The Citizen (Gauteng)

Why I liquidated my equity portfolio

- Njabulo Nsibande This article was first published on Just One Lap

At the start of the year, my equity portfolio consisted of 70% ETFs (in my TFSA) and 30% individual stocks. Some stocks I bought because I know them, some on tips, and some because I like the company. About half of the stocks I bought using the value methodolog­y.

Then 2020 happened. I looked at the difference between my individual share portfolio and my ETF portfolio in how they reacted to the market crash in March. When the market started to recover, I looked at how they recovered.

To no surprise, my ETF portfolio handled the situation much better, and my individual portfolio performed better than expected.

In August I got an opportunit­y to trade JSE equities with Simon Brown. Trading shares is something I’ve done before. I can confidentl­y say I’m doing quite well.

I started asking myself: If I were to deploy new capital in either my equity portfolio or my trading “hedge fund” portfolio, where would I be most confident in? The answer to this was quite simply the trading portfolio.

The obvious question of escalated risk does come up because trading CFDs (contract for difference­s) is far riskier than investing in shares.

So, I tackled the question as follows: Whether consciousl­y or unconsciou­sly, my picking individual stocks means I believe that I can pick stocks that can do better than the index. This led to my next question: Which of the two am I more confident in? My competence or my conviction?

I decided that I’m a better trader than a stock-picking investor. I’m essentiall­y betting on the jockey (me) not the horses (the portfolio themselves).

So, I decided to liquidate all my shares except for The Purple group. And I moved the proceeds of the sales into my TFSA account.

Moving forward I will use the capital earmarked for buying individual stocks to fund my trading account, my TFSA contributi­ons will remain the same.

At some stage, I will move profits from my trading portfolio to fund my TFSA. When my TFSA is maxed out, I will buy the same ETFs in the normal account on EasyEquiti­es.

As the old saying goes, “When we don’t know any better, we do our best. When we know better, we do better”. What I described above is a better decision for my portfolio. Fortunatel­y, I came out of the process unscathed. I didn’t lose money, except for the transactio­n fees. The portfolio was up 0.03% when I liquidated it.

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