Thursday 31 December 2015

Week 21 Review

It's been a complicated week. I took a look at some of my more volatile shares yesterday and decided to protect the profits by placing some stop-loss orders. I haven't used them before, as I was nervous of spikes in the price resulting in me selling for a loss when I didn't want to. However, in this case I used them to protect my profits. Within 30 minutes of trading this morning, both had triggered and I was faced with a dilemma, as I hadn't planned for this scenario. It was very much a "just in case" move.

BYG:Big Yellow Group is one of my favourite shares, but it has been incredibly volatile, with swings of up to 70p a share in a few days. As this was currently showing a nice profit, I decided to protect it. The share dropped 24p today, so the stop loss triggered at 823.9p before hitting 806p at the end of the day. I banked £169.03 profit which was 8.7%. I felt robbed though - I wanted to keep the shares. I resigned myself to the fact they were gone and started looking at my "next buys" list.

Top of the list was CMCL: Caledonia Mining. Despite the price of gold they are doing well, and everything is green on my spreadsheet. Add to that a 7.93% dividend and I was hooked. I bought 3000 at 38.9999p costing £1,181.95 with commission. Now I just wait for that juicy dividend...

That left another £1000 from the Big Yellow Group sale - what should I do with that? As the price of Big Yellow dropped, I realised I could buy back in at a lower price and not lose out. Seeing as I didn't want to sell them in the first place, I bought 127 at 812.4p with £5.16 stamp duty costing £1.048.86. I'm not exactly sure how all that ended up, but I think it's favourable. If I had kept the shares, I would have lost £54.48 of my profit. I've had to pay an extra £23.90 commission for my 2 purchases and have ended up with half as many Big Yellow shares, but do have a load of gold mine shares instead. I think at the very least I've not lost out, but maybe it's marginal.

The other stop loss was triggered on my pension fund. I've not held UTW:Utilitywise for long, and I do really like the company. However they are spectacularly volatile, so I was happy to bank £366.10  (25.5%) profit as they fell 13p (6.9%) today. I may return to them at a later date, so will keep a watchful eye. However, I've decided it's a risky one for the pension fund so have kept £800 to add to the £1,000 I intend to add from my StockTrade sales, and spent £1,025.83 on 1200 SLI:Standard Life Property Investments Trust shares at 84.49p a share. These are another sea of pure green on my spreadsheet. They are in good financial health and paying a 5.5% dividend. Although a slight concern that the dividend has been decreasing, it's still very high and could decrease a bit more and still be above most. The share price has been a bit volatile recently, but is going slowly upwards as a long term trend and there's no reason to suspect this won't continue.

So, after all that lot settles down, how has this week gone?




Weekly Change
Portfolio cost £33,743.41
+£209.40
Portfolio value (share price) £31,825.11 (-£1,717.26) -£48.70
Portfolio sell value (bid price - commission) £30,708.03 (-£3,035.38) -£35.25
Dividends £241.09
+£0
Profit from sales £695.01
+£244.10
Average monthly cash profit £189.38
+£43.42
(Sold stocks profit + Dividends - Fees / Months)

So the portfolio cost has gone up as a result of profits being re-invested, but the overall value has gone down slightly. However, this can be accounted for by commission and spread of new shares, so it's been a pretty much break even week.

The big positive is on the average monthly profit, which is up by £43 a month and not far shy of £200. Given my target is to keep over £100 a month then I have 4 months where I don't need to get a dividend or sell anything to stay above my target. That makes the current paper deficit of the portfolio seem much easier to tolerate.

Here's the latest SIPP performance




Weekly Change
Portfolio cost £2,901.96
-£396.12
Portfolio value (share price) £2,986.02 (+£84.05) -£518.89
Portfolio sell value (bid price - commission) £2,932.17 (+£30.20) -£514.39
Dividends £0
+£0
Profit from sales £366.10
+£366.10
Average monthly cash profit £317.27
+£317.29
(Sold stocks profit + Dividends - Fees / Months)

Very complicated after the Utilitywise sale. There is £800 waiting in the account to be re-invested, so although the portfolio value is down by £500 this week, next week it should leap as the extra £1000 is added and the £1800 spent on shares. The key thing is the dramatic improvement in cash profit from the one sale, going from a 2p deficit to a £317.27 per month profit. This is a great baseline as it gives me another 3 or 4 months before I'll feel the need to add to it.

That's it for this week, and for 2015. My first 21 weeks have been very exciting and I'm really pleased with the profits at the end of the year. The main portfolio is suffering from a combination of bad decisions early on, and investments in companies that are suffering unpopularity now, but which I believe are strong and capable of making me profit when their next results are published. I may do a portfolio review over the next few days as a proper review of the year.

Wednesday 30 December 2015

A big decision

Today I sold one of my favourite shares. SHB:Shafestbury for 930.6p. This was only a 3.5% profit of £62.05, but freed up £2,000 of capital that I thought could be doing better. Having so few shares at this high price meant that dividend payouts were small, and although one of the most sound companies I had invested in, I think a small player like me needs to focus on cheaper shares at higher quantity. If I ever make any money out of this lark, then I will return to Shaftesbury, but only when I can afford to buy 1000 shares.

The first thing I did with the freed capital was buy 2000 shares in DOTD:Dotdigital at 51.89p costing £1,049.75. I've had my eye on these for a while, as although over priced for the profits they currently earn (PE ratio of 30), there's a strong indication their profits are about to soar. They have been recently made Global Platinum Partners for Magento which is used all over the world for e-commerce, and this should open up a massive customer base. They have increasing revenues, are cash rich, have no debt and their dividend ex-date is in 8 days which will granted only deliver £7.20 but will be good for my monthly cash profit stats.

My use of the remaining free capital could be regarded as mental given the roller coaster ride GLEN:Glencore has taken me on. However, I still have faith in this company and I've been contemplating taking advantage of their current share price for some time. Now I've done it - with 1000 shares at 91.8819p costing £930.77. This brings my Glencore holding up to 1900 at an average price of 130.8813p. This is only just over the 125p that the recent listing to institutions sold at, and has been my baseline for what I don't think the share will be allowed to fall below long term. I'm hoping this will improve my chances of making up the £770 loss so far - but that's being pessimistic. The optimistic view is that I've just bought a bargain that will soar over the next few years.

The cash from my StockTrade account sales was available for transfer today, but it will take 3 or 4 days to hit my account, so the pension fund has a little while longer to wait for a new injection. My target shares have not gone up in price today, so I'm hoping they will stay where they are for a few more days when I swoop for the purchase.

Tuesday 29 December 2015

Goodbye GB Group

This morning saw a fond farewell to my GBG:GB Group shares. They are a great company, and I bought the shares based on their amazing chart of steady growth. However, with my new investing criteria I cannot hold onto a share with a PE ratio of 26 when I look for 15, a 22.5 rule score of 191, a market to book ratio of 7.23 when I look for maximum of 2.5, and a price to net tangible asset ratio of 369 when I look for 1.2. The upshot is, these shares are over priced even if you factor in substantial growth, so I fear the next correction will cause a big fall. "Be fearful when others are greedy".

I immediately re-invested the capital and teensy £11 profit in TRX:Tissue Regenix. This is a speculative purchase, but based on a company that has its key product in clinical trial, no debt and a potential niche market worth $4bn. At 15.405p a share I was able to buy 3600 costing £566.53. I believe these are more likely to give me substantial growth than GB Group as they have a lot further to go, but given the risk of buying my first pharma shares, I'll be happy to stick with a small outlay and relatively small reward should things come good.

Today was one of the best days ever for my portfolio. Almost everything was blue and the deficit was improved by £450. My dream of getting it below £2000 before Christmas may not have been fulfilled, but we're heading in the right direction. Given that I got substantially more than the bid prices for my three recent sales, shows that using the bid price for my performance calculations is pessimistic, which is good for focusing the mind, but gives me confidence that the true picture is somewhere between the bid price and share price. Amazingly the share price calculation is £1,300 better than the bid price calculation, so in reality I'm probably through the £2,000 deficit already - but I'll still use the bid price as I'd rather operate on minimum possible portfolio worth.

Tomorrow is settlement day on my BAE Systems and Halma share sales, so I should be able to withdraw the money from my StockTrade account and top up my SIPP - and reveal my next pension fund purchase...

Sunday 27 December 2015

Week 20 Review

Things were looking really good this week, with a mini Santa Rally. Until Christmas Eve when nearly everything that bothered moving decided to move downwards.

There was much festive gladness when I logged in to discover I had indeed purchased the PAF:Pan African shares in time, and there was a £90.29 dividend waiting for me.

I also decided it was time to wave goodbye to a couple of my oldest shares. These are ones I bought before developing the new stock picking rules and using my colour coded spreadsheet.

