Monday, 1 March 2010

Singapore: Property developers, Wilmar, UOB, Cerebos, Raffles Medical, Midas

March 1: Property developers, Wilmar, UOB, Cerebos, Raffles Medical, Midas


Written by The Edge
Monday, 01 March 2010 08:46


Wilmar International (WLIL.SI), the world’s largest palm oil planter, is likely to be in the spotlight on Monday after reporting a better-than-expected 18% rise in its fourth-quarter results.

Benchmark Straits Times Index (.FTSTI) inched 0.06% higher to end at 2,750.86 points last Friday.

US stocks rose last Friday, capping their best monthly advance since November as data showed the economy grew a tad better than expected in the fourth quarter.

Property developers: The government said it will raise the cost of residential land development starting March 1. Non-landed residential charges will rise 8% on average, while charges for landed homes will increase 12% on average, it said in an e-mailed statement today. Charges for commercial land development will decline an average of 2%.

Wilmar International (WLIL.SI), the world’s largest palm oil planter reported on Sunday a better-than-expected 18% rise in fourth-quarter net profit as a global economic recovery drove commodities prices higher. It also said it would continue to seek attractive investment opportunities to support future growth.

United Overseas Bank (UOBH.SI) , Singapore’s third-biggest bank, expects high single-digit loan growth in 2010 and is trying to maintain loan margins for corporate customers, CEO Wee Ee Cheong told a news conference.

Singapore-listed health supplement manufacturer Cerebos Pacific (CERE.SI) said last week it is aiming for a 10–20% revenue growth over the next three years as it steps up its presence in China, Indonesia and Vietnam.

Raffles Medical Group, the private healthcare provider in Singapore and the region, says profit after tax for the group increased 20.1% from $31.7 million in 2008 to $38 million in 2009.

Midas Holdings, the manufacturer of aluminium alloy extrusion products for China’s railway sector, announced a 14.9% rise in net profit to $37.5 million for the financial year ended December 31, 2009 (FY2009).

Abterra, the supply chain manager of resources and minerals, managed to swing back into the black with a net profit of $13.3 million for the financial year ended 31 December 2009 (FY2009) largely due to a gain from the revaluation of a mining asset.

Yongnam Holdings, the structural steel contractor and specialist civil engineering solutions provider, announced a record profit before tax of $48.8 million for its full year ended December 31, 2009 (FY2009) on the back of a 2.7% increase in revenue to $346.8 million.

China Sports International, the sports fashion footwear and apparel company based in China, reported net profit decreased by 33.7% to RMB122.6 million ($25.3 million) for the full year ended 31 December 2009 (FY09) from RMB184.9 million in FY08 as the result of lower average selling prices for footwear products.

Delong Holdings, the manufacturer of hot-rolled steel coils (HRC) in China, says it posted a net profit after tax of RMB 248.4 million and RMB 416.9 million ($86 million) for the fourth quarter (4Q2009) and full year (FY2009) respectively, reversing net losses of RMB 637 million and RMB 370.4 million recorded in 4Q2008 and FY2008 respectively.

Synear Food Holdings, the China-based producer of quick freeze food, today posted a more than two-fold surge in net profit to RMB40.7 million ($8.4 million) for the three months ended December 31, 2009 (4Q09), due mainly to lower selling and distribution expenses and lower income tax expense. Revenue for the quarter rose 1.1% to RMB507.1 million.

Food Empire Holdings, the manufacturer of instant beverage products, frozen convenience food, confectionery and snack food, says profit before tax fell 86.2% to US$3.2 million ($4.5 million) while revenue fell 39.3% to US$134 million and for the year ended 31 December 2009.

Apex-Pal International, which operates the global chain of Sakae Sushi restaurants, today reported a net profit before tax of $3.3 million for the fiscal full year ending on 31 December 2009.

