In most periods the investor must recognize the existence of a speculative factor in his common stock holdings. It is his task to keep this component within minor limits, and to be prepared financially and psychologically for adverse results that may be of short or long duration. — Benjamin Graham
Ben Graham had it right. Within every stock price is a speculative factor.
It’s why a company like Align Technology can have a market cap of $31 billion one month and $23 billion a month later. It’s why AMD can drop from $36 billion to $26 billion in a month. And it’s why Nektar Therapeutics can go from $11 billion to $7 billion in the same period. That’s a change of -39%, -38%, and -37% respectively in market cap over one month!
Why those three stocks? Maybe you’ve never heard of them, but if you own an S&P 500 fund, you own all three stocks. And those three stocks are the worst performers in the S&P 500 since it hit a high on September 20, 2018 (and they’re not isolated either). Continue Reading…
