$DFS
$FOR
$GSBC
$ZION
$PLD
$TRV
$SRCE
$ALK
$BFST
$FFBC
$EQBK
$ERIC
$SMBK
$STLD
$WTFC
$UNP
Puestos
65I still don't have any electricity shares in my portfolio ☹️, although I find the energy sector, especially electrical energy, very exciting and promising. In view of the trend towards electromobility and global digitalization, this sector could offer enormous potential.
The only share I have had on my radar for a few months now is Terna, the leading Italian grid operator. The company operates one of the largest electricity transmission grids in Europe and is benefiting directly from the growing need for modern infrastructure and expansion. Despite this, I haven't yet made up my mind to get involved, perhaps because I'm still unsure whether now is the right time or whether there are more attractive alternatives? 😭
I think that investing in electricity shares would not only be an interesting addition to my portfolio, but also an opportunity to benefit from the growth of the energy sector in the long term. In addition to Terna, companies such as RWE, NextEra Energy, Siemens Energy or Brookfield Renewable Partners would also be exciting.
Has anyone taken a closer look at this topic? I am particularly interested in the power generators with the highest efficiency. I.e. away from the ESG hype. Which shares do you have on your radar? What could be interesting and promising for the future?
$ING (-0,31 %) x1500 (no, not the ADR, but I can't get it marked properly right now)
... if they're already managing my securities account and collecting commission, they're welcome to give it back to me as a dividend. And lo and behold: I think I'll get more dividends next year than their commission 😉
$GOOGL (-0,96 %) x100
... probably one of the div-growth stocks of the coming years. It's simply part of it. Previously it was also in my other portfolio. But since the transfer was too stupid for me there and the position was quite small, I'm just buying more.
$AFL (+0,1 %) x200
...insurance in the broad area of health/retirement/etc. with the current main market in JP and the USA. I don't think you need to say any more about retirement provision in the broader sense in an ageing society. Currently rather low payout ratio for insurance/finance, but offers potential for growth and a higher div yield in the future
$WM (+0,09 %) x100
... waste and recycling. Strongly positioned in this area in the USA. I've been annoyed for ages that I didn't get involved. Now I'm just going to get started.
$V (+0,03 %) x30
... is part of div growth. Slow build-up, as expensive. Previously also held in my old portfolio.
$LIN (-0,02 %) x50
... In my opinion, the market for industrial gases is an oligopoly; Linde is well positioned. Solid growth should be expected.
Out $VST (+2,45 %) x250.
... 500 remains. The share has grown unexpectedly well. Take profits
... I didn't buy, but have a small position. In my opinion, a company with future potential, but which could possibly experience some turbulence/uncertainty in the next 4 years (Trump). I am therefore not buying, but I have it on my list to increase my position, probably starting next year. But maybe my 🔮 is wrong 😄
In Part 1 I described my start as an investor from 2010 to 2016. Despite loss-making investments and bad decisions (buying AT&T instead of Amazon), I was able to achieve a portfolio value of €35,000. These experiences were to lay the first foundation stone for my future successful investment strategy (https://app.getquin.com/de/activity/PElWrODsmV)
In part 2 I talk about further setbacks in 2017 and 2018 and how the purchase of MasterCard shares marked the turning point in my investment career. Despite initial losses and professional dissatisfaction, I realized that my original strategy wasn't working and discovered the "dividend growth" for me. With a new professional position and a solid salary, I was finally able to really hit the ground running in 2019 (https://app.getquin.com/de/activity/LUkWiLtZKX)
In part 3 it will now be about the years 2019 to 2021 will be discussed. In these 3 years, my portfolio has increased fivefold. From €40,000, it went up to €199,000 in the meantime. But not everything was positive here either. During this time, I also made the two worst trades of my investment career. In addition to Wirecard, there were two other equity investments that resulted in losses of over 80%.
The year 2019 & the first share savings plans:
The year 2019 started with a portfolio balance of ~€40,000 and after my MasterCard purchase in December 2018, my major portfolio reorganization was to continue directly at the beginning of 2019. So in the first four months with Tencent $700 (-0,43 %)
Intel $INTC (-0,67 %)
Salesforce $CRM (+0,73 %)
Alphabet $GOOG (-0,92 %) and Meta $META (+0,62 %) (then still Facebook), five more tech stocks were added to my portfolio. In return I have BHP Billiton $BHP (-0,17 %)
Macy's $M (+0,36 %)
and Hugo Boss $BOSS (+0,06 %) sold.
Later in the year, the shares of Mercedes $MBG (-0,45 %)
and AT&T $T (+0,14 %) were also removed from the portfolio.
In addition to further acquisitions such as Pepsi $PEP (+0,35 %)
Nextera Energy $NEE (+0,38 %)
or Xylem $XYL (-0,02 %) I also recognized the benefits of share savings plans in 2019 and started to set up a pure "savings plan custody account". At that time, this was still done via comdirect or Consorsbank and each savings plan execution cost a fee of 0.75%.