Techcomp (Holdings), the China manufacturer and distributor for analytical and life science instruments, posted a 139.4% year-on-year rise in net profit attributable to shareholders to US$7.4 million ($10.4 million) for the 12 months ended 31 December 2009 (FY2009). Revenue increased 29.3% to US$104.8 million fuelled by Asia’s increasing demand for analytical and life science equipment.

http://www.theedgesingapore.com/the-daily-edge/business/13008-march-1-property-developers-wilmar-uob-cerebos-raffles-medical-midas.html

Wilmar says Q4 net profit up 18% to US$442m

Wilmar says Q4 net profit up 18% to US$442m

Tags: Wilmar | Wilmar International
Written by Thomson Reuters
Sunday, 28 February 2010 18:05


Wilmar International (WLIL.SI), the world’s largest palm oil producer, reported today a better-than-expected 18 percent rise in fourth quarter net profit as a global economic recovery drove commodities prices higher.

The company, which has a presence in 20 countries across Southeast Asia, China, India, Europe and Africa, said it would continue to seek attractive investment opportunities to support future growth.

Malaysia’s benchmark palm oil price (KPOc3) rose nearly 60% in the quarter compared with the previous year.

The firm derives about half of its total sales from China, and owns oil palm plantations and runs crushing and refining plants in Indonesia and Malaysia.

“We will persist with on-going efforts to further improve our operational efficiency through greater integration and economies of scale, and seek attractive investment opportunities to continue growing our group,” said Chief Executive Kuok Khoon Hong in a statement.

The company did not elaborate on its future investment plans, but it has previously said it was planning to invest at least US$1 billion ($1.4 billion) in Indonesia, China, and Africa.

Wilmar posted a net profit of US$442 million, up from US$373.6 million a year earlier, ahead analysts forecasts of US$333.5 million.

The quarterly results took the full year net profit to US$1.88 billion, higher than ThomsonReuters I/B/E/S estimates of US$1.65 billion.

On the outlook, Wilmar, which has a market capitalisation of $41.5 billion, said that although economic recovery appeared to have started, the global business environment is expected to be volatile.

However, the company said Asian economic activity would continue to remain robust, especially in China, India and Indonesia.

Wilmar’s shares have risen around 1% since the start of the year, outpacing a 5% drop in the broader Straits Times index (.FTSTI).

http://www.theedgesingapore.com/the-daily-edge/business/13007-wilmar-says-q4-net-profit-up-18-to-us442m.html

Golden Agri-Resources price target raised

Golden Agri-Resources price target raised to 68 cents by OSK

Tags: Golden Agri-Resources
Written by The Edge
Monday, 01 March 2010 17:03

OSK has raised Golden Agri-Resources’ (E5H.SG) target price to 68 cents from 63.5 cents, based on 15x FY10 P/E, after increasing FY10 earnings forecast 8.3% to assume higher palm oil prices on back of lower fertiliser costs.

The broker says the change to bottomline estimate also reflects lower corporate tax rate of 25% vs 30% previously. Cites high fertiliser cost as one key factor weighing on FY09 profitability (earnings down 56.1% at US$607 million ($854 million)), but notes highly-priced fertiliser has since been used up.

It adds that production is also back on track, rising 13% last year after being hit by adverse weather in previous three years.

Tips production to grow 10% in 2010 on back of improving age profile.

Keeps “trading buy” call.

Shares +1.9% at 54 cents.


http://www.theedgesingapore.com/the-daily-edge/business/13045-golden-agri-resources-price-target-raised-to-68-cents-by-osk.html

Warren Buffett: A climate of fear is their best friend. When it's raining gold, reach for a bucket, not a thimble.

Buffett’s Bargain Shopping Spree


By GRAHAM BOWLEY
Published: February 27, 2010

America’s most famous investor, Warren E. Buffett, struck a confident note in his annual letter to the shareholders of his holding company on Saturday, as he described in characteristically colorful terms how his businesses had largely ridden out the calamity of the financial crisis.

Warren Buffett told investors, “When it's raining gold, reach for a bucket, not a thimble.”


The tone of the letter contrasted sharply with Mr. Buffett’s report last year, in which he took himself to task for the company’s decline in book value, only the second such decline since he took control in 1965. This time he described how he had used the last 18 months to scoop up a string of assets — a buying spree that culminated at the end of last year with the agreement to buy the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway, his biggest bet yet.

