Economic News

Double Your Biotech Blockbusters With This Simple Portfolio Design Trick

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I love picking the right stocks. But in a year like this, when Wall Street is split between big winners and equally big losers, I’m more focused than usual on how the stock picks fit together.

We’ve had a lot of success in IPO Edge with what I’m calling “intelligent portfolio design.” The basic concept revolves around making sure the basket of stocks on your screen keeps moving forward no matter how the market twists.

One week, technology might retreat to make room for conventional consumer sectors to recover. Then the pandemic headlines shift again and money flows back to Zoom Video Communications Inc. (NASDAQ:ZM), Teladoc Health Inc. (NYSE:TDOC) and the vaccine makers.

We make money on both sides, and the portfolio as a whole has kept working at an annualized rate of 50% throughout the cycle. I’m rolling out something similar for my 2-Day Trader with the potential to increase the impact of every quick double-digit-percentage win we score.

The stocks and options don’t change. Subscribers still get the same simple and actionable trade alerts. But the relationships across positions get more robust as we confront more complex market conditions.

And everyone can take advantage of the basic elements. Let’s look at the very different roles vaccine maker Moderna Inc. (NASDAQ:MRNA) plays in two superficially similar biotech index portfolios.

Who Makes Money On MRNA?

The “standard” biotech industry benchmark is iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology ETF (NASDAQ:IBB), which is up a healthy 21% year to date (YTD), beating nearly all sector funds, including the overall health care group.

MRNA played an insignificant role in IBB before the COVID-19 crisis made the company’s vaccine platform one of the few points of hope in a sick world. Now, after its 700% surge, it’s a $60 billion stock and one of the biggest components of the IBB portfolio.

Great, right? But IBB shareholders didn’t start with enough skin in the MRNA game to make real money. At best, this once-in-a-lifetime blockbuster move netted them a 4% overall return.

Meanwhile, IBB placed gigantic bets on stocks like Gilead Sciences Inc. (NASDAQ:GILD), which is down 6% YTD despite its high-profile coronavirus therapies.

GILD is a behemoth in the relatively small and scrappy biotech world, so big that many index makers now consider it a member of the exclusive Big Pharma club. As such, its growth profile isn’t anywhere near what pure biotech investors expect.

Because IBB is an index fund, it can’t sell GILD and put its money to work elsewhere. And because positions here are automatically weighted by size, dead money at the top becomes a real drag.

That’s when I noticed that another biotech fund, SPDR S&P Biotech ETF (NYSEARCA:XBI), is up 40% YTD, doubling IBB for pure performance, even though mighty MRNA is only 1.7% of the overall portfolio.

What’s the secret of XBI’s success? For one thing, it doesn’t count GILD as a pure biotech company anymore, so that big drag no longer plays any role in its aggregate results.

But the real key is that XBI is equal-weighted. Once the index managers decide a biotech company deserves inclusion, it gets the same room in the portfolio as each of its peers.

MRNA rated a significant role in XBI a year ago, well before its Wall Street profile translated to the kind of market cap that would attract IBB today. For all practical purposes, XBI shareholders were overweight this powerhouse stock, whereas IBB stayed underweight.

And because XBI rebalances every three months, shareholders automatically took profits along MRNA’s stratospheric trajectory. Managers sold enough shares to maintain a 1.7% weight and redistributed the proceeds evenly across other biotech holdings.

No prescience was needed to buy MRNA in the first place. Every biotech stock with roughly $70 million in market cap got a seat at the table, no matter how hot (or cold) its clinical path happens to be.

It is still diversified. That’s essential in an industry where hundreds of stocks are still in bear market territory, despite all the vaccine buzz taking scattered winners into the stratosphere.

Both XBI and IBB ensure that everyone got a taste of the winners. Nobody missed out on MRNA or gambled everything on a clinical trial that failed.

The difference is in how the portfolios are constructed. IBB relies on inertia. As companies grow, their weight in the index grows too, which means the index today reflects their past success.

XBI is all about the future. The scoreboard resets every three months. Every constituent is an equal member of the team. When the team does well, we all cheer.

That’s the kind of thinking driving my newsletters these days. If you’re already an IPO Edge subscriber, you’ve seen it in action with our talk about paper profit levels and when to let triple-digit-percentage wins ride.

Anyone can pick stocks. Very few people have a talent for doing it consistently. And when you can overlay additional discipline across the stocks you pick, the gains stack a whole lot faster.

I’m excited about the future. Whatever happens in the market, the economy or Washington, we’re where we need to be.

All we need to do is define the parameters and then give the system time to work. We have time. Just to draw a few examples from the biotech world, we’ve been in some of the hottest holdings in either XBI or IBB for years.

I got a few Turbo Trader subscribers into Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals Inc. (NASDAQ:ARWR) below $7. That was obviously a few years back, but a well-designed portfolio is about patience as well as insight.

We’ll talk about this on my Millionaire Maker radio show. Now, there’s a podcast (Spotify)(Apple) as well to keep you focused on opportunities to build real wealth while avoiding obvious threats.

Hilary Kramer

Hilary Kramer is an investment analyst and portfolio manager with 30 years of experience on Wall Street. The Financial Times describes Ms. Kramer as “A one-woman financial investment powerhouse” and The Economist distinguishes her as “one of the best-known investors in America”. Ms. Kramer is often quoted in publications such as the Wall Street JournalNew York Post, Bloomberg, and Reuters. She is a frequent guest commentator on CNBC, CBS, Fox News and Bloomberg, providing investment insight and economic analysis. Ms. Kramer was an analyst and investment banker at Morgan Stanley and Lehman Brothers.  Ms. Kramer founded and ran a long-short hedge fund and has been chief investment officer overseeing debt and equity portfolios. Since 2010, Ms. Kramer’s financial publications have provided stock analysis and investment advice to her subscribers.  Her products include GameChangers, Value Authority, High Octane Trader, Triple-Digit Trader, 2-Day Trader, IPO Edge and Inner Circle. Ms. Kramer, a Certified Fraud Examiner, has also testified as an expert in investment suitability, risk management, compliance, executive compensation, and corporate governance. Ms. Kramer received her MBA from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania and her BA with honors from Wellesley College. Ms. Kramer has provided testimony regarding investment policy to the U.S. Senate and is a frequent speaker on the markets, portfolio management and securities fraud and compliance. Ms. Kramer is also the author of “Ahead of the Curve” (Simon & Schuster 2007) and “The Little Book of Big Profits from Small Stocks” (Wiley 2012).

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