Topic: How To Invest

Pat: When you are queried by members of the Inner Circle on a certain investment holding, you sometimes use what might be considered an ambiguous term “it’s okay to hold.” It sounds like a lukewarm comment meaning “if you are already holding it, you might keep it” or “there’s not too much wrong with it but it wouldn’t be a recommended new purchase.” Could you please clarify your use of the terminology?

Article Excerpt

We continually troll the Canadian and U.S. markets for stocks to recommend. Even so, we generally get excited about only a handful — that is, excited enough to recommend them in our publications. A much larger number of stocks we look at have one or more serious flaws in our view. We can’t cover them all in the newsletters, of course. But if you ask about them here, we’ll tell you to sell. However, a large number of stocks fall into a grey area. Though we wouldn’t advise buying them, we see them as “okay to hold.” In other words, if you want to hold these stocks, we can’t voice any strong objection, but it’s not something we would advise you to buy. If you say, “Forget ‘okay to hold’ — tell me if it’s a buy or a sell,” we are always going to translate “okay to hold” as sell. On the other hand, the one-word recommendation “hold” is something else entirely. When…