Tag: portfolio

Stockmarket Eye – software for Portfolio Management

Update 2024. SME has closed down. The new Owner realised that he had bitten off more than he could chew. I’ve moved to Airtable and Stockopedia (see elsewhere) so I have removed all links to the Software.

It’s a shame. It was a really useful and comprehensive package.

Prior to 2015 I used to use a spreadsheet to manage my Portfolios (didn’t we all). That is quite labour intensive if it’s not a ‘Buy and forget’ type of Portfolio. Even if it is, it is still a pain to update with current prices to see how your Returns compare to your chosen index.

I have also tried some of the online Portfolio facilities provided by, for example, ADVFN. ADVFN is a fantastic site for raw information on everything and I have been a user for decades. The Portfolio Management section is not as user-friendly as many packages. I still use it pretty much daily for that nerdy blow-by-blow share price tracking, however.

In 2015 I trialled the Stockmarket Eye package (SME). This is specifically designed around Portfolio Management. You get a 30 day trial and after that it’s currently just $75 a year (about £60 at current rates). Personally, I think that’s a bargain. I’ve been subscribed since about 2016.

You can see typical reports it can produce on these pages. All the stats I have created in my Blogs have come from the Reporting features of the package.

Features that I use regularly

  • Buy, sell shares. Spare splits
  • Dividend recording
  • Cash management recording – fees, commissions interest etc
  • Multiple Portfolios and Watchlists. I have set one up for my ISA, one for my SIPP and I also have a Watchlist one. Reporting can be separate or consolidated.
  • Charting. SME has live links to current and historic share prices so producing a share price chart is a doddle. You can have different styles such as Line, Candlestick etc and you can compare prices against other shares or indices.
  • Reporting. See the top of this Blog or my gain/loss calculations for a typical example. All I do is set the time period and it does the rest.
  • Cloud-based As long as I keep it synchronised I can access the software from my PC, my laptop or my phone (there is a free App).
  • Configurability. The main display is based around each share entry and all columns can be ordered or hidden. Here’s the example from their website:

This isn’t meant to be a massive review of SME, but if you are looking at setting up and Managing a Portfolio, do take advantage of their free trial and have a play.

Reasons to buy

  • Cheap at £75 a year. You can easily recoup that in time saved by not using a spreadsheet
  • Highly configurable
  • New ownership of the software with plenty of plans moving forwards
  • Free Trial anyway – nothing to lose!

Quirks

  • It would be nice if it was truly cloud-based rather than local copies that can be synchronised. Synchronisation is easy enough but it’s easy to forget to save if you make a change. A cloud-based version downloads the latest every time, and any changes get automatically saved back up to the cloud.
  • The Watchlists have a subset of the columns available to the Portfolios. It would be nice to have them all, no reason why this shouldn’t be the case.
  • All data are dependent on the source they are using. I have one share, for instance, where the historic data prices are a factor of 100 out where someone assumed the values were pence rather than pounds 9or vice versa). Make some charts look funny, but that is probably out of SME’s control.

This Blog must in no way be construed as investment advice. I’m not an Advisor, I’m just a Private Investor that takes an interest in Stocks and Shares as a way of increasing my standard of Living & having a bit of fun. Feel free to comment. All comments are Moderated before publication, keep them relevant, short and interesting otherwise they won’t be published. My Blog, my Rules.

Don’t make me responsible for any decisions that you make off the back of anything I write here. DYour Own Research. Capice?