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Woodford Concerns
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ChesterDog said:I don't think a lot of people could foresee it. I invested, I've been investing for over 25 years and still got caught out.
Jim, I'm surprised to see you getting caught out. I've always felt you and I are very much on the same wavelength.
I invested in the Woodford OEIC initially (as did a friend to whom I suggested it), but as time passed, I became concerned enough to pull out well before the crisis hit. I twisted my friend's arm to do likewise even though - as he pointed out at the time - I had always told him investment is for the long term and you shouldn't chop and change. But this was a special case...
The fund got chucked out of the Equity Income sector - bad sign.
There was a high level of small, unlisted, high-risk companies in it, and the proportion of these grew and grew - bad sign.
Increasingly, the holdings didn't reflect his previous successful funds - bad sign.
There were big problems with individual holdings within it (Capita, Provident, Industrial Heat...) - bad sign.
The performance, initially good, fell away - bad sign.
Woodford started to rule-bend and wriggle the regs (Guernsey listings) - bad sign.
Withdrawals from the fund sucked further value from it - bad sign.
Woodford - the high-hubris, high-conviction, dedicatedly contrarian investor - found himself issuing contrite apologies to his investors, while also blaming them for the poor performance by pulling their money out - bad sign.
Etc, etc, etc.
So I am curious: what made you hang on?As you put, the writing was on the wall for a long time, and its shameful so many FA's hung on on behalf of their clients for so long. No disrespect but if amateurs like you and me could see the issues building, what on earth is going on when so called professionals cant?(dont answer that, having seen so-called professional analyst reports on companies I really understand, as a group, they are clueless.1 -
Once you ditch the dogma of beating the market you can simply ignore active managers. You'll avoid the massive failure, obviously the successes too, but given that you can't know the future I think that's a worthwhile trade. My "no active manager" filter and also "BS" sensor meant that I was never in the Woodford camp. My sense is that the Lindsell Train IT might be on course to have some big reverses just because any fund that holds 50% of the parent company isn't exactly diversified.“So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.”0
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eskbanker said:Sailtheworld said:We don't know your portfolio. If you built your portfolio correctly then it shouldn't really be any more than 20-25% of your overall portfolio. So, the loss relative to your portfolio shouldn't be much more than a minor setback. Indeed, the rest of your portfolio could well have more than made up for it. It's a setback but it shouldn't be a large one costing you years.
Cold comfort when it's pretty clear he didn't build his portfolio correctly and it is a large setback costing him years.
He bought into the idea (promoted by the financial sales industry) that he had the skills to pick a star manager ahead of time or, for just a 'small' fee, they would tell him. Mix in a touch of greed and gullibility and all sense went out of the window.
Lots of disciples on this board are all too happy to comment on 'flavour of the month' this and 'top of the league table' that and perpetuate the myth. I can see why - nobody likes to attribute one iota of investing success to luck and, of course, diversification is so so unsexy.
Likewise, practically all posts I've read on here by anyone with any sort of credibility (i.e. based on quality not quantity of posts) reiterate the importance of portfolio diversification - where do you believe you've read otherwise?
You only have to hint that someone on here might not have an investment edge and umbridge is taken despite the fact that in many more cases than not it's going to be true. Even the wise owls with the credibility of a high thanks to posts ratio (lol) aren't above this way of thinking. I think it was Bowlhead who said I was simply sore that someone in flavour of the month fund x, y or z was ahead of me in trackers so he/she clearly sees my lack of investment edge as being worthy of insult.
How many times on here have people been advised on here to bolt the stable door despite the horse disappearing off into the far distance? When this happens a little less frequently I might start thinking things are turning in favour of the client.0 -
Sailtheworld said:What do you think sales & marketing budgets are for? They're not there to ensure the punters are making the best choice - they want you to buy their fund no matter what and I'm certain they couldn't give a monkey's about whether the punters were becoming overly concentrated. There's simply no need for some many hundreds of funds to be in existence; it's a requirement to help mask the awkward fact that not only are most investors incapable of beating the market neither are the fund managers they employ either.Sailtheworld said:
You only have to hint that someone on here might not have an investment edge and umbridge is taken despite the fact that in many more cases than not it's going to be true. Even the wise owls with the credibility of a high thanks to posts ratio (lol) aren't above this way of thinking. I think it was Bowlhead who said I was simply sore that someone in flavour of the month fund x, y or z was ahead of me in trackers so he/she clearly sees my lack of investment edge as being worthy of insult.
How many times on here have people been advised on here to bolt the stable door despite the horse disappearing off into the far distance? When this happens a little less frequently I might start thinking things are turning in favour of the client.I can't identify any correlation between that and my point about diversification being generally recommended by those who have some sort of idea about what they're talking about, were you answering something or someone else perhaps?
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Sailtheworld said:We don't know your portfolio. If you built your portfolio correctly then it shouldn't really be any more than 20-25% of your overall portfolio. So, the loss relative to your portfolio shouldn't be much more than a minor setback. Indeed, the rest of your portfolio could well have more than made up for it. It's a setback but it shouldn't be a large one costing you years.
Cold comfort when it's pretty clear he didn't build his portfolio correctly and it is a large setback costing him years.
He bought into the idea (promoted by the financial sales industry) that he had the skills to pick a star manager ahead of time or, for just a 'small' fee, they would tell him. Mix in a touch of greed and gullibility and all sense went out of the window.
Lots of disciples on this board are all too happy to comment on 'flavour of the month' this and 'top of the league table' that and perpetuate the myth. I can see why - nobody likes to attribute one iota of investing success to luck and, of course, diversification is so so unsexy.
"Flavour of the month" or fashion investing, as it is more commonly known, is an issue but that is one driven by the media and marketing and inexperienced investors looking at past performance alone. Investing, if done properly, is typically quite boring and mundane. It should not be viewed as something exciting.
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SonOf said:Sailtheworld said:We don't know your portfolio. If you built your portfolio correctly then it shouldn't really be any more than 20-25% of your overall portfolio. So, the loss relative to your portfolio shouldn't be much more than a minor setback. Indeed, the rest of your portfolio could well have more than made up for it. It's a setback but it shouldn't be a large one costing you years.
Cold comfort when it's pretty clear he didn't build his portfolio correctly and it is a large setback costing him years.
He bought into the idea (promoted by the financial sales industry) that he had the skills to pick a star manager ahead of time or, for just a 'small' fee, they would tell him. Mix in a touch of greed and gullibility and all sense went out of the window.
Lots of disciples on this board are all too happy to comment on 'flavour of the month' this and 'top of the league table' that and perpetuate the myth. I can see why - nobody likes to attribute one iota of investing success to luck and, of course, diversification is so so unsexy.
"Flavour of the month" or fashion investing, as it is more commonly known, is an issue but that is one driven by the media and marketing and inexperienced investors looking at past performance alone. Investing, if done properly, is typically quite boring and mundane. It should not be viewed as something exciting.
“So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.”1 -
I see Woodford is apparently still managing the St James's Place UK high income fund according to Morningstar. High charges, performance seems to have fallen off since 2016 (just before Income Focus?), which surprisingly is when the last annual report was issued that can be downloaded from Morningstar site. Wonder if any "tactical investments" were added to that fund.
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Sure I read many months back that SJP sacked him.0
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AnotherJoe said:Sure I read many months back that SJP sacked him.
One would hope so. Pity that Morningstar doesn't seem to be up to date on that then.
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