Another sale in 2019 was the Gamestop-share $GME (-0,12 %) . Bought in 2016 to have something to do with gaming in the portfolio, but not taking into account that stationary sales are becoming less and less relevant. In the end, the share price fell by 85% - unfortunately, this was long before the memestock hype emerged.
My portfolio rose to ~€67,000 in 2019 and achieved a return of 23%. However, this was still well below the MSCI World and the S&P 500.
The year 2020 - Corona, Wirecard bankruptcy & 100k before 30 in the portfolio
2020 - a year that few of us will probably forget. While everything was still going reasonably smoothly in January and February 2020, chaos was set to break out from mid-February/March.
The first few weeks of 2020 had given rise to hopes of a very positive development in my portfolio. From the beginning of January to mid-February, my portfolio rose by almost €10,000 to €77,000.
Panic then slowly set in from mid-February. I still remember exactly how trading on the US stock markets was repeatedly suspended for short periods and daily losses of 10% were normal. At 0 o'clock sharp, I looked at the US futures and in seconds the futures went down by -5%. A cap for the futures, the futures loss must not be higher and you knew the next morning it would end badly for the DAX.
But when there is blood in the streets, you can make very good deals! So in March 2020 I bought the Allianz
$ALV (+0,05 %) for €118. This gives me a personal dividend yield of almost 12% based on the current dividend of €13.80. Unfortunately, I only bought for €1,000 in total.
Also Starbucks
$SBUX (+0,12 %) I was able to buy for less than €50.
The stock market crash continued until the Fed made short work of it and ended the crash single-handedly. The crash was ended with interest rate cuts and massive money printing and once again the saying "Never bet against the FED" proved to be true.
The stock markets then went through the roof and within a very short space of time were already back to a positive level compared to the end of 2019. Every share that somehow falls under the term "stay at home" was suddenly the hot tip on the stock market. Whether the Peloton $PTON (+0,77 %)
or Teladoc $TDOC (+1,37 %) everything went through the roof.
I let myself get carried away and did about 10 "Stay at Home" hype stocks into a growth savings plan portfolio. Of these, at the end of 2024 with Sea $SE (+0,79 %) and MercadoLibre $MELI (+0,97 %) only two shares remained. It goes without saying that most of them left the portfolio at a loss.
But 2020 was also the Wirecard year $WDI BaFin's ban on short selling, a year-long audit by EY, political backing and massive investments by German fund managers from DWS, UnionInvest and Deka vs. a journalist from the Financial Times.
Wirecard's claims that the journalist was in cahoots with short sellers and the backing from various institutions were unfortunately too credible for me.
When Wirecard faced the press and announced that EUR 2 billion could no longer be found, things went downhill and it became clear to everyone that the company was heading for insolvency. Before trading was suspended, I was able to sell my shares at a 50% loss and got off lightly.
Later in the year, I was able to conclude an extremely favorable leasing offer and sell my private car. The proceeds went straight into my securities account and I broke the €100,000 barrier in November 2020.
My portfolio then ended the year with a value of ~€120,000. At +5%, my performance was pretty much in line with the MSCI World.
The year 2021 - HYPE! Wall Street bets, crypto and almost 200k in the portfolio
The year 2021 was characterized above all by hypes. Cryptocurrencies, memestocks and memecoins were in the headlines everywhere. Gamestop, Dogecoin, SPACs and NFTs everyone had to have.
Traditional shares became almost boring.
One of the reasons was certainly the checks that the US government issued to its citizens. It was still Corona, many were locked down and suddenly people started gambling on the stock market.
The hype can be illustrated very well using the example of NFTs. In 2021, NFTs worth $17 billion were traded, in 2023 it was only 80 million - a decline of 97%. According to one study, ~95% of all NFTs are now completely worthless.
The madness in one example: Procter & Gamble launched a Charmin toilet paper NFT. This was sold for over $4,000. All proceeds were donated, but a symbol of the madness of 2021.
From a portfolio perspective, 2021 was great! In the end, there was a +32% return and a portfolio value of over €190,000, which at times in November 2021 was €199,000.
My top performers were NVIDIA
$NVDA (+3,93 %) with over 100% price gains and Pfizer $PFE (+0,32 %)
, which was driven by the vaccine hype and at €50 was twice as high as in 2024.
My worst performer was another 80% loss with TAL Education $TAL (+0,28 %) . An education company from China. Unfortunately, this was the first time I was able to experience the political arbitrariness in countries like China. Overnight, it was decided that education/tutoring could only be run as a non-profit. Of course, this was almost a death sentence for the company and the share price plummeted by 80%.