BA.:BAE Systems had been dropping ever since I bought them. They were laying off workers and slowing down production of the Euro fighter. I was most concerned however by their whopping great debt. They fell down on loads of my other measures for buying shares too. PE ratio was high at 22, ROCE below 10%, Market to book ratio 7.56 when I look for below 2.5, assets to liabilities ratio of 1.1 when I look for over 1.5, 22.5 rule of a staggering 167. I had been fretting for some time about how I was going to get rid of them, but didn't panic as their order backlog is huge, so I hoped they would become profitable at some point. I hate to say it, as it was such a ghastly crime, but the announcement of increased Government defense spending following the Paris atrocity was the catalyst that sent the share into profit. I sold at 498.98p which was a 5.9% profit of £33.26 plus a £10.92 dividend. Not big bucks, but marginal gains, and above interest rates.

HLMA:Halma was my first share. It was meant to be a long-term dividend earning share, but I couldn't bring myself to keep a share with PE ratio of 31 when I'm looking for 15, and a 22.5 rule of 190. I feared that if there was a stock market correction, these would plummet. As I only held 100 shares, the dividends didn't add up to very much anyway. I thought I could make the capital work much better for me. I sold at 871.40p which is up 9.9% with a £74.78 profit. If I had held for a few more days I would have got a huge £4 interim dividend, so I didn't bother.

So, here's the result of my changes




Weekly Change
Portfolio cost £33,534.01
-£1,387.03
Portfolio value (share price) £31,665.41 (-£1,667.55) +£112.36
Portfolio sell value (bid price - commission) £30,533.88 (-£3,000.13) +£22.50
Dividends £241.09
+£90.29
Profit from sales £450.91
+£108.03
Average monthly cash profit £145.96
+£37.55
(Sold stocks profit + Dividends - Fees / Months)

One slight change to my calculations. The weekly change of the portfolio share price value and sell value now takes into account the increase or decrease of the portfolio cost, so it's effectively how much better or worse the difference is between the cost and value of what's left.

This week wasn't too bad. Up on last week despite over £100 of profit being banked.  The most satisfying result is the average monthly cash profit rising by £37.55 a month thanks to the big dividend and selling a few. Now it's double the best interest I was earning beforehand. Still very titchy in the big scheme of things - but it's moving in the right direction until I'm forced to sell something at a loss, and as the portfolio slowly grows in size, so should the profits on each transaction.

The plan for the £1,495 profit from the two sells is to bank £495 to pay for a deposit to go to Peru next year, and transfer £1,000 into my SIPP to start gradually building that up. The settlement date isn't until 30th Dec, so I won't be able to do that for a few days. I've already identified the perfect share to add to my pension - more on that soon...

Talking of the pension, this is how we're doing




Weekly Change
Portfolio cost £3,298.08
+£0
Portfolio value (share price) £3,901.03 (+£602.95) +£151.34
Portfolio sell value (bid price - commission) £3,842.68 (+£544.60) +£203.84
Dividends £0
+£0
Profit from sales £0
+£0
Average monthly cash profit -£0.02
+£0.01
(Sold stocks profit + Dividends - Fees / Months)

Another great week, with the sell price increasing by more than the share price. That might have been the HGM:Highland Gold spread narrowing, and may also be influenced by the artificial non-existent spread on AA:Alcoa, as I only have the Hargreaves Lansdown current selling price to go on, as they factor in the exchange rate. This has been going for 4 weeks now. £544 profit in a month on a £3,200 investment - wow!! The 2p fee for the last few days of November is divided by 1 (ish) rather than .75 (ish) last week or .5 (ish) the week before. When December's fee is levied, the performance will be much worse until I decide to sell something - which may be some time! Looking forward to adding another £1,000 and then the additional £1,000 from the tax man in January - woohoo!!

Not back at work until 4th January now, so I may have some fun tomorrow. I've spent a lot of the Christmas break studying potential new shares and have discovered a few that I'm very excited about. I may take a long hard look at some of my in-profit shares and see if I think the capital could be put to better use elsewhere...

Friday 18 December 2015

Week 19 Review

Week 19 looked as if the Santa rally had finally arrived, but a dip on the last day put a bit of a dampener on things



Weekly Change
Portfolio cost £34,921.04
+£0
Portfolio value (share price) £32,939.08 (-£1,860.28) +£238.22
Portfolio sell value (bid price - commission) £31,898.41 (-£3,022.63) +£323.79
Dividends £150.80
+£0
Profit from sales £342.88
+£0
Average monthly cash profit £108.41
-£6.03
(Sold stocks profit + Dividends - Fees / Months)

No new shares this week so it's nice and easy to see that things have gone quite well. Unusually the selling price of the shares has increased more than the share price, so some of the spreads must have narrowed. If things had just kept up with the trend of this week I'd have cracked the £3,000 deficit. Given that a few weeks ago I was aiming to crack the £2,000 deficit shows how torrid a time it's been.

I've made a change to the way performance is measured. I realised that the previous way just wasn't right. You can't try and account for both cashed in profits and portfolio value in the same measure as there is overlap when some profits are re-invested. Therefore I've developed a new performance indicator which shows the average monthly profit. All I need to do is enter the week number into my spreadsheet as I prepare this update, and it calculates how much I've cashed in from profit and dividends minus the fees charges by the brokers for account management.

When I get no dividends or sell now shares, the monthly performance declines as I add another week. It should be bolstered by sales and dividends. I was making a maximum of about £70 a month from interest and premium bond prizes, in fact many months significantly less. Unfortunately I don't have baseline measures - although I guess I could trawl through old statements and come up with an average I can compare against.

The key thing is that it's over £100 a month which is significantly better, and if I can keep that up will give a nice profit even after paying interest on the loan.

I'm keeping everything crossed that the PAF:Pan African Gold purchase went through in time for the dividend. My purchase date was 8th December, but the settle date was 10th December, which is the same as the ex-dividend date. I won't know if this was in time until 24th December, when I'll either get £107.92 or I won't. Fingers crossed for a nice Christmas present! Suffice to say it would massively enhance my performance stats.

Another encouraging sign is that my Hargreaves Lansdown standard share account is in profit (unlike my ISA and StockTrade accounts). This was the account I opened after developing my new stock picking process, so fingers crossed is a sign that it's working.

Let's see how the SIPP is doing



Weekly Change
Portfolio cost £3,298.08
+£0
Portfolio value (share price) £3,749.69 (+£451.61) +£573.56
Portfolio sell value (bid price - commission) £3,638.84 (+£340.76) +£538.56
Dividends £0
+£0
Profit from sales £0
+£0
Average monthly cash profit -£0.03
+£0.01
(Sold stocks profit + Dividends - Fees / Months)

Ah - a joy to behold. UTW:Utilitywise has gained by 24% since I bought the share, HGM:Highland Gold has gained by 4% and AA:Alcoa has recovered some of it's losses and is now only 1% down. Gaining over £500 in one week with just 3 shares in the SIPP is wonderful. Roll on January when the tax refund turns up in the account, and will be enough to buy another share.

The average monthly profit from sales and dividends is a bit daft at the moment. I had a 2p account administration charge, and at 0.69 months it means my monthly performance is -3p and is 1p better than when I had been going for 0.5 months. With this being a pension fund I'm much less likely to sell shares, as they are chosen for being the most likely income stocks or steady performers. However, when I do sell it will be good to keep tabs on the monthly "cash" performance.

So all in all a positive week, with 14 stocks in profit, 2 only losing by commission and 26 making a loss. The loss making percentage is coming down and apart from BLUR:Blur Group and TRK:Torotrak which I suspect are both doomed, I'm still highly positive about all the other shares in the portfolio.

Saturday 12 December 2015

Week 18 Review

There was a bit left from the loan money which I was saving for potential Christmas costs, but as it's pay day on Tuesday, I decided some of it would be better invested. I added £450 to my standard share account and bought 5,700 shares at 8.3375p of APC:APC Technology costing £487.19. Although APC are making a loss overall, I was fascinated by their "Minimise" subsidiary, which supports companies in meeting sustainability targets. Earnings in this part of the company are doing really well, and with the Paris summit about to chuck loads of money at tightening up companies carbon footprints, this could easily take off in a big way. Worth risking £500 for anyway. Normally this company would have failed nearly all my investment criteria, but every now and again I feel a spot of speculation isn't too cardinal a crime.




Weekly Change
Portfolio cost £34,921.04
+£4,660.67
Portfolio value (share price) £32,700.86 (-£2,098.50) +£4,364.46
Portfolio sell value (bid price - commission) £31,574.62 (-£3,346.42) +£4,269.64
Dividends £150.80
+£0
Profit from sales £342.88
+£0
Overall profit -£2,660.67
-£391.03
(Portfolio sale-cost+dividends+profit from sales)

All a bit mixed up with the extra shares. The FTSE 100 was down relentlessly all week, so I'm not too upset that overall performance is only down £391 when there's commission and spread for new shares, and no new dividends or sales. The portfolio has certainly performed a lot better than the FTSE 100 this week.

The weekly performance was helped hugely by TON:Titon holdings. These had lit up my whole spreadsheet greener than just about any other share, but had been running at a £43 loss until this week, when a good trading statement made them surge and they are now at a £195 profit and my most successful share. My other 7 in-profit shares all dwindled quite badly in comparison, and SHB:Shaftesbury went into loss after being in profit for weeks.

