Performance so far


Since the start of 2012 I have:


Gained 2.94% (excluding dividends and costs) of my investment - and the market is up 26.30% according to Google Finance

Been rated in the 65th percentile of all listed Trustnet.com OEIC managers (including dividends and costs - assuming that the market-average 1.6% per annum TER is charged across the board)

Achieved an average yield of 1.44% (averaged over the last twelve months) - compared to a market average of 2.8% (according to Digital Look).

Invested in a way that should deliver a pension around 48% of the value of my current income, based on current annuities and growth rates

Tuesday 21 May 2013

Another Carnival Cruises crash?

It certainly was this morning, but not in the same vein as the Costa Concordia disaster in the Mediterranean at the start of 2012.  No, this morning the shares started 15.5% down on yesterday - and when I see that kind of share performance, I start to get excited!

Why, you ask?  You already hold CCL shares from the last time the company crashed something - how can a big drop be good?  Well, first things first - Carnival hasn't dropped as far as it did last time and it's been happily paying dividends since then.  It remains a solid long term company too - it's the biggest in a market which has huge barriers to entry (can anyone lend me the cash to buy a cruise liner?  I didn't think so), it's attractive to the oldies - and there are plenty of those in the world - and more importantly there will be loads more in the developing world who want to take advantage of the self-contained hell that is a cruise.  I cannot imagine anything worse.

The financial fundamentals are important in a business this size, so let's have a quick look at what reassured me once the markets were open this morning. Firstly, bookings grow - but in order to make this happen, ticket prices are down.  The earnings guidance is down by between 9% and 31% - so probably down 20%.  Sounds bad, but I do not think this is a position that will sustain - as I said above, this is a service for old people and there will be lots more of rich ones of those in future unless we all go Logan's Run - not a particularly attractive concept for a 31 year old!

I was thinking to pick up something distressed in Europe about now, particularly in Italy which totally stinks at the moment (wife said no to Greece :-(), but I am also getting twitchy about 12 year highs in the London markets.  Although, that said, if you consider all the money the Government has printed then actually the markets could go a lot higher - purely on the basis that so much money is washing around the system.  I digress.

The other company I am really interested in getting involved with is Jardine Matheson - an old family business with lots of interesting exposure over South East Asia.  Probably good until a war kicks off over the South China Sea!

Sunday 5 May 2013

Who ate all the pies?

I appear to have done so.  Ask my wife - I love Greggs, and it might be starting to show.

Sadly for Greggs, the stockmarket did not love their latest results .... and it showed.  On the 29th April the share price dropped more than 10% off the back of some fairly tedious results - like for like sales were down 4.4% during the last quarter.  Why?  Well, bad weather has been blamed.

I already held Greggs in my portfolio before the drop ... and I am very happy to load up on some more.  Why, you might ask?

Well, look at my investment criteria:
  • Be contrarian - I bought in as others sold out
  • Seek dividends greater than 3% - tick, Greggs is at 4.88% and the board will be keen to defend that 'rising dividend every year since listing' reputation
  • Exposed to lots of markets - not really, these guys stick to the people they know, who tend to be Scots and those from northern England
  • Get Laura's approval - aside from the obesity issue, she's very happy with Greggs
  • Never buy on a Monday - nope, bought these bad boys on a Tuesday
A handy addition to the portfolio, let's hope.

Unlike African Barrick Gold, which continues to pile in - my investment has now lost just shy of 61% of it's value.  How annoying.