Asset development & return:
After the years 2013 to 2018 were forgettable in terms of returns, the years 2019 to 2021 finally delivered:
Year
Deposit value
Yield
2019 67.000€ +19%
2020 121.000€ +5%
2021 193.000€ +34%
Vermögensentwicklung 2019-2021:
Vermögensentwicklung 2013-2021:
Outlook:
Looking back on the hype year 2021, it is almost obvious that 2022 had to be clearly negative.
After the party, however, came the hangover in the form of inflation and the war in Ukraine. Sharply rising interest rates and global economic concerns did the rest.
In the next part, I would therefore like to look at the years 2022 & 2023. I will then combine 2024 with my review of the year in the last part.
RIP to all $FSLR (+0,64 %) and $NEE (+0,38 %) Investors🙏🫡
📣All these stocks hit new 52 WEEK HIGHS at some point today
📣All these stocks hit new 52 WEEK HIGHS at some point today
Alcon $ALC (+0 %)
Applovin $APP (+0,55 %)
Beigene $BGNE (-0,95 %)
Boston Scientific $BSX (+0,52 %)
British American Tobacco $BTI (-0,14 %)
Carrier $CARR
Fair Isaac $FICO (+0,34 %)
NextEra $NEE (+0,38 %)
ServiceNow $NOW
Natera $NTRA
Public Service $PEG (-0 %)
Insulet $PODD (+0,09 %)
Sharkninja $SN
Squarespace $SQSP
Stryker $SYK (+0,04 %)
Long term US 20 stock selection: https://www.trading212.com/pies/lua2LbG5mCkbey1Mr82wyL08O4XMB
Solid but includes also some wildcards like TSLA and SIGA. Not financial advice.
$ADM (-0,56 %)
$SIGA
$CAT (+0 %)
$BMY (-0,27 %)
$TSLA (+1,2 %)
$GOOGL (-0,96 %)
$AMZN (+0,31 %)
$BMI (+0,19 %)
$KO (+0,27 %)
$WTRG (-0,18 %)
$INGR (+0,29 %)
$JNJ (+0,65 %)
$MRK (+0,22 %)
$MSFT (+1,5 %)
$NEE (+0,38 %)
$NVDA (+3,93 %)
$PLTR (+3,35 %)
$PEP (+0,35 %)
$V (+0,03 %)
I am taking profits of around 17% and no longer want to be invested in the main electricity supplier.
Any opinions? $NEE (+0,38 %)
16.07.2024 +++ Apple increases sales in India +++ Hugo Boss lowers forecast +++ Netflix with new price target +++ SMC joins the NASDAQ 100 +++ Solar sector under pressure +++
Jefferies raises target for NETFLIX $NFLX (+0,97 %) to USD 780 (655) - 'BUY'
SolarEdge $SEDG (+1,12 %) Technologies lost around 9% after the company announced plans to lay off 400 employees to restore profitability at a time of declining revenues. Other solar stocks fell, with Sunrun $RUN (-0,23 %) and Sunnova Energy $NOVA (+0,73 %) recently falling by more than 6 % each. Nextera Energy $NEE (+0,38 %) slipped by 2%. Joe Biden stood for this sector, but he has not delivered on his promises in recent years. Now that he is losing more respect and Trump is further ahead, this is reflected in the sector!
Apple $AAPL (-0,33 %) achieved a new record turnover of 8 billion dollars in India in the past financial year. The 33 percent year-on-year increase is in line with the increased attention Apple is paying to the Indian market, writes the agency. The iPhone manufacturer is benefiting from the increased purchasing power of Indians and has set its sights on the country as a production location and source of revenue beyond China against the backdrop of growing tensions in trade with the USA.
Hugo Boss lowers annual forecast below market expectations - weak quarter
The fashion retailer Hugo Boss $BOSS (+0,06 %) is more pessimistic about the year as a whole after a disappointing second quarter. The company announced late Monday evening that it only expects sales to increase by one to four percent to 4.20 to 4.35 billion euros in 2024. This means that the upper end of the range is below the market expectation of 4.37 billion euros. Previously, Hugo Boss had expected an increase in sales of three to six percent. In its new forecast, the company assumes that currency effects will have a slightly negative impact on sales development in 2024.
Tuesday: Stock market dates, economic data, quarterly figures
ex-dividend of individual stocks
Clinica Baviera EUR 1.57
Quarterly figures / company dates USA / Asia
00:30 Rio Tinto Operation Report 2Q
11:55 Unitedhealth Group quarterly figures
12:45 Bank of America quarterly figures
13:30 Morgan Stanley quarterly figures
13:30 State Street quarterly figures
14:00 Alco Extraordinary General Meeting
Quarterly figures / Company dates Europe
07:30 Richemont Trading Update 1Q
17:45 Vinci Q2 sales
19:00 Telekom Austria quarterly figures
Economic data
Principales creadores de la semana