Just a few notes:
1) The portfolios are locked into the North American equity markets through investments on the Toronto exchange, which is the large
Canadian exchange.
2) Risk in these strategies has been covered by Bryan and myself (and others I'm sure).
- a) portfolio "wipeout" usually means total loss, whereas drawdowns of 40% are likely closer to future exposure. This is a high level, unbearable for most investors. I don't think anyone on this forum has endorsed using the SSP system with all their capital.
- b) as the system also includes exit strategies, drawdown is a function of these rules moreso than speculation on the future of interest rates, fx, commodities, etc. It's been mentioned before, stops that allow you to stay with the system need to be very wide.
3) hedge fund strategies are very different (generally) than SSP, and any strategy that risks money will have the potential for significant losses.
4) warnings about putting "all your eggs in one basket" are quite common, although given the level of losses out there (putting all your cash in ABCPs turned out to be a bad idea too!) I suppose they still bear repeating.
SSP generally picks micro-caps with very high volatility. Fortunately the "long term" exposes the positive side of the chosen investments. Here's a quick update on my performance since August 2007:
Win %: 40%
Avg. Winner: +30%
Avg. Loser: -8%
Edge: 7.21%
Annualized return: 26%
Note: Win percentage is well under 50% (and has fallen into the 30s in the past). It's the ratio of avg. winner to avg. loser that gives SSP the positive edge (so far). The annualized return is nowhere near SSP's posted numbers because I've overlaid a money management (position sizing) strategy over the SSP picks. Cash (or equivalents) sometimes constituted 70+% of the allocated funds for SSP. Therefore I also haven't experienced the depth of some of the SSP drawdowns. I gave up some upside for a smoother equity curve. In essence I'd say anyone wanting to trade SSP picks should first acknowledge the risk, and then make necessary adjustments so your exposure reflects your attitudes towards risk taking.
Cheers,
Victor