Film and television make for a wildly different kind of investment when it comes to your personal tastes and preferences. I have found that having diversified mix of movie favourites makes for great return on social investment. As a cinephile, having a good pick of blockbusters, indies, thrillers and pure comedy has opened up a lot of avenues of opportunity in social settings. Let's call this my version of Factor Investing.
What is factor investing?
A collection of investments that should beat the market average on returns for the investor. Yes, a collection of shares, rather than that one stock that would, in theory, propel your stock portfolio to the stars. There are five factors that determine which stocks these are, hence the name. Here are the five factors:
Value: These are stocks that are relatively cheap compared to their assets. These shares tend to do perform better than their more expensive counterparts.
Momentum: This category describes stocks with an upward trend in price. Sure, stocks tend to fluctuate in price when you're looking at day-to-day charts and trends, however there are shares which show a more linear trend in price when looking at the medium to long-term price movements.
Size: It has been found, by researchers, that portfolios which contain small-cap stocks show higher portfolio returns on average than portfolios made up exclusively of large-cap stocks.
Volatility: Researchers suggest that stocks with low volatility produce better returns than highly volatile ones.
Quality: Finally, these are the sum of parts that make for good business, therefore a stock that is to perform well. These include consistent stock asset growth, strong corporate governance, low debt, and stable earnings.
Analysts will correct me in highlighting that there are far more factors to consider, and they would be right. This insight excluded Macroeconomic factors that influence all markets (i.e inflation, economic growth, liquidity, etc). Cinephiles may also chastise this list for excluding a number of cinematic factors and agents that play a bigger role in the successes and failures of some motion pictures (like producers, location, and the underrated, director of photography). To both sets of analysts and connoisseurs I have a compromise: share your insights. The spotlight is on you.