Other disasters were WRES:W Resources which were in profit last week and are now back down by £142, and AFPO:African Potash, which looked as if things were improving but is still down £219. AFG:Aquatic food have perked up a bit thanks to a director buying shares. These are still down £413 but I'm convinced will come good when the market's suspicion over them de-listing is proven wrong after a few years of good returns. GLEN:Glencore continue to be a roller coaster and are still down by £834. I'm still keeping the faith - copper will recover at some point!

Here's the SIPP summary



Weekly Change
Portfolio cost £3,298.08
+£2,500.90
Portfolio value (share price) £3,176.13 (-£121.95) +£2,409.19
Portfolio sell value (bid price - commission) £3,100.28 (-£197.80) +£2,145.29
Dividends £0
+£0
Profit from sales £0
+£0
Overall profit -£197.80
-£155.61
(Portfolio sale-cost+dividends+profit from sales)

Added two more shares with resulting spread and commission, plus AA:Alcoa is down this week. I was hoping the pension fund would get into positive territory quickly, but given the torrid week it's not surprising it starts in the red.

Fingers crossed next week will finally bring some seasonal cheer to the market...

Tuesday 8 December 2015

More additions to the portfolio

The loan money came through late last night, so I was able to add to the portfolio this morning. It arrived just in time, as my failure to sell any existing shares meant my SIPP starter money had come from my bank account, and with 7 days until payday it was getting perilously low. Now it's much healthier.

First off I added £2,600 to the SIPP and purchased the following

HGM:Highland Gold Mining. 2,000 shares at 53.35p costing £1,078.95. Gold is rock bottom but I don't believe for a minute this can continue. Three years ago these shares were trading at 200p before sliding all the way down to 40p in August. Since then they've been recovering gradually despite gold still suffering. When the inevitable turn-around happens, I have high hopes for these shares. Even if the share price doesn't recover for a while, they pay excellent dividends.

UTW:Utilitywise. 1,000 shares at 141p costing £1,421.95. Utilitywise is a business service provider. Basically energy consultancy, which in a time when everyone is trying to use less of it would seem to be a growth area. Profits are up by over 20% a year and they pay a reasonable dividend, but inexplicably their share price has been dropping from nearly 400p in early 2014. I can't understand why. It looks like a good growth company with healthy finances and a market for which there is growing demand. Needless to say, after buying this morning the price dropped by 10% - grr!!

Next I added £4,200 to the share account and bought the following

PAF:Pan African Resources. 20,000 shares at 7.6732p plus £7.67 stamp duty costing £1,554.26. For the same reason as Highland Gold Mining, now seems to be a good time to get into gold. There was also an imperative to buy these quick, as it's ex-dividend day tomorrow and it's a healthy dividend indeed. I stand to make more from the dividend of these shares than I will from my best return after selling stock. I just hope that any transactions that need to happen to secure these have been completed before the cutoff, as I don't know if it's from the moment you do the deal, or whether money has to have changed hands. As mine is still sitting in my bank account, albeit not available, I'm hoping I got them in time. If these go up to just 12p I'll make £800 so quite excited.

LOOK:Lookers. 800 shares at 173.64p plus £6.95 stamp duty costing £1,408.02. I already had some of these which I bought at 179p so the chance to increase my holding at a cheaper price was irresistible. I liked them lots at 179p so I like them even more now.

GVC:GVC Holdings. 300 shares at 399.7499p costing £1,211.20. GVC is a bit like Playtech which I already hold. I believe this is a mega growth area and they seem underpriced. Their share price has been falling since late 2014 but their profits are rocketing and they pay an excellent dividend. They lit up every field in my spreadsheet green, so I had to buy some. It also looks like they may be about to take over another big company, so their growth could become even more impressive soon.

So, Friday's weekly summary will be even more confusing now. Clearly my performance will have dropped off badly. Lots of new spread and commission, and today was a disaster for the rest of my portfolio. Where the hell's this so-called Santa rally?!

Saturday 5 December 2015

Week 17 Review

This week I realised that my maths for calculating overall performance was flawed. I was double-counting dividends and failing to take proper account of money withdrawn from investments. I've changed my approach to keep track of cash in (including dividends) and cash out, and keep the portfolio calculations separate. I'm also undecided about how to keep tabs on the SIPP. I think it's different enough to consider separately, so I'll have one portfolio review and one for the SIPP.




Weekly Change
Portfolio cost £30,260.37
+£0
Portfolio value (share price) £28,336.40 (-£1,802.29) +£34.40
Portfolio sell value (bid price - commission) £27,304.98 (-£2,955.40) -£35.92
Dividends £150.80
+£15.42
Profit from sales £342.88
+£0
Overall profit -£2,269.64
+£171.58
(Portfolio sale-cost+dividends+profit from sales)

No new shares in the main accounts this week. Interesting that the share price value is up £34 but the bid price value is down £35. That can partly be accounted for by the increase in spread of AFG:Aquatic foods to a ridiculous 50%. How is anyone meant to be encouraged to by a share with a 50% loss the second they get them?

Here's the SIPP performance




Weekly Change
Portfolio cost £797.18
+£797.18
Portfolio value (share price) £766.94 (-£30.24) -£30.24
Portfolio sell value (bid price - commission) £754.99 (-£42.19) -£42.19
Dividends £0
+£0
Profit from sales £0
+£0
Overall profit -£42.19
-£42.19
(Portfolio sale-cost+dividends+profit from sales)

Just the one share in this, and with it being American, I suspect the value is slightly less than showing here as there is bound to be a loss on the currency conversion. The lack of transparency with American shares is troubling, so I think I'll stick to UK shares in future, but it's nice to have one.

The loan paperwork came through yesterday and I got it in the post, so it should be with them today. Hopefully the cash will arrive early next week, as some of the stocks I want to buy dropped in price over the last 2 days so the timing would be perfect for a bit of a bargain.

Thursday 3 December 2015

Time to set up a pension

This week I decided to set up a SIPP

I'd been thinking about why I'm investing. Some of this is for buying my new Honda Civic Type R (in 5 years when they are sufficiently cheap), but some of it is long term investment. I still have 18 years before retirement, and although I have a healthy work pension, if I'm planning on keeping some of my investments for the long term, then the extra 25% chucked in by the tax man makes a very attractive offer.

So with that in mind, I opened a Hargreaves Lansdown SIPP and added £800. That means in January I get £200 from the tax man. I also added a £100 per month standing order so I'll be topping up by £125 per month. In the short term I want to get £10,000 transferred in there as I sell other shares, which will be instantly £12,500 with the tax contribution. I'll reduce my monthly premium bond standing order from £200 to £100 so I won't be any worse off - in fact the tax rebate of £25 is the equivalent of a premium bond win every month!

It still leaves me with £20,000 in the more liquid accounts, and that's soon to be topped up to £27,500 after my bank sent me an irresistible offer of a 3.6% loan. I thought long and hard - my plan is to invest about £300 per month into my share accounts. As I've topped up an existing loan and lowered the interest rate on that too, I'll be paying £288 per month over 4 years for effectively £12,000 up front. That's only about £800 interest over 4 years. Given that I've sold £340 worth of shares and received another £146 dividends (total £486 in 4 months), I'll cover the interest in no time. Why not get the capital up front and use the payments as my monthly investment?

Just waiting for the loan to come through - already decided what to buy with it, so the portfolio will grow again next week!

Another new venture was buying American stocks with my SIPP. I'd been reading up about renewable energy, and the money that's going to be available for development in this sector following the Paris conference. AA:Alcoa make aluminium - but they have been working in partnership on developing aluminium-air batteries. These are getting 1,000km from a single charge, and although there are still loads of issues, they have backing from Renault and Nissan with the research. If this takes off then demand for aluminium will go mental. They have also spent loads of resource restructuring over the last few years, which will hopefully see their share price start to rise again, as they appear under-valued. There's a bit of uncertainty as they may be about to split the shares into 2, so we'll see what happens with that.

I bought 124 shares for the equivalent of 633.2507p at a cost of £797.18. They're down to 611p today so not a great start. Must admit, I do feel a bit blind with them. I was also looking at ABB Ltd, as they are doing a lot of work with batteries, and these will be vital if we're going to rely more heavily on renewable energy. The ability to store energy at times of surplus and release it when the sun goes in or the wind stops will be in high demand, so the company that makes the next great breakthrough in batteries will shoot up in value. However, I need to find a web site with better stats on American companies before I buy any more.

Friday 27 November 2015

Week 16 Review

What a roller-coaster week. Down, down, up up, up. By the end of Tuesday I'd lost £700 and have spent the last 3 days trying to claw it back. I didn't succeed so I know today's review will be down from last week.




Weekly Change
Portfolio cost £30,260.37
+£646.95
Portfolio value (share price) £28,302.00 (-£1,852.11) +£592.20
Portfolio sell value (bid price - commission) £27,340.90 (-£2,919.47) +£578.54
Dividends £135.38
+£3.84
Profit from sales £342.88
+£0
Overall profit -£2,441.22
-£64.58
(Portfolio sale-cost+dividends+profit from sales)

Note the sneaky increase in portfolio value. This was caused by my desire to get it to £30K and the fact I couldn't resist topping up on JLP:Jubilee Platinum while they were cheap. I got another 20,000 to add to my existing 15,000 and paid 3.175p for a total of £646.95. My original lot were bought for 3.71p so are losing £92 but the new ones are only down £8.90 of the commission so are doing ok. I still believe when Jubilee start production they will make big profits, as even with platinum prices falling, they can produce it so cheap.

