Our "Mutual Fund" - Printable Version +- Dividend Growth Forum (http://DividendGrowthForum.com) +-- Forum: Dividend Growth Investing (http://DividendGrowthForum.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=15) +--- Forum: My Portfolio (http://DividendGrowthForum.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=14) +--- Thread: Our "Mutual Fund" (/showthread.php?tid=570) |
Our "Mutual Fund" - Robandcindy2 - 05-27-2014 Just the big picture of our portfolio. No single asset is greater than 2% of our portfolio at present. I track the Spec Stocks(growth-non-dividend) and Emergency Fund (6 months take-home pay, separately). Apologies if this doesn't format correctly: [attachment=65] Overall returning 10.62% Yielding 3.44% on cost RE: Our "Mutual Fund" - ChadR - 05-27-2014 Good yield. Any way you could have the individual stocks listed? RE: Our "Mutual Fund" - Kerim - 05-28-2014 Hard to argue with your weightings. But agree would be interested in the stock list as well. Is the 2% cash allocation (not the emergency fund) your dry powder for new purchases? Or are new purchases from new money, and the cash is just a cushion against volatility? RE: Our "Mutual Fund" - Robandcindy2 - 05-28-2014 (05-28-2014, 05:25 PM)Kerim Wrote: Hard to argue with your weightings. But agree would be interested in the stock list as well. We have several IRAs plus 401K, all with money markets for sweep funds. The 2% was just a round number that was close to the value at the time. Just a target. I always reinvest our dividends. When I get our list up you'll see that the portfolio is on cruise control. Rarely selling and buying. Mostly saving new monies to add/rebalance positions. I spend more time fighting the Boglehead in me that wants 40 % in bonds QE or no QE. That's the hard part now-ignoring history and being low on the bond side. Many arguments both ways. I'll try and format a list of our stocks and get it up in a few days. Everyone has to promise not to laugh- we are at the far end of stock count. I sleep very well with this set up however. RE: Our "Mutual Fund" - Robandcindy2 - 06-02-2014 Equity Portion of "Our Mutual Fund": Sensitive Energy 10.00% ConocoPhillips COP Chevron Corporation CVX Occidental Petroleum OXY Exxon Mobil Corporation XOM BP plc (ADR) BP Ensco PLC Class A ESV Royal Dutch Shell plc (ADR) RDS-A Royal Dutch Shell plc (ADR) RDS-B Williams Companies Inc WMB Enbridge Energy Management, L.L.C. EEQ Total S.A. ADR TOT Kinder Morgan Management LLC KMR Spectra Energy Corp. SE Industrials 10.00% Lockheed Martin Corporation LMT Waste Management, Inc. WM Norfolk Southern Corp. NSC Paychex, Inc. PAYX General Electric Company GE UPS UPS Stanley Black & Decker SWK Emerson Electric Co. EMR Textainer Group Holdings TGH Caterpillar CAT Technology 9.00% Apple Inc. AAPL Intel Corporation INTC Maxim Integrated Products MXIM Cisco CSCO Microsoft Corporation MSFT CA, Inc. CA KLA-Tencor Corporation KLAC Qualcom QCOM Accenture PLC ACN First Trust NASDAQ Technology Dividend Index ETF TDIV Communication Services 5.00% AT&T Inc. T Verizon VZ BCE Inc. (USA) BCE Rogers Communications (USA) RCI Vodafone VOD Cyclical Basic Materials 5.00% Air Products APD Compass Minerals CMP Dow Chemical DOW International Paper IP Nucor NUE Rayonier RYN BHP Billiton plc (ADR) BBL Potash POT Consumer Cyclical 6.00% Coach, Inc. COH Darden DRI Ford F General Motors GM Home Depot HD Leggett & Platt, Inc. LEG Mattel MAT McDonald's Corporation MCD PetMed Express PETS Starbucks Corporation SBUX Shaw Communications Inc (USA) SJR Financial Services 5.00% AFLAC Incorporated AFL Cincinnati Financial Corporation CINF Community Trust Bancorp CTBI JP Morgan JPM New York Community Bancorp, Inc. NYCB Wells Fargo & Co WFC Bank of Montreal (USA) BMO The Bank of Nova Scotia (USA) BNS HSBC Holdings plc HSBC Toronto-Dominion Bank (USA) TD Westpac Banking Corp ADR WBK Business Development Companies (BDC's) 2.00% Ares Capital Corporation ARCC FS Investment Corp FSIC Hercules Technology Growth Capital HTGC Main Street Capital Corporation MAIN New Mountain Finance Corp NMFC TCP Capital TCPC Real Estate Investment Trusts (REIT) 4.00% American Realty Capital Properties ARCP Digital Realty Trust, Inc. DLR National Retail Properties NNN Realty Income Corp O Vanguard REIT ETF VNQ Vanguard International Equity Index Funds VNQI Health Care REITs 4.00% HCP, Inc. HCP Medical Properties Trust, Inc. MPW National Health Inv. NHI Omega Healthcare Investors Inc OHI Health Care REIT HCN Defensive Consumer Defensive 20.00% Archer Daniels Midland Company ADM ConAgra Foods, Inc. CAG Colgate-Palmolive Company CL The Clorox Co CLX CVS Caremark Corporation CVS Dr. Pepper Snapple DPS General Mills GIS Kellog K Kimberly Clark KMB The Coca-Cola Company KO Kraft Foods Group Inc KRFT Lorillard Inc. LO Altria MO Nestle NSRGY PepsiCo, Inc. PEP Pinnacle Foods PF The Procter & Gamble Company PG Phillip Morris, Intl PM SYSCO Corporation SYY Target Corporation TGT Tupperware Brands TUP Unilever plc (ADR) UL Walgreen Company WAG Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. WMT Health Care 10.00% AbbVie Inc ABBV Abbott ABT AstraZeneca plc (ADR) AZN Baxter International Inc. BAX GlaxoSmithKline plc (ADR) GSK Johnson & Johnson JNJ Eli Lilly LLY Medtronic MDT Merck & Co., Inc. MRK Novartis AG (ADR) NVS Pfizer PFE Market Vectors