time. While
he believes his statements to be true, they always depend on the reliability
of his own credible sources. Of course, we recommend that you consult with
a qualified investment advisor, one licensed by appropriate regulatory agencies
in your legal jurisdiction, before making any investment decisions, and barring
that, we encourage you confirm the facts on your own before making important
investment commitments.
Copyright © 2000 - 2008 Michael A.
Alexander
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