As it happened I chose the wrong mine to top up. WRES:W Resources went through the roof after they had the permission to mine granted. That was losing 54% and yesterday was up 13% with £25 profit. It dropped 11% today as people sold out, so back down to 2% increase and losing £22 commission. Once they start producing it could gain a few pence. As 1p would be worth £600 I'm still hopeful.

Back to the review, and although adding £646 to the portfolio it's only up by £578 which isn't great. Overall I'm down by £64 this week, which given I was down £700 Tuesday evening is a bit of a relief. So much for getting below the £2,000 loss. Not sure if I'll get that ambition as a Christmas present...

Tuesday 24 November 2015

Bad news after bad news


It's only Tuesday and this has been a horrible week.

Was I really saying only 2 days ago how nice it would be if my losses could get under £2,000 before Christmas?

After the last 2 days my losses are only £4 away from £3,000!

Yesterday it was PTEC:Playtec announcing their 2 takeovers had fallen through, resulting in a massive crash of £1 a share.

Today it was PUR:Pure Wafer announcing they were planning to de-list. I was hanging onto them to reap the big dividend from the sale of their destroyed UK factory, and now I'm not sure. The chatter seems to be that we will get back more than the current price. 195p would give me £50 profit but anything less than 179p will give me a loss.

That was a shock, but didn't actually do today's damage. That was due to >4% declines in 6 of my stocks. It's not often Glencore is a ray of sunshine, but a 3.9% rise was nice, and a 12% rise in W Resources was also nice. However, given that these 2 shares have declined by 85% and 32% since I bought them, despite today's rise, they're not really helping me much.

Things are set to get worse tomorrow with a chancellor statement that could cause ructions in the house builder sector. Surely this government are trying to encourage house building? I'll be holding my breath to see if a third disastrous day dawns and my 3 house builders sink even further...

Friday 20 November 2015

Week 15 Review

My perception is that this week has been generally upwards, but a few shares have tanked, so it may be a false perception. Let's see what the facts say.




Weekly Change
Portfolio cost £29,613.42
+£0
Portfolio value (share price) £27,709.80 (-£1,801.21) +£219.28
Portfolio sell value (bid price - commission) £26,762.36 (-£2,851.06) +£196.89
Dividends £131.54
+£33.05
Profit from sales £342.88
+£0
Overall profit -£2,376.64
+£229.94
(Portfolio sale-cost+dividends+profit from sales)

Although profit from sales is less than last week, it's because I accidentally included dividends from sold shares in the profit. Those have been taken out so there has been no actual change as I've not sold anything this week. For a similar reason the overall profit was missing dividends from current stock and so was a little out. Those have been adjusted this week so it should reconcile properly from next week.

Nice to see another £33 dividends arriving this week, and the overall position up by a few hundred quid. Doesn't quite cancel last week's £700 loss, but at least things are heading in the right direction.

Seven stocks are in profit at the end of the week, and another seven are up but losing commission. If I can get half the portfolio in the green over the next few weeks I'll be happy for Christmas. It would also be wonderful to get the loss on paper down below £2000.

Tuesday 17 November 2015

So nearly a perfect day

Why is it that just when you think everything is coming up rosy, something slaps you in the face with a haddock?

After weeks of misery watching practically everything slide, today saw a huge bounce-back with blue all over the monitor - at least - NEARLY all over the monitor!

AFPO:African Potash up 11.3% after a miserable few weeks.
HLMA:Halma up an incredible 7.5% (57p) after a strong 6-month report.
SSX:Sirius Minerals up 5.7%
UTV:UTV Media up 2.6%
SGRO:Segro up 2.4% after a recent slide
BDEV:Barratt Developments, RDW:Redrow, TW.:Taylor Wimpey all up over 2% reversing their recent slide
BA.:BAE Systems up 2% and continuing their revival

For the first time since I bought the shares, BAE Systems, Halma and Redrow are in profit

I now have 8 shares in profit - the most ever, and another 7 that are past the spread and only the commission charge prevents them being in profit.

You'd think I'd be dancing in the street!

BUT NO!

AFG:Aquatic Food also put out a trading statement. It's not that bad - still making good profits, but despite only 1,368 shares being traded, the price dropped 19.4%

What's that all about??

£200 wiped off my portfolio and completely undoing all the gains made everywhere else

Oh woe, doom and misery!

I'm still a bit shell-shocked. I'm also confused. The share has ended up with a spread of 50%. I thought it was mental at 30% but this is ridiculous. Who's ever going to buy it? Are they trying to stop people buying it? Is such a massive drop on a not-too-bad trading statement an attempt to shake people out of the share? If it is then it wasn't very successful as only 1,368 were sold and they were all in one trade. Given there are 109,930,000 shares in issue I really don't understand how one sell can have that much effect.

OK - rant over - I'll be optimistic and hope there's been some sort of mistake and the bid price will right itself tomorrow - that will erase some of the damage. I should focus on the positives - I have £200 worth of profit if I sell my top 8 shares now - which I won't - but it's great to see so many in the green for the first time.

Sunday 15 November 2015

Portfolio Review

I decided to do a review of the whole portfolio yesterday, and colour-code the shares by category. I'm hoping this will give me an indication of where I should be considering a sell and what my target prices should be.

Red - sell immediately even at a loss
I'm happy to say there are none in this category - it's reserved for those that are clearly doomed

Amber - stinkers that I never should have bought and should sell as soon as they get into profit
BLUR:Blur Group. Purchased when I first started, and naively believed all I had to do was find a share price that was the lowest it had ever been and wait for it to go up. Now I understand that there's a good reason these were the lowest price they had ever been, and that's where they remain. Fortunately I also failed to understand the impact of spread and commission on these shares, so only bought £100 worth, so I don't feel any fear of losing loads of money, and can keep them as a reminder of how rubbish I was at the beginning. They are actually up 10% from when I bought them, but thanks to the gigantic spread and commission I'm still down £25. I'll flog them as soon as there's a modicum of profit, which may never happen.
TRK:Torotrak. I could write almost the same for this share as I did for Blur. They've invented a great KERS system but nobody wants it. They continue to make loss after loss and show no signs of turning around. My only hope is for a takeover - maybe VW will need to do something drastic to help their emissions problems! They have dropped 4% so I'm only losing £35 and will sell if they ever pop up into profit.

Pale red - High risk companies that will either bloom of collapse. Hold through the bad times in the hope of future glory
AFPO:African Potash. I still believe in the business model, and feel sure when everything falls into place there will be huge profits. They have dropped 11% since I bought them and are losing £163, but by next year I expect them to soar. I'm almost tempted to buy more at this price, but it is high risk so probably best to stick with what I have
JLP:Jubilee Platinum. Again, I still believe in their business model. They can produce platinum with less cost than their competitors and should deliver a profit even at current very low prices. These have dropped by 5% since I bought them, but are only down £55 with the promise of good news coming soon
RDT:Rosslyn Data. These launched just over a year ago at 40p a share and have dropped to 12p before a slight recovery to 15p. I bought these because they are a new company with no debt and I believe strongly in the future of hosted cloud services - especially business intelligence. They have some gigantic customers like Xerox, Serco and Weir Group so I seen no reason why they shouldn't become highly profitable. However they might not, so it's in the high risk category. The share price has dropped 9% since I bought them, losing £84
SXX:Sirius Minerals. This is a very long term investment. They have the rights to mine a vast potash resource in Yorkshire, but have billions to spend to get at it. I only invested £185 because of the risk it will never happen. If it's a success I won't make a lot, but it's nice to have a small stake and see what happens. Currently the shares are down 2% from when I bought them losing £25
WRES:W Resources. This is a tungsten mine in Spain. It's another company that appears to be able to produce the metal at a low cost so should be able to turn a good profit once they get going. Shares are less than 1p each so I was able to get 60,000 which is by far my biggest holding. If they ever pay dividends it will be great! Unfortunately these have dropped by 52% and I'm £184 down, but I'm confident they will turn around.