Mr. Buffett wrote that his company, Berkshire Hathaway, had net income of $8.1 billion last year, or about $5,200 a share, 61 percent higher than in 2008. The company also reported a 19.8 percent rise in book value.

The crisis of 2007-8 led to the company’s first operating loss in the first quarter of last year, raising questions about Mr. Buffett’s exposure to consumer spending and the housing market. The company recovered strongly later in the year, however, helped by the rebound in the stock market, which strengthened his derivatives holdings.

In his letter, which accompanied the company’s annual report, Mr. Buffett laid out in detail how many of his holdings still depended on the vagaries of housing demand and consumer spending. But shares of the company, which peaked late in 2007 around $148,220 and fell to lows of around $73,195, have since rallied to close at $119,800 on Friday.

“We’ve put a lot of money to work during the chaos of the last two years,” he wrote. “It’s been an ideal period for investors: A climate of fear is their best friend.”

Mr. Buffett used his letter to crack jokes and issue more of his trademark aphorisms. The so-called Sage of Omaha, he is America’s most listened-to investor, and his annual letter is watched closely by investors for his assessment of his businesses and of the economy.

It has, however, taken on somewhat less importance in recent years as Mr. Buffett, 79, has raised his profile with more public speaking and interviews.

In characteristically blunt terms, he had harsh words for unnamed chief executives and directors who oversaw disasters at their companies during the crisis but “still live in a grand style.”

He said, “They should pay a heavy price,” and that there must be a reform of the way executives are rewarded for their performance. “C.E.O.’s, and in many cases, directors, have long benefited from oversized financial carrots; some meaningful sticks now need to be part of their employment picture as well.”

He also admitted mistakes of his own, saying he had closed a troubled credit card business, which had been his idea, and had given too much time to turn around the NetJets business, long a burden.

But he dwelt also on the lucrative positions he took in a string of companies over the last year and a half, pouring $15.5 billion into shares of companies like Goldman Sachs, General Electric and Wm. Wrigley Jr. Wishing he had taken greater advantage of the opportunities offered, he said, “When it’s raining gold, reach for a bucket, not a thimble.”

Burlington Northern Santa Fe was Mr. Buffett’s biggest purchase to date. Addressing that company’s 65,000 shareholders, he offered them a primer in his investment rules. But he warned all shareholders that the bigger size of Berkshire Hathaway would probably mean slower growth in the future.

“Huge sums forge their own anchor and our future advantage, if any, will be a small fraction of our historical edge,” he said.

Justin Fuller, the author of a blog about Mr. Buffett and a principal at Midway Capital Research in Chicago, said this company size was an important theme of the letter: “There was a lot of talk about size and maintaining a business and how size and bureaucracy can really hurt a business over time.”

Mr. Fuller said Mr. Buffett had also given insights into his investing strategy — many of his businesses are now in monopoly or near-monopoly industries like railroads and utilities.

Mr. Buffett told a long story about the wisdom of using a company’s own shares to buy another company — which was a veiled criticism of Kraft’s takeover of Cadbury, Mr. Fuller said, but also a justification of Mr. Buffett’s decision to issue shares to buy Burlington Northern Santa Fe. Mr. Buffett is a major investor in Kraft but has opposed its pending acquisition of Cadbury.

Mr. Buffett’s letter is watched closely for hints about when he may retire, but this year’s offered none. Talking of a time when he would be long gone, he said he was still tap-dancing to work at the end of his eighth decade.

He said he had sold shares in ConocoPhillips, Moody’s, Procter & Gamble and Johnson & Johnson, mainly to finance his railroad purchase. The shares of these companies were still likely to trade higher, he said.

Closing the letter, Mr. Buffett, ever the cheeky salesman, invited shareholders to his company’s annual meeting on May 1 in Omaha — promising to play table tennis for spectators and urging them to buy goods and services from his companies, and ending, “P.S. Come by rail.”


http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/28/business/economy/28buffett.html?em

Preparing for the Inevitable Bursting Bubble




Your Money

Preparing for the Inevitable Bursting Bubble





Published: February 26, 2010
Financial bubbles are a way of life now. They can upend your industry, send your portfolio into spasms and leave you with whiplash. And then, once you’ve recovered, the next one will hit.


