1Año·

Depot review April 2023 - The 200k cracked, at the end of the month again just under it


April is over and with it already a third of the year 2023 - madness, how fast time flies.


In the depot, April was the first negative month in 2023 with -0,7%. Compared to April 2022 with -4.8% the month was nevertheless significantly better.

(Fun Fact: April is generally considered to be the best month on the stock market).


Nevertheless, I was able to break the 200k mark for the first time in April after almost 10 years on the stock market. At the end of the month the portfolio closes nevertheless scarcely under it with 199,5k.


In the current year my current performance is +8,3% and thus above my benchmark (MSCI World +6%).


Dividend:

  • Dividend +50% compared to the previous year - However, Sartorius $SRT (+2,64 %) paid out in March last year, this year in April.
  • "Adjusted" for the Sartorius dividend, distributions were nevertheless +33 +33% above the previous year


Purchases & Sales:


In the next month, Hershey will be added to the $HSY (+0,3 %) a new stock in the savings plan (consumer staples with growth prospects and a very capital market affinity - share buybacks & high dividend growth).

BASF $BAS (-0,31 %) is still very much on the brink of being sold.


How did your portfolio perform in April? And how long do you hold a stock in the savings plan before adding a new one?


#dividende
#dividends
#personalstrategy
#depotupdate
#performance


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24 Comentarios

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@Hannes_SK I believe that BASF unfortunately has very difficult circumstances in Germany. As a shareholder, I would tend to be in favor of a strong relocation abroad, but that would be accompanied by massive restructuring costs and would also be a difficult development over the next few years. The share price has also been stagnating for years, the high in 2017 is far away, the share price is at the level of 2010. Unfortunately, the dividend no longer saves too much. So it is a mixture of many reasons.
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@Mister_ultra
I assume therefore you shun China?! 😅
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@Hannes_SK China is a thing of its own. I buy the Invesco MSCI China All-Shares on a monthly basis, which covers all Chinese stocks, regardless of whether they are listed in Hong Kong, NASDAQ or Shanghai. So I cover everything in terms of content. Due to the small share of the portfolio, I can still sleep peacefully.
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@Mister_ultra BASF is a global company. Whether they press the tear gland in Germany shouldn't really matter in the long term, because they get their asses handed to them elsewhere.
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@KleinviehmachtMist Quite right. But before I take BASF, which is perhaps one-third dependent on Germany, I'd rather take a company that is perhaps only 10% dependent. But as I said, that's just one of several reasons that speak against BASF for me personally.
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@Mister_ultra No, the problem is the business in China. If things go wrong with Taiwan, it could turn into a total loss. And you don't just quickly move a chemical plant to India or Malaysia, as other companies are doing right now. Edit: But I'm also rather optimistic and strengthening my position.
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@devnerd_daddy The problem is the German business, which was even cash flow negative last year. If Taiwan collapses, we will have completely different problems than BASF's China business. TSMC produces 60% of the world's chips and 90% of the high-performance chips, if Taiwan and TSMC collapse, we will have huge problems that would lead to worldwide disruptions in almost all sub-frames.
Starting, for example, with NVIDIA, which would have virtually no more production, resulting in no GPUs for various other companies, ..... Such a scenario would then be a Black Swan event. Therefore, it does not play a role for my BASF decision in that sense.
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@Mister_ultra I agree with you that all industries would be affected, but only temporarily as customers, whereas all companies with production in China would probably have hard write-offs. As of today, however, I don't believe that. In my opinion, the poor business in Germany is negligible for the time being and even has the potential to be an innovation driver. I therefore remain invested for the time being and plan to make additional purchases. Before that, I would like to increase my position at $AI.
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@KleinviehmachtMist As a company with a long history and prominent location in Germany, BASF's image and reputation in Germany are equally important。
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@cMary They only care about the funding pots and subsidies. When the Ukraine war is over and hundreds of billions in subsidies for the economic development of Ukraine are flowing in, BASF and others will be the first to build new sites down there with German taxpayers' money. From the shareholders' point of view, this will work.
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Strong! Why is BASF on the verge of being shot down? Is this more of a personal closure or do you no longer believe in profitability?
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@Hannes_SK There may be some problems with the treatment structure and management of BASF
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@cMary Can... But in practice, this is rather unlikely. The management is tried and tested. I can't understand the criticism of Brudermüller. Ultimately, it is over-regulation and pricing that drives the industry away. 😅
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Looks great! Did not even know that you can store a benchmark in the performance display 🤓
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@Howsy Yes, you can select a benchmark there and then specify any security (in my case an MSCI World ETF). But theoretically you can also use the Dirk Müller Premium Fund 😂.
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@Mister_ultra Good idea to compare annual return in a PP dashboard in heatmap with a benchmark. I will also set this up for myself 😀
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Am just a fan of such summaries 😍
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@Simpson Thank you very much! This also helps you yourself to review the last decisions a little bit.
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what do you use to track your portfolio there on the pictures?
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@Dellou This is Portfolio Performance. Is a program on the PC, offers extremely many possibilities, but also has a very large manual effort. I use getquin on the cell phone and because it is totally simple. Portfolio Performance I use for a very detailed look at my portfolio.
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@Mister_ultra ok thanks
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1Año
@Mister_ultra have you linked the respective stocks or ETFs to the respective stock market prices or do you track via price data from Yahoo Finance?
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With 200k only so little dividends?🤔
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@mRNx In fact, April is one of the weakest months, but dividends don't play a big role for me either. That's why the yield in my portfolio is only just over 1%. I invest mainly in dividend growth stocks, which still have a very low dividend today, but increase it strongly. In a few years or decades, I will then have high dividends, but also significant price increases. That is why I prefer to invest in a Microsoft than in a Verizon.
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