Pharmaceutical ETF PPH Vanguard Healthcare ETF VHT Utility Income Stocks 10.00% American Electric Power Company, Inc. AEP Avista AVA Duke Energy Corp DUK Consolidated Edison, Inc. ED National Grid plc (ADR) NGG Public Service Enterprise Group Inc. PEG PPL Corporation PPL Southern SO Vectren Corp VVC WGL Holdings WGL Westar Energy Inc WR Artesian Resources ARTNA Middlesex Water Company MSEX Only a handful of these positions exceed 1% of our portfolio. This is one way I minimize risk. Maybe not text book but it works for me "at this phase of my investing development/education." As I seriously get close to retirement (mandatory by age 65 as an airline pilot) I plan on shrinking the number of stocks significantly, raising the "current" yield conservatively closer to 4%-4.5% as well as bringing our fixed income assets back in line with our Boglehead Family (assuming QE has settled down and the bond world has normalized....ah, yeah....that's gonna happen! ) When I retire, portfolio management will be my full time job (that and teaching my better half to take over when I croak from all those hours locked in a tiny closet bathing in gamma rays at 39,000 feet living on airline food and coffee.) :-) RE: Our "Mutual Fund" - Ok Red - 06-02-2014 Wow. You own the S&P 500.... RE: Our "Mutual Fund" - Dividend Watcher - 06-02-2014 OMG, Rob, that's an awesome portfolio. Why did we have to promise not to laugh? I own many and there were quite a few I'm interested in. My problem is I didn't want to dilute the portfolio too much with my limited capital. Thanks for sharing. RE: Our "Mutual Fund" - Robandcindy2 - 06-03-2014 (06-02-2014, 11:08 PM)Dividend Watcher Wrote: OMG, Rob, that's an awesome portfolio. Why did we have to promise not to laugh? Only because the "current philosophy" is 20-50 stocks. It is a lot to watch. But with low total percentages, if I screw up, I mean their CEO screws up it is a minor mistake. So far working being up 11.0% as of yesterday. Lucked out because of a mandatory retirement rollover at work pushed me into the $2.00 commission schedule. You know, this is America, I believe in us (and a few good companies overseas) so why not? (06-02-2014, 09:52 PM)Ok Red Wrote: Wow. You own the S&P 500.... Maybe, not a big "fan" of S&P this or DOW that....just Dividend Growers. My personal benchmark is the Vanguard Wellington Fund. Ginormous track record, smart folks, and our go to fund if our family has a disaster and we can't manage all of this ourselves. RE: Our "Mutual Fund" - TomK - 06-03-2014 Wow, Rob -- that list is no joke. I tend to think that perhaps it is a bit over-diversified, but as I read through the names, they look like an excellent list of companies. And if you don't mind tracking it all, good on 'ya. I suppose that you could argue that once you are that diversified, you're just going to average the same return as the index, but as a dividend growth person, that wouldn't be considered a problem. What you'd really want to know is whether you were able to get into all or most of those names at good valuations. I tend to buy opportunistically, when a good company that I am watching reaches an appealing value, so my portfolio grows slowly (especially recently!). Thanks for sharing the list. RE: Our "Mutual Fund" - Robandcindy2 - 06-04-2014 (06-03-2014, 01:37 PM)TomK Wrote: Wow, Rob -- that list is no joke. I tend to think that perhaps it is a bit over-diversified, but as I read through the names, they look like an excellent list of companies. And if you don't mind tracking it all, good on 'ya. Been building this for several years now. I used to use several online valuation calculators to determine "fair price" (which I still consider the toughest question we all face). I now rely almost 90% on FastGraphs for my initial "fair value" estimate. If something is fairly priced or under value it receives further scrutiny. My next stop is Morningstar's Fair Value price. If it passes both of those I move on to other considerations. If not, and it is a company I really want (i.e. KMB...still waiting!) I come up with "my buy price", note it on my spreadsheet and move on.... RE: Our "Mutual Fund" - Robandcindy2 - 06-04-2014 Just to be sure folks new to DG don't get the wrong idea, here are my screw ups: (Bought prices are ave cost per share averaged over all accounts including reinvested dividends and commission when applicable) CSCO Down $140 (was down around $600 at one point) Bought at $25.25 CA Down $721 Bought at $33.16 POT Down $165 Bought (actually repurchased) at $37.12 COH Down $603 Bought at $52.67 F Down $118 Bought at 17.08 GM Down $272 Bought at $39.18 PETS Down $401 Bought at $15.77 ARCC Down $103 Bought at $17.75 MAIN Down $121 Bought at $32.72 ARCP Down $186 Bought at $13.04 DLR Down $221 Bought at $60.35 VNQ Down $833 (!!! What's up with that Vanguard????!) VNQI Down $854 MPW Down $205 Bought at $14.13 PM Down $100 Bought at $89.81 TGT Down $329 Bought at $61.11 ED Down $455 (Seriously? This is ConEd in the NY metro area???) ARTNA Down $120 Bought at $22.42 I can pretty much make an argument for holding on to each of these (either business model, estimated growth/return, cyclical stock) but sometimes..."ya just wanna dump those looooosers!" Overall up 10.93% (lifetime) as of yesterdays close. Not great but receiving 3.4% in yield. |