 
How are you preparing for the next bubble?


Or so you might think, as a veteran of two gut-wrenching market declines and a housing bubble over the last decade. 


There’s plenty of reason to expect more surprises, given the number of hedge funds moving large amounts of money quickly around the world and the big banks making their own trades. 


Individuals, as always, may be tempted to make their own financial bets, too. Last time, they bought overpriced homes with too much borrowed money. Next time, who knows what the bubble will be? And that’s the problem, as it always is. How do you identify the next thing that will pop? Is it China? Or Greece? Or Treasury bonds? It is difficult to predict and make the right defensive (or offensive) moves at the correct moment to save or make money.


Still, if you want to better insulate yourself from bubbles — however often they may inflate — there are plenty of things you can do. Your debt levels matter, and you may want to consider a more flexible investment strategy. But perhaps most important, this is a mental exercise that begins and ends with an honest assessment of your long-term goals and how you handle the emotional jolts that come from the bubbles that burst along the way.


FIXED EXPENSES
Start with the basics. The less you have to pay toward monthly obligations, the better off you are, and that’s especially true at a time of economic disruption. You certainly wouldn’t want any bills increasing, so now’s a good time to refinance to a fixed-rate mortgage.


Whittle down student loan and credit card debt, too, and pay cash for your car if possible. “Flexibility is priceless in a time of panic,” said Lucas Hail, a financial planner with Foster & Motley in Cincinnati.


SELF-RELIANCE 
Then take a hard look at how much you should rely on promises from the government. Social Security and Medicare may not fit the traditional definition of bubbles, but that hasn’t stopped Rick Brooks from advising his financial planning clients to expect less from both programs. “Something that is not sustainable will not continue. It just can’t,” he said of Medicare.


Mr. Brooks, the vice president for investment management with Blankinship & Foster in Solana Beach, Calif., said anyone under 50 should assume that Medicare will look nothing like it does now and examine private health insurance premiums for guidance as to what may need to be spent on health care in retirement. Meanwhile, the firm advises current retirees to assume a 20 percent cut in Social Security benefits at some point.


Bedda D’Angelo, president of Fiduciary Solutions in Durham, N.C., has an equally stark outlook on long-term employment risk. If there are two adults in the household, your goal should probably be to have two incomes instead of one. “I do believe that unemployment is inevitable,” she said, adding that people who think they are going to retire at 65 should save for retirement as if they will be forced out of the work force in their mid-50s.


PORTFOLIO TACTICS
Perhaps you did what you thought you were supposed to during the last decade. You got religion and stopped trading stocks. Then, you split your assets among various low-cost mutual funds and added money regularly. And the results weren’t quite what you hoped.


Tempted to make big bets on emerging markets or short Treasury bills? You’ve landed in the middle of the debate between those who favor a more passive asset allocation and those who prefer something called tactical allocation.
The first camp sets up a practical mix of investments, according to a target level of risk, and then readjusts back to that mix every year or so.


  • They frown on the hubris of the tactical practitioners. To make a tactical approach work, they note, you need to know what the right signals will be to buy and sell everything from stocks to gold, during every future market cycle. Then, these tacticians need to have the discipline to act each and every time. This is extraordinarily hard.


The tacticians, however, believe they have no choice. 

  • “What consumers need to know is that no matter how comforting it is to believe a formulaic approach or prepackaged investment product will allow them to put their financial future on autopilot, our current and future financial environment will require advice, diligence, education and responsiveness, which takes into account strategic consideration of geopolitical and economic relationships,” as Ryan Darwish, a financial planner in Eugene, Ore., put it to me this week.


Mr. Darwish scoffed at the notion of mere bubbles and said he thought that more fundamental and far-reaching shifts were under way, like the transfer of economic power from the United States to China and other nations.

A growing number of financial planners are embracing a middle, more measured approach: If diversification across stocks, bonds and other asset classes has proved to be a good thing in most investing environments, why not diversification around investment approaches?

