Saturday, December 31, 2022

2022 Portfolio Review

 1) Performance of Individual Stocks Portfolio

2022 Returns was negative at -13.7%, poorer than STI returns of +7.6%. This is because my portfolio comprises mainly HK-based China Stocks and US Stocks.

Year

% Returns

STI (incl Dividends)

2020

3.6%

-7.5%

2021

14.7%

12.5%

2022

-13.7%

7.6%



I raised my cash position in 1Q 2022 to have a more prudent allocation and increase the cash available to take advantage of price declines. In 2Q-3Q 2022, I had used some cash to buy US stocks such as Alpabet, Booking, and HK stocks such as CNOOC and CSPC Pharma. In Oct, I bought HK stocks such as HK Tracker Fund (2800), Fu Shou Yuan and added more to Ping An.

There were also stocks bought and sold in same year, mostly at loss or breakdown e.g. Meta, WBD, OXY, CMGE

2) Position Sizing

In 2021 year-end review, I aimed to have fewer positions this year. But it seems that the no. of positions remain similar.

 

Number of Stocks

Top 10 position size

At end 2016

21

 

At end 2020

39

46%

At end 2021

19

71%

At end 2022

18

72%

 In 2Q 2022, I felt that it is risky to have position that are too large. As such, I strived to cap new positions small

3) 10-year IRR

I look at my 10-year IRR across time. My IRR is lower compared to earlier years, where I run more concentrated and risky positions (i.e less than 10 positions in 2004-11) and had smaller portfolio. In 2012, I changed strategy to be more diversified. In addition, the low returns of SG stocks from mid 2010s onwards probably lead to lower returns in late 2010s


4) Stock – Non-stock Allocation

The above are on my cash equity portfolio.

 I have other stuff such as SRS, ETFs, Bonds, Cash and CPFB accounts.

 Looking at total allocation, I have around 55% stock – 45 non-stock allocation. The bonds allocation rose this year, as I allocated more cash to buy SSB and T-bill when the interest is higher in 3Q 2022 onwards. 

5) Net Asset Growth

I started keeping track on my net asset since 2014. This year’s return is -1%, mainly due to stock losses.

Monday, December 26, 2022

2022 Review - Lessons

 This will be on lessons learnt in 2022

1) Do not buy quality without concern for valuation
2) Do not buying too large position at one go

I bought Tencent and Prosus to around 18/% of portfolio in late 2021, thinking that Tencent is a high quality stock despite that Tencent is quite expensive. My average price on Tencent is around $450-$460. 

However, Tencent fell by a lot in 2022. During the fall, I did not average down since it was a large position in my portfolio. 

So the lesson is that buy quality at reasonable price and buy slowly. Reasonable price can be cheaper at times.

3) Don't follow superinvestor's purchases - you do not have their conviction / they may sell their stake later.  

In 2021, I follow Mr Charlie Munger and Mr Monish Prabrai's purchases to load up on Alibaba and suffer losses. In late 2021, Mr Prabrai sold  Alibaba. 

I sold Baba in early 2022, as I conclude that Baba's moat is affected by JD, Pinduoduo and in southeast asia -- Shopee. The sale was done at a loss. Nonetheless, it taught me a lessson of not following uperinvestor's purchases. I do not have their conviction and they may sell their stake later.  

4) Do not sell put option

This year, I sold put option around 2-3 times. The money earn is not a lot. But the last put option sold -- selling put option for Google @87 -- caused me to not buy Google at $87. 

5) How does it matter to you if you know A or B?
6) Aggressiveness -- when I should get more aggressive

Howard Marks' memo "What Really Matters" provided two insights to me. 

First, does it matter to me if I know when Fed will reduce interest rates? Probaby not.

Second, how aggressive should I be in my positioning or asset allocation? When should I get more aggressive and when less? This is a question which I will focus more time to study next year.

Saturday, December 17, 2022

Buying Meta

 I bought a small stake in Meta recently at $118. 

The thesis is that 

1) Meta has stable ad business from Facebook and Instragram that are cash-cows

2) In medium term, there are more monetisation avenues from Reels and Whatsapp biz messaging

3) Meta is a cheap way to gain exposure to Metaverse. If Metaverse fails, sure you lose out on the cashflow invested in Metaverse but Meta's existing business Facebook/Instragram/Whatsapp will still be around

I missed buying at the lows of $90+, as I am not sure of my thoughts on Meta then. By the time I concluded (3), Meta is around $110-$120+ level. 


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