Salmon - Not lighting up my new spreadsheet the right colours, but with enough promise to prevent me selling. These are all companies I probably wouldn't buy now, but will hold until they return a reasonable profit
BA.:BAE Systems. They have a massive order book and I think are always going to be in demand. They fail on quite a few of my selection criteria. The 22.5 rule for market to book ratio times PE ratio comes out at 146.55 so fails horribly, and the debt is 20 times the annual profit when my cutoff is 3. However if you divide the enterprise value by the number of shares (my bottom line price) it comes to 680p when they are trading at 453p, so I'm sticking in there for a bit. The current price is pretty much the same as I paid for them, so I'm just down by the £25 commission, and their momentum is upwards.
GBG:GB Group. I bought these during a phase of chart watching. I figured if the chart was heading upwards, then there's sufficient momentum to jump on board and ride it. Once I plugged things into my spreadsheet I became more wary. Their PE value is 25 and I normally go for 15. They score 183 on the 22,5 rule so chronically fail that, and even the price based on enterprise value alone would be less than the current price.However, they are growing rapidly and when you factor in the growth rate of 20-40% then the shares could easily be trading in the 310-350p range as opposed to the current 267p. They have risen in value by 8% since I bought them, and so I am am £12 in profit. I'll review at around 320p.
HLMA:Halma. The first shares I bought, and intended to be my big safe pot with a nice dividend. They proceeded to tank and I was regretting this decision. They don't do bad on the spreadsheet, but the PE ratio of 27 and 22.5 rule of 138 would prevent me buying them now. However, they are a safe company and the price based on enterprise value would be 822p as opposed to the current 757p and with current growth rate 860p could be possible, so I'll hold on. They have recovered recently and are only down 1% so I'm just losing £38.
MSLH:Marshalls. These fail on lots of points. 22.5 rule is 70, assets to price ratio of only 48% instead off 66%, price to net tangible assets of 5.02 instead of 1.2, yet their growth rate is so spectacular that I can't see the price stopping until past 500p. They have bucked the trend since I bought them, dropping 6% and so I'm losing £71 but it will turn around.
PTEC:Playtec. One of my most strongly growing shares, with an aggressive acquisition strategy and a promising future. They fail on the spreadsheet due to a 22.5 rule of 70 and assets only being 44% of price when I look for more than 66%. Share value based on enterprise value is over 100p less than current share price, however based on their growth rate could easily be 100p higher than it is now. For that reason I'm sticking with them. Their price fell consistently from the day I bought them, but has now bounced back and is 4% higher, resulting in a gigantic profit of £14.

Green - Fulfill most of the spreadsheet rules, but a few problems that are worth keeping an eye on, and would probably buy again or top up
LOOK:Lookers. Another one purchased based on the upwards chart, but this ticked a few more boxes than the salmon ones above. Biggest concern is debt 14 times profit and the 22.5 rule is 37 which isn't too far off. They are growing at 30% and show no signs of faltering, so I still think these could go up another 100p a share. They've dropped 2% since I bought them so I'm down £43 at the moment.
MMX:Minds + Machines. I recently topped these up with another 12,000 bringing my holding to 18,000. On the spreadsheet they fall foul of the 22.5 rule with 25 so it's pretty close, and based on enterprise value alone they should be about 40% less than they are now. However, they are just entering a marketing phase for the web names they purchased at auction, and are actively buying back shares with their excess capital. It's only a matter of time until they start paying dividends and I can still see this going up 500%. Having said that, although my first batch of shares have increased by 5%, I bought the second batch just before a drop and they are down 6%, so altogether I'm losing £126 at the moment.
PUR:Pure Wafer. It's hard to make out what's going on with this one. There was a disastrous fire at their UK factory and they have sold the site and taken the insurance money. That just leaves their US factory. As the sale of the site was built into their profits, it's hard to say what the growth potential is. They are so cash rich that their enterprise value is negative, so that screws up my calculation of the bottom line share price. However, they are due to return the profits from the sale of the UK site to shareholders in a gigantic dividend, so there's no way I'm selling. The share has risen 5% since I bought it, but that's the same as the spread so I'm still down by £21 of the commission.
WRL:Wentworth. I purchased these because they are a gas producer that's actually making profit, and they had just started delivering gas in Tanzania, so should be about to make even more. They have low debt but are trading a higher than their current enterprise value. However, if the profits increase now the gas is flowing, my hopes are this could go up by 300%. Currently it's up just 2% but with a 3% spread and commission I'm losing £34


Light purple - Fulfill all criteria on my spreadsheet except one or two if by small margins
AFG:Aquatic Food. This only fails to turn everything green because of the debt being 5.6 times profits. The share price hasn't changed once since I bough it - in fact there hasn't been a single trade since mine. I can only assume people are afraid of investing in anything to do with China - but they just earned a big contract to supply USA, so I don't understand the reticence. With them being a fairly new company there's not a huge amount of background data to go on, but it all looks good to me. They have announced their first dividend already, and my target it 200p. I bought the shares at 35p but thanks to a ridiculous 30% spread, even though they remain at 35p I'm losing £263 on paper. Bloody annoying for my stats, but I'm hoping something will happen at some point to generate some interest in this share.
BDEV:Barratt Developments. One of the first shares I bought and meant to be a safe bet. I'm still excited about the gigantic dividends that are coming, although I only hold 100 shares so won't get that much.They only fail on price to net tangible asset ratio of 2.32 where I go for maximum of 1.2. I don't tend to think of that one as too important though, especially when everything else is green. On enterprise value alone my baseline is 100p more than they are currently trading, and with growth continuing then I think there's long term potential for hitting 900p. The problem is there's a panic on house builders shares at the moment so they have dropped 19% and I'm losing £130. I'm absolutely convinced this is nonsense and will wait patiently for a turn around.
BYG:Big Yellow Group. One of my most recent purchases. They only failed on price to net tangible asset ration of 1.57, which is only a tiny failure. Debt of 3.2 times profit is teetering on the limit, but I think that's allowable. I still see these as big winners that have a long way to go. They dropped 3% since I bought them, so I'm down £102 but that's just because the FTSE has had 3 bad weeks.
CRL:Creightons. Another one that only fails on debt, being 6.3 times profits. This company have a tiny enterprise value of £3.7m so are currently trading fractionally above this value at 8p. My target is 14p which would be a 75% gain. However, I think this one could be worth hanging on to, as it must be a stong contender for a buy-out. The shares have risen by 6% since I bought them, but that rise was entirely down to my own purchase. The spread is a mental 21% so I'm down by £73 until that narrows.
GLEN:Glencore. My nemesis share. If only I'd just watched as the price plummeted instead of jumping on for the ride. I was so convinced it wouldn't get lower - despite all the evidence of falling copper prices, Chinese slowdown and epic debt. Amazingly, the share still sits in my light purple category thanks to debt being 14.8 times profits. Everything else is positive, and I'm still firmly convinced that when the panic is over, they will climb back to the 400p area. Currently they've dropped a horrific 88% and I'm losing £734. I vow that the day these get into profit, I'm going to have such a party!
NTBR:Northern Bear. These only fail on debt of 7.5 times profit, but they are actively paying it back. They also have a return on capital employed of 7.22 when I prefer 10, but that's not too troubling. Everything else is lit up green, and enterprise value pricing would be 74p as a baseline, and with current growth I see no reason why it shouldn't hit 130p. Current price is 45p which is a drop of 21% from when I bought it, and a loss of £142. It's top of my top-up list should I get some more capital - and don't get distracted by a new shiny share.
RDW:Redrow. My third housing share, and most recently purchased despite the panic hitting the sector. The price to net tangible assets is 2.03 rather than 1.2 else this would be in with the deep purples. The enterprise value is 80p more than the share price, and my target is 900p. The share price hasn't budged since I bought it, despite the poor performance of other house builders, so I'm just down £28 for spread and commission
RNK:Rank Group. These would be straight green if not for debt being 4.7 times profit and 22.5 rule being 51. Everything else looks good, and they continue to grow. They still sell below enterprise value by 10p and with current growth I think they could easily climb to 350p before I review them. They have increased by 9% since I bought them so this is my best performing share with a £109 profit.
SSY:Scisys. These are almost deep purple, as they only fall down on price to net tangible asset ratio of 1.6 instead of 1.2. For the 22.5 rule they are an encouraging 9.46, their ROCE is 11.8, and PE ratio only 9.55. Their shares plummeted in value from 90p to 60p in June after releasing a profit warning, but this was down to a one-off problem project. Since then the share price has grown slowly but steadily by 3%. However with a 7% spread and commission, I'm still down £48. I'm confident it will soon perk up and go to profit.
TND:Tandem Group. I bought this because they have a big Star Wars franchise and when the new films come it it could go bonkers. They only fail on debt being 8.5 times profit and price to net tangible assets being 3.56 rather than 1.2. Their PE ratio is a tiny 5.79 and they are trading at 100p below enterprise value, with growth potential to easily double in value quite quickly. I only bought them a few weeks ago and they have already increased by 5%. However, with an 8% spread and commission I'm still losing by £50. Not for long I hope!
TW.:Taylor Wimpey. These were purchased just before I started using the new spreadsheet. They just qualify as pale purple because although they miss quite a few of the scores, it's only by a fraction. Their 22.5 rule score is 44 which is their main miss, but the others are very close to green. Asset to price ratio is 64% instead of 66%, and price to net tangible asset ratio is 2.23 instead of 1.2 - I guess that's a bit wide of the mark. Current price is fractionally above enterprise value, but with their growth rate my target is still 250p from the current 198p. Unfortunately the house builder panic has hit this share badly and it's down 15% over the last few weeks, so I'm losing £191.
UCG:United Carpets. This one only fails to light everything up green on price to net tangible asset ratio of 2.35 rather than 1.2. It has a massive ROCE of 26%, hardly any debt, 10.7 for the 22.5 rule, and PE ratio of 8.64. It's a very small enterprise value of only £7.33m so shares are a few pence over this, but it also means the business is ripe for take over. My target remains 19p before I review it. Currently the price is up 7% from when I bought it, so I'm just £18 down thanks to the commission.
UTV:UTV Media. Mostly green on the spreadsheet except for debt of 6.6 times profit and ROCE of 8.77 rather than 10, but it's not far off. Everything else looks healthy and there's a potential big dividend on the way if the shareholders approve selling off Ulster TV to ITV for £100m. Given that it's currently making a loss, I can't see anyone objecting. My target for this is 260p once the dust settles after the sale. It's up 4% from when I bought it, which means I'm only down £8 from the commission.

