Traders and investors may concentrate on the causes of downturns or increased stock market volatility. However, regardless of political trends, long-term investors have always had to weather stock market storms.
Since the introduction of the value-oriented investment newsletter in 1977, the S&P 500 SPX has had 39 corrections, or drops of 10% or more from previous highs, according to John Buckingham, publisher of the Prudent Speculator. According to Buckingham’s message to clients on Monday, the index had “also enjoyed 39 rallies of 10% or greater since 1977, with the average gain during the periods in green working out to a whopping 40.69%.” However, the dips had averaged 17.83%.
“Alas, they don’t ring a bell to mark the start and end of Bear and Bull Markets, which is why we always say that time in the market trumps market timing,” he stated.
The issue with staying out of the market to prevent a drop is that investors will probably come back long after a market recovery has begun. Attempts at market timing are likely to result in poorer overall returns over time unless you have perfect timing.
However, diversifying your portfolio may still help you reduce your risk. A fund that tracks the S&P 500, for instance, will have minimal costs for a portfolio of hundreds of stocks. However, it is weighted by market size and restricted to U.S.-listed stocks. This indicates that 18.6% of the portfolio is made up of the three largest holdings of the $576 billion SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust SPY: Apple Inc. (AAPL), Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), and Nvidia Corp. (NVDA). Additionally, approximately 34% of the fund is made up of the top 10 holdings.
Your portfolio is probably focused in U.S. stocks because of how well the overall U.S. market has done since the 2008 financial crisis. However, a screen from Jefferies analysts could be a good place to start your own study if you are looking for dividend-paying companies and want to diversify your portfolio to include non-U.S. equities in order to reduce your risk.
Prior to presenting that list, consider this Janus Henderson Investors figure, which illustrates the performance cycles of the S&P 500 and the MSCI EAFE Index XX:990300 of 21 stock markets in developed nations outside of the US and Canada:
Based on five-year rolling averages, the graph, which was part of a paper titled “Revisiting the Case for Non-U.S. stocks,” illustrates how the two have alternated in terms of positive returns.
Good dividend stocks from outside the United States.
Eleven U.S. dividend stocks of businesses that seem to have a lot of free cash flow available to support or boost their shareholder distributions were highlighted by us last week.
Analysts lead by Desh Peramunetilleke, Head of Quantitative Strategy at Jefferies, released a research on Thursday that featured a number of dividend ideas both domestically and internationally.
Stocks were included in one of the techniques for a “Europe dividend portfolio based on high-quality yield.” The Jefferies analysts’ approach, which included free-cash-flow yields, returns on equity, expected earnings-per-share growth rates, and other indicators, gave sixteen of the listed stocks a score of five out of five.