“I am not a financial genius, but the geniuses are even worse off because they’re anchored on one philosophy,” said David O’Brien, a financial planner in Midlothian, Va. So he and a growing number of his peers have added some strategies to their baseline portfolios aimed at losing less during bubbles while still gaining in better times. “We’re not trying to shoot for the moon,” he added.

These tactics can include managed futures, absolute return funds, merger arbitrage and other approaches that will get their own column someday.

The embrace of all this even led one investment professional I spoke with this week to express the ultimate sacrilege: It really is different this time.

Thomas C. Meyer of Meyer Capital Group in Marlton, N.J., noted that many of these alternative strategies were not even available in mutual-fund form three to four years ago. So that’s different. He’s now putting 30 percent of his clients’ equity portfolios into such investments.

The big change, however, is that the baby boomer money is getting older. People are further along in their careers than they were during the market crash in 1987, and they can’t rely on pensions as so many more near retirees could in the 1980s (while shrugging off stock market volatility). And the boomers don’t have as much time to make up lost ground, especially if they’re already retired.

“Losing less means a lot right now,” Mr. Meyer said. “So we want to suck volatility out where we can.”

MATTER OF THE MIND  
But can you live with less volatility — and the permanent end of occasional portfoliowide returns in the teens or higher? Markets run on greed and fear; bubbles expand and deflate thanks to outsize versions of each. One of the few things you can predict about bubbles is that they will test your conviction on where you sit along the fear-greed continuum. 

And once they pop, you’ll know a bit more about how your mind works than you did before.

This last downturn was severe enough that about 10 percent of Steven A. Weydert’s clients realized that they had overestimated their own risk tolerance. “Ideally, with an asset allocation, you never want to look back and say you’re sorry,” said Mr. Weydert of Bowyer, Weydert Wealth Planning Partners in Park Ridge, Ill.

So rather than trying to predict the number and type of bubbles, it may make more sense to look inward when trying to predict the future. Bob Goldman, a financial planner in Sausalito, Calif., said that clients often looked at him blankly when he asked them what it was they imagined for themselves in the future. Sometimes, they need to go home and figure out what sort of life it is that they’re saving for — and how much (or little) it might cost.

“People come in and talk about how we all know that inflation is going to explode next year,” Mr. Goldman said. “Well, we don’t all know that. We don’t know anything. But we can know something about our own lives, and there is a person we can talk to about that. A person in the mirror.”

****Select A Good Stock Market Strategy For Good Returns

Select A Good Stock Market Strategy For Good Returns

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

Stock market can be a good money maker if you know how to play the stock market correctly. A lot of people get into the stock market thinking they can make big money but then lose money by making some rash decisions.

These decisions most often are based on gut feel and not on solid research. Stock market research is the key to making money in the stock market. There are two types of stock market research that can be done in the stock market. Each of the types of research can lead to good amount of money if proper investing discipline is followed.

The two types of research that can be done is
  • the fundamental research and 
  • the technical analysis research. 
 Both of these styles are very different and require different kind of discipline and methodology while buying the stocks.
In fundamental research you research a stock which has a long term potential and then keep on accumulating this stock for future gains.
  • The time horizon for this type of investment strategy can be really long like say two years to four five years. 
  • This type of style requires the art of stock picking to be perfected in terms of their fundamental strengths. 
  • Also the attributes of this kind of a stock trader are that they are patient and have immense amount of perseverance. 
  • They know the art of stock picking and can wait for some time to pick a good stock.

In the Technical research the main emphasis is on trending and the traders thrive on the volatility of the market.
  • Based on the trending they buy and sell stocks. 
  • Stock quality is important but not to the extent as in fundamental research. 
  • Also the main aim here is to make money on a short term basis and do not hold the stock for long. 
  • They exploit the inefficiencies in the system as a tool for buying and then selling or offloading the stock once they reach a threshold profit percentage or the stock reaches a particular trend. 
  • These traders can also make money in a bearish market.

So if you are investing in the market you will need to enough discipline to follow any approach. There is no middle path and the middle path will not make you enough of profits. So make sure that you follow one strategy and make money from it. Remember patience is a virtue in any business.

New stock market for beginners need to learn about trading strategies. The author recommends stock market for beginners strategies for getting to know how to select a good stock.