Deep purple - my top shares that turn every single box green in the spreadsheet.
JLG:John Laing Group. Ah the joy of a sea of green. All pointers are to a very healthy company with a PE ratio of 4.74 and an enterprise value of 244p a share only trading at 190p. My target is 460p. The chart is most odd, with a steady climb after listing from 200p to 230p followed by a plummet to 190p. It appears to be jitters following on from a dodgy project, but since then it's been good news and a maiden dividend. The price is static from when I purchased, so I'm down £35 for spread and commission.
KIBO:Kibo Mining. Another beautiful sea of green, which is very rare for a mining company. PE ratio is only 4.5, they are already making profits, and their mining to power project means they will be generating electricity from the stuff they're digging up. Africa is the biggest growth area at the moment, so things are looking promising. Unfortunately the price is exactly the same as when I bought it, and with a 13% spread I'm down £71, but never mind.
RCI:Rapidcloud. PE ratio 5.12, only listed 2 years ago, and the chart is a horror to behold as it plunges downwards ever since. 110p to 25p in 2 years! Strange then that my target is 113p which would put it right back where it started. I think the downturn is partly the Asia effect, and partly the fact Malaysia is slapping a great big tax on them which will dent profits. However, they are growing and increasing dividends, so I'm hoping now is the right time to buy. Slightly tragic that the price has dropped 3% and with a 12% spread that leaves me down £156. The word Grrrr springs to mind.
SGRO:Segro. Another new share and another sea of green, with PE ratio 4.56, 22.5 rule score of just 5, ROCE of 14.75, debt 2.9 times profit, enterprise value 200p a share more than the current price, and steady growth. A dividend yield of 3.38% isn't to be sniffed at either. Inexplicably the shares have dropped by 8% since I bought them, so I'm losing £101. There seems absolutely no reason for the drop, other than the price does have a history of wild fluctuations. In fact, with hindsight I should have spotted that and waited a while, as it's been 420p where it usually drops to before taking off again. Long term the graph is a steady rise, so I'm reasonably relaxed.
SHB:Shaftsbury. This one sneaks into the deep purples. In theory it should be pale purple as the price to net tangible assets is 1.35, but it's so close to 1.2 I've let it in. PE ratio 5.71, ROCE 17.16, 22.5 rule of 7.43, debt to profit ratio of 1.7, enterprise value of 200p a share more than current price, and rapid growth over the last 3 years. The price had gone up nicely, but that's dropped off recently to a rise of only 1%, putting me £9.60 down when I was over £100 up a few weeks ago. I'm sure it's just a blip.
TON:Titon Holdings. This is a FTSE Fledgling company and only has an enterprise value of £7.22m, but profits are growing and they pay regular dividends. PE value is only 10, debt is 1.3 times profit  and the 22.5 rule is 8.8. Although trading quite a way above the enterprise value, the current growth rate could take the price to 200p. The price has risen by 5% since I bought the shares, leaving me with a whopping £4 profit - Woohoo! Nice to end the review on a positive note.

That's it - phew. A bit of an epic, but a very valuable exercise. I moved several of the shares from one category to another as a result, and it's been a great opportunity to check that my original views still stand. I'm happy to say it's made me even more keen to keep hold of every one of them, which means I'll have to put my plans for buying into a gold mine on hold for a bit longer...

Friday 13 November 2015

Week 14 Review

This has been a truly horrible week. I almost don't want to write this as it will be so depressing. My portfolio is a sea of red and practically nothing is in profit.

However, it was pay day and I did have some spare cash to invest, so added £420 to my account and purchased 5000 shares of CRL:Creightons at 7.9499p plus £1.99 stamp duty costing £411.44. This was going against my "don't buy less than £1,000 at a time" rule, but I'd got up to them in my A-Z of analysis yesterday, and they looked so impressive I had to get them. Unfortunately if I'd been a day earlier I would have been holding them when they went up 10% so I didn't get them as cheap as I would have liked. They basically make toiletries, but their financials look good, except for a bit more debt than I would like. My review target is 13p but I'm hoping by then they would have released more trading data as I'd like to hold for longer. Given that their entire enterprise value is less than £5 million they're also ripe for potential takeover.

As with last week, the addition of a little more capital will make interpreting the figures more difficult, but here goes.




Weekly Change
Portfolio cost £29,613.42
+£411.43
Portfolio value (share price) £27,490.52 (-£2,040.78) -£328.59
Portfolio sell value (bid price - commission) £26,565.47 (-£3,047.95) -£369.66
Dividends £98.49
+£0
Profit from sales £359.25
+£0
Overall profit -£2,688.71
-£781.10
(Portfolio sale-cost+dividends+profit from sales)

So, despite adding £400 to the pot, the share value dropped by £300, a loss of £700 value over the week. As expected, the sell value did even worse, but not as badly as it might have done. My overall performance has therefore plummeted by £781.10 this week to an almost 10% loss.

However, I remain undaunted. I only make the loss if I sell the shares. My portfolio has 13 shares triggering a 15% stop loss alert and 8 of those have progressed to 20% stop loss alerts. However, some shares have such a large spread they triggered the stop loss alert the day I bought them. AFG:Aquatic Food had a 30% spread! I'm satisfied in the health of the companies I've invested in, so have no intention of jumping ship just because of a setback. I'm still £359.25 better off in cash from the shares I sold. Let's hope next week brings better fortune.

Friday 6 November 2015

Week 13 Review

The week ended with a proper mix of gains and losses, but an overall gain so it will be interesting to compare with last week's review.

Biggest gain today was AFPO:African Potash. 12.2% was some recovery from the recent slide - albeit only 0.225p a share. This one still has £150 deficit to make up, after being £200 in profit a few weeks ago. JLP:Jubilee Platinum was the next best performer, up 5.7% and now only £40 away from going back into profit. RCI:Rapidcloud climbed 3.9% despite there not being a single trade. Dunno what that's all about?

Biggest loser was GLEN:Glencore, which is distressing as I thought it was recovering. All the commodity producers are down though, so hopefully it's just another blip. The house builders were all down by around 1% after yesterday's recovery. My biggest concern is that BDEV:Barratts today went past my 15% loss alert. That's a bit of a worry given this was meant to be one of my safer shares.

This is the first injection of capital to my portfolio since I started the weekly review, so the figures may need careful interpretation

Weekly Change
Portfolio cost £29,201.99
+£3,255.53
Portfolio value (share price) £27,819.11 (-£1,300.76) +£2,488.27
Portfolio sell value (bid price - commission) £26,935.13 (-£2,266.86) +£2,432.56
Dividends £98.49 +£16.37
Profit from sales £359.25 +£251.07
Overall profit -£1,907.61 -£654.02
(Portfolio sale-cost+dividends+profit from sales)

So, although I added £3,100 to my account, the profits from the sales meant the portfolio cost increased by £3,255 as the profits were re-invested. However, the share value only increased by £2,488 and is £1,300 less than I paid. The Sell value went up £2,432 which is only £50 less than the share price, but equates to £2,266 less than I paid, largely due to the massive spreads on the new shares.

In summary, if I sold everything now I'd make a total loss of £1907.71 which is £654.02 worse off than I was last week. On paper that looks very bad, but seeing as I'm not going to sell today, and seeing as most of this lot is for long term investment, I'm not unduly concerned.

I have no more capital to invest, so there should follow a period of relative calm where I have an opportunity for some of the spreads to be cancelled out and start chipping away at the paper loss. There are a few holdings that I'm looking to sell if the price rises high enough, but most likely to consolidate some of my existing holdings rather than go for anything new, depending which account I sell them from.

On a more optimistic note, I've cashed in £359.25 profit in 13 weeks. If I was really, really lucky I may have got £70 from premium bond wins and interest over a similar period. Given that my initial purchases were made without having a clue what I was doing, and even now I only have 13 weeks experience, I have a quiet sense of satisfaction that things are going ok - and it's bloody good fun!!

Thursday 5 November 2015

House builders bounce back

Much joy greeted me when I logged in this evening. The house building shares all bounced back today. Barratts by 11.5p, Redrow by 11.8p and Taylor Wimpey by 3.1p. I knew (or at least hoped) it was a storm in a teacup.

Other shares were mixed. African Potash was down by another 8.6%, W Resources down 5.7% and Glencore down 3.5% just when it looked like a corner had been crossed

Best performer today was Kibo Mining with a 5.4% increase on the back of a strong update. I'm confident this will do well and may even top up if I ever sell something else. United Carpets was up 4.3% after doing nothing for ages.

Although the downs almost balanced out the ups, things looked a teensy bit better at the end of the day than at the start. Hope tomorrow is kind...

Wednesday 4 November 2015

Promising start ends in disappointment

Today started off full of excitement and promise, but ended in disappointment.

