Friday, March 30, 2018

March Portfolio Update: A lot of Lion, a Little Lamb

My total net worth actually is $400 less than last month, which includes money added and gains on the last day.  For the most part, my portfolio outperformed the DJIA, but I haven't figured out how to graph that yet with my brokerage.  April will be a big month for purchases, so I'm hoping things stay low key (or drop) for a few more weeks...

Annual Income:













Dividends Received:  March is another high yielding month
Symbol Amount
HD 12.36
O 9.86
ORI 8.97
MCD 13.13
MAIN 6.65
CMP 7.92
JNJ 12.6
ADM 5.03
TGT 8.68
CVX 14.56
SO 14.5
WEC 7.18
WTR 2.87
Total               124.31

March Purchases:
QCOM - 29
GIS - 25
KMB - 10

I just bought KMB on Tuesday, right before it started heading back up to where I originally bought it a few months ago.  I doubled down on GIS after short-selling PM (I'm off cigarettes!).  I was in with Kroger for a day, then went with QCOM ("the biggest drama queen on Wall St.").  Target and Kroger seem to be getting along together quite well lately, so we will see if I don't end up having a part of Kroger anyway.  

YD was right, the first annual $1k is difficult, and i even had a head start with the 20k initial.  I'm hoping to see $2k quite soon.  I'm also looking forward to a few more dividend increases in April.  April is historically the best month in the market, but we will see if it keeps the title.


Thursday, March 15, 2018

Kroger in, Kroger out, Qualcomm in

Last week I had been watching and waiting for WalMart to drop.  It wouldn't.  Everybody and their mother says "Buy WalMart", but it has never quite hit the level I wanted it to be at before buying in.  So I look at similar grocery-type staples, and Kroger had just announced their (less than expected) quarterly results.  I figure if I can find the floor on this one, I might get a good yield.

Well, Friday morning I see the inflation report on Drudge, and I surmise that the market will take off.  I pull the trigger on Kroger, and sure enough I made some money by the end of the day.  Over the weekend, and listening to Cramer, I realized a few things.  Kroger is in the most competitive sector out there right now - groceries.  Everyone has a hand in groceries:  WalMart, Target, Amazon, even Kohl's will!!  Add that to the list of grocery stores that already exist.

But that is not what pushed me over the "Sell" edge.  It was the unions.  I am from a big union state, I see what they do to inflation, bottom lines, even new, innovative stores.  Working in tech made me think that unions were just for railroads and truck drivers.  After all, WalMart kept the unions out.  And then I find out that Kroger has unions.  That was enough for me.  I sold bright and early Monday morning with a tiny profit.  I refuse to invest in anything grocery going forward, the margins are too thin!

Meanwhile, the Qualcomm/Broadcom
deal was nixed.  After QCOM flew up out of reach in November when the merger talk started happening, I largely ignored it.  However, when the deal was nixed, QCOM started dropping pretty hard, being on Yahoo's loser list 2 days in a row.  When it stopped falling on Wednesday, and everything else was falling, I realized it hit the bottom and bought 29 shares at 3.9% yield!  So I guess I get to be part of the silicon valley NASDAQ drama as I now have a part of Qualcomm.  I'm glad my other tech company is MasterCard, which will be a solid player against the volatility of Qualcomm and its ilk.  As for now, I have my tech quota (2) so I am done with tech.  Until I fill all of my other quotas, I may take a look at tech again, but if I do it will be a long time from now.

I am glad that my net worth has popped back above what it was at the end of January - the February drop will be forever immortalized in my spreadsheets!  I'm counting down to 5 weeks when I will be making some (positive) financial changes through a hard-earned windfall.  It will still be a few weeks after that before the effects will be seen, but it should help boost my investing and bring me closer to my goals.

Monday, March 5, 2018

Great Article on "The Highest Quality Dividend Growth Stocks"

I came across an article here, which may or may not be available depending on when you read this.  Basically, the author used a set of standards to rate all of the stocks on David Fish's CCC list.  He used these stringent criteria:


He did not record any stocks that scored lower than 4 in each category.  That being said, let's see how mine turned out!

The 20 Point Crew:  These stocks are the golden standard.  Only 11 made the cut, of these I own:
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)
Proctor & Gamble (PG)
also, the ones on my shortlist watchlist were
WalMart (WMT)
Merck (MRK)

The 19 Point Crew: A bigger list overall, but of mine...
Chevron (CVX)
Home Depot (HD)
MasterCard (MA)
shortlist watchlist:
Exxon (XOM)

The 18 Point Crew:
Fastenal (FAST) - I found this gem from personal research, so good on me!
Kimberley Clark (KMB)
No watchlisters...

and....
The 17 Point Crew:
WEC Energy (WEC)
Xcel Energy (XEL)
Again, no watchlisters.

The 16 pointers had QCOM on it, which is on my watchlist, but nothing else.

Now,
Stocks on these lists yielding high that I might want to look into:
Pfizer, IBM, AEP & Pinnacle West.  I decided to replace Smuckers (didn't make the cut) with Pinnacle West.  I have enough staples in my portfolio, and shortlist that I think this one would be fine.  Although I am a bit utility heavy as well.  We will see what happens during my tax harvest season.

Note:  These are Dividend Growth Stocks, not Growth stocks.  Hence I don't buy them all.  I need a little growth mixed in (ABT, MA, TGT, FAST).



Thursday, March 1, 2018

February Portfolio Update

Since tracking my net worth since May of '17, this is my first month where my total net worth (which I do not track on this blog) went down.  I decided this would be a good time to start posting my progress per month so I can look back on it.  Why not start with a down month?  Next month will be better, right?  Right?

Annually, I am currently making:

Dividends Received
February is one of the higher yielding months.
Ticker          Divs
T 34.50
GIS 6.86
MA 4.00
APD 12.35
ABT 4.76
HRL 7.69
MAIN 2.85
NNN 14.25
PG 6.90
O 7.67
FAST 5.55
Total 107.38

February purchases:
XEL - 19
MAIN - 20
NNN - 13
O - 10
PG - 7
GIS - 11

I made a decision to move or get off the fence on General Mills (GIS) after their expensive purchase of Blue Buffalo.  The yield is good, however the growth is slow, debt is high, and possibly the dividend will be frozen until 2020.  However, it is a staple.  I don't expect much growth from staples in a healthy economy, so I decided to stick with them for now, adding to my position.

I have a lot of deals in my own portfolio, while keeping one eye on my watchlist short list, particularly WMT, which is still a tad too expensive.  I feel like I should obtain deals in my own portfolio before adding to a new position, i.e. buy some more O.  Now that tax reform has passed, I don't know if we will continue to see as much of an upward trend, despite it is Q2 when the tax law makes its impact known.  I am preparing for choppy waters by being more conservative and averaging down my portfolio in preparation for tax harvesting, which will begin after May for me.  However, if WMT hits the low 80s....

My other indicators will be at the other links, as usual.