Sunday, 28 February 2010

More Often Than Not, the Insiders Get It Right

Strategies
More Often Than Not, the Insiders Get It Right

By MARK HULBERT
Published: February 27, 2010

CORPORATE insiders are sending fairly positive signals about the market.

When stocks began to fall in mid-January, insiders cut back on sales of their companies’ shares and increased their purchases, according to David Coleman, editor of the Vickers Weekly Insider Report.

That adds up to at least a “neutral” stance, he wrote to clients, and implies that the recent decline won’t turn into a full-blown bear market.

But, as a market indicator, how reliable are the sell-and-buy decisions of insiders like corporate officers, directors and big shareholders?

While these insiders have a long history of correctly anticipating the market’s direction, they haven’t done all that well in the last few years. As a group, insiders failed to recognize the top of the bull market in October 2007, and didn’t anticipate the depth of the decline that followed.

After these missteps, have insiders’ trades outlived their usefulness as a basis for market timing?

Probably not, says H. Nejat Seyhun, a finance professor at the Stephen M. Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan, who has studied the behavior of corporate insiders for many years. In an interview, Professor Seyhun said that insiders were not infallible, and that their recent failures were hardly their first misreading of the market’s direction.

But since 1975, the earliest year he has studied, insiders have been correct far more often than they’ve been wrong, and this is still likely to be the case, he said.

And there is no evidence, he added, that insiders have lost their ability to tell when their own companies’ stocks are undervalued. In the late 1970s and early ’80s, for example, he found that the average stock bought by an insider outperformed the overall market by three percentage points in the 50 days after the purchase.

For the most recent 10-year period in his sample, through 2008, the comparable 50-day advantage for the insiders was 3.3 percentage points. That’s striking because it includes the bulk of the 2007-9 bear market.

Given the variability of the year-by-year results, Professor Seyhun cautions that it’s not clear whether insider purchases are more profitable today than they were 30 years ago. But, he argues, his results show that insiders by no means are losing their touch.

Though the professor’s analysis extends only through 2008, data collected by the Vickers Weekly Insider Report show that even though the insiders missed the bear market, they can nevertheless take credit for anticipating the market rebound that began a year ago. Leading up to the market’s low in March 2009, for example, insiders as a group behaved more bullishly than they had in more than a decade.

Consider an indicator that Vickers calculates each week, representing the ratio of the number of shares that insiders sold over the previous eight weeks to the number they bought. That ratio dropped to as low as 0.45 to 1 in the weeks just before the bear market ended. That was the ratio’s lowest level since December 1990, at the beginning of the great ’90s bull market.

The more recent low, of course, was followed by a 10-month rally in which the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index gained some 70 percent.

By November, in contrast, this sell-to-buy ratio had risen as high as 5.21 to 1, according to Vickers, more than double its long-term average of around 2.5 to 1. That signaled to Mr. Coleman that the market was vulnerable to a decline — and, indeed, the market did start to fall in mid-January. At its lowest point, the S.& P. 500 was down nearly 9 percent from the mid-January high.

But in recent weeks, insiders have been cutting back on sales and increasing their purchases. As a result, the sell-to-buy ratio has fallen back to 3.52 to 1, according to Vickers.

Though that is still higher than the long-term average, the trend suggests to Mr. Coleman that the recent downturn is likely to be “only a near-term correction.” He said that his firm was “increasingly optimistic about the future performance of the overall markets.”

Had the sell-to-buy ratio increased in the wake of the market’s pullback, Professor Seyhun added, we would have had reason for worry. It would have meant that insiders had no confidence that their shares would be recovering anytime soon, he said.

“Fortunately, and at least for now,” he said, “insiders are not exhibiting such eagerness” to sell.

Mark Hulbert is editor of The Hulbert Financial Digest, a service of MarketWatch. E-mail: strategy@nytimes.com.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/28/your-money/28stra.html

You don't have to be a genius to make money in the market

NAVIGATE INTERVIEW
With four sons about to enter college, Ellis Traub lost everything.  Today, he's a widely respected author, spokesman for the NAIC, and CEO of Investware.  Learn how you can avoid the same mistakes he did - and save your pocketbook a lot of trouble.
 