The premium bond money arrived in my account, so I was able to open a new shares account with Hargreaves Lansdown and transferred in £3100. I was all set to go with my purchases after research over the weekend.

RDW:Redrow. Purchased 225 shares at 436.1p plus £4.91 stamp duty costing £998.09. They had been on my radar for a while. Nearly everything was green and my target price was 1200p over time based on current growth rates. I was even more determined to buy today after the crazy drops in house builders yesterday caused by some dodgy broker talking rubbish. I figured people would see sense today and take advantage of the lower price. I was wrong. The price dropped another 6p. However, I believe I'm right long term so am happy albeit a tad bitter.

What's more concerning is Barratts down 13.5p and Taylor Wimpey down 7.4p. I don't understand - they can't build houses fast enough and interest rates still show no sign of going up. I'd understand if these companies were all trading at a high P/E ratio, but Redrow is 10.5, Barratt is 13.71 and Taylor Wimpey is 17.68 (but with 36% growth). I don't think that's excessive and a sign the shares are over-priced, so why the perception that there's a bubble that needs to burst?

Anyway, onto my second buy this morning...

BYG:Big Yellow Group 270 shares at 748.7p plus £10.01 stamp duty costing £2043.55. I love this business. It lit everything up green, my minimum expected price is 893p and my review target is 1500p. The chart is sailing through the roof and the business model of leasing cheap storage seems great - there's always demand and their brand looks brilliant. They pay good dividends and have excellent growth over the last three years. Needless to say, the shares dropped 18.5p today for no good reason!

That used up my last available capital. I still have £1000 in premium bonds, but that's staying where it is, as I hope to eventually start building that up again - and I have a monthly direct debit to top it up. It will be my safe money in case all this lot goes pop.

I did a few more trades this morning. Ever since I started using my new spreadsheet I've had a nagging doubt about TFW:Thorpe FW. The very, very best I could get their shares being worth was 227p. They reached this twice and then dropped back. My (completely unproven) formula rated their share price at 169p so I had been worrying they were over priced. This morning I took the plunge and sold them for 212.46p after buying them for 194.76p. This made me £64.60 profit and I have about £15 dividend coming in a few weeks. That's only a 6.4% profit after commission, but way better than interest rates. The price dropped 7.5p today so I may have timed it right - although selling at 227p would have been better, but that was before I developed my new spreadsheet.

That left me funds for trading. I've been watching a share for weeks and trying to decide whether to buy it. Today I bit the bullet. AFG:Aquatic Food. This is another sea of green on the spreadsheet, and they seem to be increasing their market and making huge profits. They've got rid of a director with a reputation for de-listing companies, which had been ringing some alarm bells, and they have started paying dividends. They seem to genuinely have shareholders interests at heart and at 35p a share I couldn't think of a reason not to buy, so I purchased 3000 at a cost of £1061.95. The one annoying aspect is the ridiculous 30% spread. If I sold them today I would lose £263 instantly. However, if 35p is insanely cheap and I don't intend selling until my review target of 191p then it doesn't really matter.

So a very mixed day. Some of my favourite shares did rubbish. Some of my more risky shares did brilliantly - especially GLEN:Glencore (5.4%), WRL:Wentworth (5.6%) and JLP:Jubilee Platinum (3.7%), but there were so many small losses on the majority of the portfolio, and coupled with the massive spread on Aquatic Food, the sale value of the portfolio dropped by about £350. It will be interesting to see where things lie at the end of the week compared to last week. It feels a little gloomy so far.

Monday 2 November 2015

Goodbye to Stilo

This morning I sold my shares in STL:Stilo. 20000 shares at 5.1p after paying 4.13p a few months ago. That resulted in a profit of £176.10 when you add the £6 dividend that arrived the other day.

This was the first victim of my new spreadsheet for calculating the worth of shares. Based on the company value alone, the shares should be around 4p. Based on my (probably dubious inaccurate) formula, 1.36p. I tried changing their growth and profit figures to really optimistic amounts, and it still only managed to sneak up to 4.8p.

The one thing that could have kept me in there was the possibility of a buy-out. However my fear was that before that happened the price would drop back to what I paid. I couldn't find a single reason why it would go up.

The sale left me £284.28 in profit from total sales of shares. That's a lot better than the £20-40 I would have got from interest and premium bond prizes over 2 months, so despite my portfolio being in the red, I'm more than happy. It also helps wipe out the misery I was suffering after the £92.99 Ocado loss.

Over the weekend I had been plotting my actions, so I was ready to buy new shares as soon as the sale went through. I purchased 500 shares in JLG:John Laing Group for 191.78p plus £4.79 stamp duty for £975.64. John Laing Group was one of the few shares that turned every single column in my spreadsheet green. I couldn't find anything to explain why their share price was headed down. My very minimum expectations are for 244p and optimistic expectations are 468p, so we'll see. They closed up 0.1p so I'm only £30 down on commission and small spread.

This success has boosted my confidence a bit. Although I wasn't going to cash in any more premium bonds after filling up my ISA, I changed my mind and cashed in the last £3000. Just got to wait a few days, then I can open a non-ISA account with Hargreaves Lansdown and put them in there. I've already earmarked what I want to buy, so more news of that after the deals are done.

Friday 30 October 2015

Week 12 Review

I decided to do a review of each week and see how things have changed since the previous week. Unfortunately my first retrospective was only a few days ago, but lets go with it and see what happens

Portfolio cost £25,946.46 Weekly Change
Portfolio value (share price) £25,330.84 (-£533.50) +£69.02
Portfolio sell value (bid price - commission) £24,502.57 (-£1,443.89) +£5.99
Dividends £82.12 £0
Profit from sales £108.18 £0
Overall profit -£1,253.59
(Portfolio sale-cost+dividends+profit from sales)

 Better than I thought. After 2 days of general redness and the FTSE looking glum, it's a massive £5.99 up from Wednesday. Interesting that the share prices are up by £69 suggesting the spread must have widened somewhat

Yesterday generated much excitement when PTEC:Playtec shares went bonkers after a strong 3rd quarter statement. Unfortunately all my housing stocks crumbled and negated much of the gain. GBG:GB Group had also performed well, but  today they've lost 14p and Playtec have lost 17p, presumably as people took profits from yesterday's rise. Meanwhile the housing stocks between them have slipped another 1p. Mortgage lending data seems to be messing them up,

Biggest gainer today was JLB:Jubilee Platinum. A 6.6% increase! OK it's only 0.225p, but the gain is nudging me back towards break-even. LOOK:Lookers was the next best, with a 4.1% increase. I was hoping for a little more after a strong trading statement.

GLEN:Glencore climbed 1.7p. Woohoo!! Every day they sneak up is a happy day and nibbles away at my £558 loss. It may take years to wipe it out, but there will be some serious celebrating the day these shares go into profit!

The weekend beckons. Time to find the next great share...

Wednesday 28 October 2015

First retrospective


OK - it's time to review the first 2 months of investing.

Portfolio cost £25,946.46
Portfolio value (share price) £25,261.82 (-£602.62)
Portfolio sell value (bid price - commission) £24,496.58 (-£1,449.88)
Dividends £82.12
Profit from sales £108.18
Overall profit -£1,259.59
(Portfolio sale-cost+dividends+profit from sales)

I guess that's not too bad after 2 months. Around £750 of the loss is commission, as it includes the cost of sale. There's still a big loss from the spread where the bid price hasn't caught up to the offer price I paid, the market has been incredibly volatile with the China slow down and uncertainty over interest rates, and Glencore alone is down by £500.

It will be fascinating to compare this summary over the weeks (for me at least!)

Writing this summary did remind me of something. When I got back from Brazil and set up my new spreadsheet, a couple of shares appeared to be over-priced given the profits, growth and current share price. As these were in profit, and my system reckoned they were way, way overpriced, I decided to sell.

Given that my new system has absolutely no track record or evidence to back it up, the sales may be a huge mistake, but they allowed some of the other recent purchases to happen where the companies were straight greens, so I'm comfortable with the decision.

ISG:Interior Services Group. I bought at 168.8p and sold at 235p making £173.60 which was 33% profit. As ISG made a loss last year, I had to make up some figures so my formula would work. Based on their previous year's profits and at 20% growth my system calculated a fair share price of 166p which was just less than I paid for them. Since I sold them the selling price has dropped 19p to 216p, so although I'd love to see them continue to grow, I'm happy with what I got.

REDD:Redde. I bought at 158.51p and sold at 177p making £20.16 which was just 5%. I'm still not convinced I made the right decision. Their graph is evenly upwards, and they have only gone down 2p since I sold. My new system had their fair price at 133p which is what caused the big rush to sell, but there's a lot more than company accounts to drive a share price so I maybe should have ridden it a bit further.

I have a few others in my portfolio targeted for a sale, but I'll keep quiet about those until the deals are done, for fear of jinxing them. I also have a few more star shares I'd like to buy, so more on them when the deals are done. Meanwhile I need some way of validating my new system, so maybe try a few more tweaks to the algorithm to smooth out the extremes, and maybe calculate growth over 3 years instead of 1. Hmmm...

My first dividends!

