Speculators versus Investors
Mark Twain mentioned the two times in life when one shouldn't speculate: "when you can't afford it, and when you can!".
Speculators buy in the hopes or assumptions that others will want to buy the same asset (be it a painting, a baseball card, or a stock) later.
Investors buy the cash flow the investment returns to its owner. (As such, a painting can never be an investment by this definition!)
Stock Market Bubbles
Bubbles in the stock market form due to faulty logic that first propels speculators to bid up prices followed by the inevitable bursting which destroys the wealth of many.
What determines whether an investor will make money in the market or not?
The answer is his psychological make-up.
If he does his own stock analysis and views the prices offered by Mr. Market as an opportunity to buy low and sell high, he will do fine.
If Mr. Market's offering prices guide the investor's outlook of what the stock price should be, he should get someone else to manage his money!
Market fluctuations
Most market fluctuations are the result of day-to-day distortions between supply and demand of particular stocks, not of changes in fundamentals.
Investors who take advantage of these distortions by focusing on the fundamentals will be successful.
Those who invest with their emotions are sure to fail in the long-run.
Read also:
Read also:
- Your investments using Mutual Funds or Money Managers
- Trading and portfolio management from a value investing point of view
- Value Investor's Opportunities in Distressed Securities
- Value Investing Opportunities in the Banking Sector
- Look at FUNDAMENTALS and POTENTIAL CATALYSTS when making investment decisions
- Where to look for Investment Opportunities
- Business value cannot be precisely determined. Make use of ranges of values
- Central elements to a Value Investing Philosophy
- The Philosophy of Value Investing and Why It Works
- Philosophy of value investing. Need to have clear strategies too
- How Wall Streets can create investment fads? The Junk Bond Market of mid-1980s
- Understanding these changes in the investment world allows investors to earn superior returns
- What's good for Wall Street is not necessarily good for investors
- Speculators, Investors and Market Fluctuations
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