Part 1:A Walk: Ellis' Story
• Part 2:You Can Do It
• Part 3: Buy from a Sucker
• Part 4: Reader Questions


The Five Rules for Successful Stock Investing

The Five Rules for Successful Stock Investing: Morningstar’s Guide to Building Wealth and Winning in the Market

02.28.2010 · Posted in Stock Market

Product Description
The Five Rules for Successful Stock Investing

“By resisting both the popular tendency to use gimmicks that oversimplify securities analysis and the academic tendency to use jargon that obfuscates common sense, Pat Dorsey has written a substantial and useful book. His methodology is sound, his examples clear, and his approach timeless.”

–Christopher C. Davis Portfolio Manager and Chairman, Davis Advisors

Over the years, people from around the world have turned to Morningstar for strong, independent, and reliable advice. The Five Rules for Successful Stock Investing provides the kind of savvy financial guidance only a company like Morningstar could offer. Based on the philosophy that “investing should be fun, but not a game,” this comprehensive guide will put even the most cautious investors back on the right track by helping them pick the right stocks, find great companies, and understand the driving forces behind different industries–without paying too much for their investments.

Written by Morningstar’s Director of Stock Analysis, Pat Dorsey, The Five Rules for Successful Stock Investing includes unparalleled stock research and investment strategies covering a wide range of stock-related topics. Investors will profit from such tips as:
* How to dig into a financial statement and find hidden gold . . . and deception
* How to find great companies that will create shareholder wealth
* How to analyze every corner of the market, from banks to health care

Informative and highly accessible, The Five Rules for Successful Stock Investing should be required reading for anyone looking for the right investment opportunities in today’s ever-changing market.
  • ISBN13: 9780471686170

Never Get Started Investing – 5 Tips To Ignore Your Financial Future

Never Get Started Investing – 5 Tips To Ignore Your Financial Future
February 27th, 2010 | Author: admin


Try to be Warren Buffet(Pick Individual Stocks)

Warren Buffet can do it so darnit you can too. NOT! To do it profitably, stock picking requires that you understand complex accounting. You have to be able to pore through long corporate financial statements, analyze what you see and then decide whether the company is worth its current stock price. Sounds easy right?

There is no reason to do this. There are so many exchange-trade-funds(ETFs) and index mutual funds to choose from that allow you to avoid this complextiy. A single ETF alone can provide you with exposure to an entire sector, country, region of the world, or even a commodity or foreign currency. Why waste time trying to decipher boring financial statements. Yuck!

Listen to the Media

Go ahead,.. just try to factor in every single thing you hear or read about the economy, interest rates, or some company’s fancy new product into your portfolio. You are guaranteed to earn yourself a trip to the local looney bin. Investing doesn’t have to be complicated. Stay focused on the big picture. Choose a mix of asset classes that is right for your age and desired level of risk. Next, implement it using low cost index ETFs or index mutual funds.

Follow Stock Tips

That hot stock tip from your buddy at work. That unknown pennystock your cousin told you is going to triple in a few weeks. All aboard! You’re going to be rich soon, right? WRONG! There are many places on the web to get objective research on ETFs and mutual fund options. Try Morningstar or Yahoo! Finance, just to name a few. Avoid message boards, forums, and tips from friends and family like the plague. it’s a recipe for hurt feelings and portfolio pain.

Ignore Your 401(k) Match

Who needs free money for retirement anyway? It’s so far away. You’re young, and you’d rather spend the money on a new sports car, a leather jacket, and some hot threads for the cllub. That is oh so stupid! If you employer offers matching contributions in your 401(k) plan, get it! Make whatever the minimum contribution is to get those matching funds. It’s literally free money. No one in their right mind should say no to that.

Don’t Have a Strategy

Why have a strategy? Investing is easy, just buy-and-hold forever and you’ll be okay, right? Nope. What will you do one day when you open your account statement to find that half(or more) of your nest egg is gone. Everyone has an buying strategy. Very few people have an exit strategy. You need to have an exit strategy so that you don’t get crushed during bear markets. Having a robust trend-following strategy and the discipline to stick with it will help you keep your emotions in check. You’ll be well on your way to becoming a successful investor.

http://investmentguideblog.com/2010/02/never-get-started-investing-5-tips-to-ignore-your-financial-future/

Tips On How To Buy Stocks That Should Double And More!

