3 Portfolio Moves Stock Market Investors Should Make Before the End of the Year


The end of the year is the perfect time to reflect on your portfolio. But sometimes, that can lead to anxiety if there is a rift between where your portfolio is and where you want it to be.

Instead of trying to trade your way out of discomfort, a better approach is to engage in exercises that can help set the stage for compounding your wealth over time.

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Here are investment portfolio actions worth taking before the end of the year.

A rendering of a table with a gold bull on top of the table resting on a laptop computer that displays financial information.
Image source: Getty Images.

Investing in the art of putting capital to work in quality companies, identifying risks that can derail an investment thesis, and sticking with winning companies over time — these are all part of a portfolio review. Having an investment thesis for each asset you own is paramount. Some can be short, whereas others can be long. But it’s essential to know what a company does, what it is trying to do, and why you believe it is worth putting your hard-earned money into.

You can also make investment theses for companies you don’t own but are high on your watchlist so that you can have the conviction to buy them when it makes sense for you to do so.

As an example, here’s the essence of my investment thesis on Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT):

Microsoft is an industry-leading company with exposure to several end markets. It has evolved from mediocre sales growth and weak margins to a high-margin cash cow — largely thanks to the build-out of Microsoft Cloud and product upgrades of existing software. Microsoft is monetizing artificial intelligence (AI) throughout its product suite, from Microsoft 365 to GitHub, Azure, and more.

The company is well diversified across hardware and software. It owns LinkedIn and has a powerful place in gaming with Xbox and Activision Blizzard. Microsoft generates plenty of excess earnings to pay a growing dividend and repurchase more than enough stock to offset stock-based compensation, which grows earnings per share by decreasing the outstanding share count and making Microsoft a better value.

Because Microsoft has more cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities than debt on its balance sheet, it is well positioned to endure an industrywide downturn and even take market share or make timely acquisitions. Microsoft’s 36.1 price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio is above its historical levels, putting pressure on the company to deliver outsized growth or risk facing a sell-off. But long term, Microsoft has plenty of levers to pull for growing earnings, making it worth holding even if the stock price goes down in the near term.


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