I didn't realise I had some dividend payments until I looked at my transaction history when I started writing this diary. There were a load of payments that had mysteriously appeared in my account, totaling £82.12. This felt like real interest at last.

Up till this point I had regarded dividends with some disdain. A few pence a share here and there - how could that be worth anything?

Well - quite easily when you get £80 out of the blue.

What was even more amazing was the £35.65 from Glencore. The share that was losing me most money finally gave something back. What puzzled me was that I thought they had withdrawn the dividend to pay off the debts - maybe that's the next one?

Now I've added a column for dividend yield into my spreadsheet. It doesn't impact the colours in the conditional formatting, but if I'm comparing two similar shares, then it will have an influence.

Meanwhile my stock searching found another must-have share, and as I was really close to my ISA limit, I decided to take another £1000 out of premium bonds, and transferred in £1080 to my account. That leaves £1300 available, except it's not available as that's how much I had put in my cash ISA this year.

So that's it - I have my seed fund and I'm not putting any more in. My remaining premium bonds will stay and I'll start building up my liquid savings again, especially as I need a new garden fence. From now on my share dealing will be restricted to money that I make from selling my existing shares.

The final purchase from my savings was this morning. SGRO:Segro provide warehousing and offices. Their chart is a little volatile, but generally heading upwards, they pay generous dividends, and they are confident of future growth this year, especially with internet shopping requiring more and more warehouses. I bought 225 shares at 451.26p and £5.08 stamp duty, costing £1032.37. In just one day they have gone up enough to cover the spread, so I need another 15p rise to pay the commission. My target is a whopping 1500p.

That brings the whole history up to date, and means I can start using this as a more traditional diary

Holiday reading

Just before my holiday to Brazil, I decided more research was required, so downloaded "The Intelligent Investor" by Benjamin Graham, and absorbed its wisdom over the 16 days.

I came back invigorated and keen to try out my new measures. There were so many columns to add to my spreadsheet and so many conditional formatting rules to flag those great shares.

I applied my new thinking to my existing portfolio. It wasn't a pretty site, with KIBO:Kibo Mining the only one to turn every category green.

After the initial disappointment, further scrutiny made me feel a bit better, but what would be the ultimate test of my new method? I looked at all my watch lists and added all the new info from their financial reports, and a few of them really stood out - green everywhere.

I acted almost immediately - with so many great new shares, I had to get some. I still had credit from my premium bond withdrawal so set about spending it

On 19th October 2015 I made my biggest ever purchase. 225 shares at 887.96p plus £9.99 stamp duty costing £2019.85 in SHB:Shaftesbury. They develop and rent out expensive premises in London and are on a steady climb in share price. Normally I wouldn't touch such an expensive share, but with such steady growth I could see them topping 2000p a share. In just 9 days they have risen to 938.5p and I'm already £90 up. Could the new system be working?

On 23rd October 2015 I decided £2000 wasn't an unreasonable sum for one stock, in fact if I'm to whittle down my portfolio to a more manageable size, then I ought to be nearer £2000 on each transaction than £1000. So with that in mind, my next all-green stock was TON:Titon Holdings. 2400 shares at 82.4p plus £9.89 stamp duty costing £1999.44. Titon Holdings make ventilation systems and door knobs, and they seem to be very good at it, with increasing profits and regular dividends. In 4 trading days their share price has gone up a few pence, but with a huge spread and commission I've got £90 to go before I break even. Not a problem when my review point is 500p!

On the same day I bought 550 shares in TND:Tandem Group at 194.75p for £1083.08. Tandem make bikes, which are going through a boom at the moment. They also sell franchised toys, and with Star Wars coming out soon, there's tons of potential. My review point is 600p so I have high hopes. Unfortunately this is another with a great big spread, so although the price has risen slightly the sell price is 180p and I'm £105 down. I need it to go up to 200p just to get into profit, but it will.

My next purchase was a top-up of MMX:Minds + Machines. I'm so convinced this is a brilliant business model that I added 12000 shares at 9.25p costing £1121.95. Since applying my new scoring, my potential price has gone up from 200p to 285p, but that's based on current growth which isn't going to happen, so my actual review point is 85p.

My final purchase from the big premium bond pot was RCI:Rapidcloud. 3400 shares at 28.9p costing £994.55. This is a scary share, as the chart is plummeting. Problem is, I can't see why. Cloud computing is taking off, with more and more companies strategically moving systems off their premises. Rapidcloud provide the building blocks to allow companies to do this, and they are making good profits. The share price fall may be the China slowdown effect as they operate in Asia, and some changes in Malaysian tax laws will hit their short term profit. However revenues are up in the first 6 months of this year, and they are about to start paying dividends. My review point is 150p so I'm anticipating a reversal in fortune - at some point. The price has gone up in the last few days, but this is another share with a massive spread, so if I wanted to sell now I would lose £88. Good job I don't!

Next post features a very pleasant surprise...

Tuesday 27 October 2015

Dawn of the ISA

Since reading the Naked Trader book, it was nagging at the back of my mind that if I were to make too much profit on my shares, I would be liable to pay tax. It has to be said, the way things were going so far, there wasn't much chance of me making more than £11,000 profit - if any at all.

Anyway, I had already decided that the premium bonds had to be invested, so why not open up a stocks and shares ISA and transfer some of them into there. I cashed in a load of bonds and then had to wait what seemed like forever for the cash to appear in my account. Meanwhile I looked at several options for an account, and my favourite was Hargreaves Lansdown. The money appeared and I opened up my ISA with £12,860.

I had spent the last few weeks going through the A-Z of stocks starting with L (I figured if everyone started at A and got bored or ran out of money, then L-Z might have a better chance. I had immediately discounted any with debt, and when I found one in profit did a quick check on their profit to debt and profit to market cap ratios for ones that looked reasonable. When I found one, I went and checked out their accounts and web site to see if I liked them.

Needless to say, there were a few other investments that didn't match these criteria - once again speculation had crept in where it shouldn't. These are the shares I purchased with my premium bonds between 16th and 22nd September 2015

TFW:Thorpe (FW) 500 shares at 194.76p costing £973.80. Thorpe make LED lighting and their chart had been a steady rise. They paid a reasonable dividend and profits had been growing gradually. This seemed like one of those sensible shares that would plod along nicely for a few years. Happily this has proved true so far, with an increase to 214p and £70 up.

JLP:Jubilee Platinum 15000 shares at 3.71p costing £568.45. I was impressed with Jubilee Platinum, because despite platinum prices going down, they had a production method that means they can produce at well below even these low prices and so should remain profitable when other producers are not. I also liked the fact that they went from extraction right through the process to smelting and refining, although they have since sold some of these interests. The share did really well for a while, increasing to over 4p a share, but now it's back down at 3.5p so I have £60 to make up.

WRES:W Resources 60000 shares at 0.698p at a cost of £430.75. W Resources mines and produces tungsten. There seemed to be lots of promise in their operations, so although a bit risky I decided that for under £500 and getting a whopping 60000 shares, it was worth a risk. Unfortunately after being up for a while, they have dropped to .6p and I'm £94 down - but I am confident this one will turn around.

STL:Stilo International 20000 shares at 4.13p costing £837.95. Stilo is a software company with some massive customers like IBM and Cisco. They are in a niche market and seem to be on the way to dominating it, so I have high hopes for these shares. Currently they are trading at 5p, which leaves me up by £150

RDT:Rosslyn Data Technologies. 2000 shares at 17.5199p costing £362.35. Rosslyn provide cloud analytic services - a rapidly growing market. Their share price has sunk since they floated, but they seem to be close to turning in a profit, and were so cheap I felt a small purchase was justified. With hindsight, I shouldn't be spending £360 on one share if I want to stand much chance of getting the commission back! Unfortunately these are already down to 15p so I'm £75 down, but I think long-term they will become profitable.

SSY:Scisys 1000 shares at 70p costing £711.95. Scisys are another company with a very niche market, providing IT services and equipment for various areas, but including space exploration. They had a drastic drop in share value from a gradual increase to 90p, and I see no reason why they shouldn't go back to 90p and continue to grow. I've got 200p as my review target.

TW. Taylor Wimpey 600 shares at 200.24p plus £6.01 stamp duty costing £1219.40. I already had shares with Barratts and was convinced the housing market had more room to grow. These shares have stuttered a little, as have Barratts, and are currently priced at 195.2p, so I have a £60 loss and a while to wait for my target price of 250p.

GBG:GB Group 200 shares at 246.55p costing £505.05. GB Group deal in cyber security, so there is huge demand for their services and their chart is a dream. Since buying they have continued to rise despite other shares falling, and are currently trading at 270p so my commission is payed and there's £23 profit. Still a long way to go before I get bored of this one. I'll do a review at 350p.

That was my big splurge, but there was still some capital to save for when I got back from holiday. There was just one last task for September, which was to sell my PTY Parity Group shares. I purchased them at 7.5p and sold at 8.31p, so after spread and commission I made a massive £7.40 profit. I didn't care that it was tiny. I'd finally made some money from the stock market, and chipped away a little at the £92.99 loss I made on OCDO:Ocado.

Time to go on holiday and read my new book...