Tips On How To Buy Stocks That Should Double And More!

Do you think you’re prepared to buy stocks, but you are uncertain where to start?

Nowadays it is less difficult to buy stocks that will double, triple, or more! Nevertheless, the potential for loss are still there. If you wish to buy stocks with no chance, you’ll have to continue step-by-step, and plan your investments before taking the dive.

Discover ways to pick and buy stocks without getting caught into dangerous schemes and invest in winning stocks. Here are a few no- risk tips on how to proceed.

Determine a secure strategy before you start buying stocks:

• Choose what stock you need to invest in by researching the market completely. Read stock market newspapers carefully, such as the Wall Street Journal, or browse through financial marketplace sites.

• Keep up with customer trends. If you are going to buy stocks, you will need to follow corporations and firms that are likely to influence the stock market.

• Evaluate the marketplace before buying stocks to choose winning stock picks. It’s not that difficult to find out the rate at which your stock is anticipated to mature. The trouble lies in determining whether the stock will really grow. To do this, you must find the industry’s rate of growth. Next, find out if the company you want to buy stocks from can grow up at the same rate.

• Only buy stocks from industrial sectors you’ve thoroughly investigated.

• When buying stocks, it is better to acquire low and sell high in order to invest. Prevent buying high to try and speculate, by selling higher.



How to define winning stock picks:

Getting stocks has become much easier now, as you have more choices than before. You are able to choose to buy stocks as a small investor with easy study. The thing is right now there is simply too much to pick from!

Before you purchase stocks, stop, watch and understand. In no way believe in virtually any advice until you’re certain it will work. Never allow your feelings overcome your own judgment when you’re buying stocks.

 http://www.assetinvesting.com/?p=4961

Singapore’s Wilmar says Q4 net profit up 18pc

SINGAPORE, Feb 28 – Wilmar International, the World's largest palm oil producer, reported on Sunday a better-than-expected 18 per cent rise in fourth quarter net profit as a global economic recovery drove commodities prices higher.

The company, which has a presence in 20 countries across Southeast Asia, China, India, Europe and Africa, said it would continue to seek attractive investment opportunities to support future growth.

Wilmar posted a net profit of $442 million, up from $373.6 million a year earlier, ahead analysts forecasts of $333.5 million.

The quarterly results took the full year net profit to $1.88 billion, higher than ThomsonReuters I/B/E/S estimates of $1.65 billion. – Reuters

Friday, 26 February 2010

People all over the world lost huge amounts of money in the stock exchange business.

Stock Market Strategy
25.02.2010

What do you know about the stock market business? Do you find yourself accounted enough with the information related to the stock market to start gambling? In the case, you are, we might only give you our congratulations and wish good luck and nice profit there. However, if you find it would be important for you to account yourself with some interesting facts related the stock market business we might be helpful for you. Any way, we consider it is significant to understand the fact that disproves some unauthentic information. People all over the world are talking about the great risk that we are under when we involve our assets into the stock market gambling. There were gossips that people all over the world lost huge amounts of money in the stock exchange business. It means that the people who have heard this resist involve money at the stock market. To be honest, the great deal of potential investors keeps their assets in the bank account thinking that it is the most safety place for them. Moreover, we would not dispute as for the fact that the stock market business is the risky one. Nevertheless, you should remember the fact that your bank account would never bring as much money as the stock market might do. Any way, you should also be well accounted with the information that the lost as well as wins at the stock market gambling depends on the proper organization the speculations. What might you do for it? The only thing that depends on you is to make the proper investment. In the other words, you should observe and discover all possible information that characterizes the stock exchange you are going to deal with. Whatever, you think it would be of great value for you to account yourself with the portfolio of the definite stock market. The portfolio of the stock exchange, you are going to deal with as the any other portfolio, includes all needed information that might be helpful for you to make the final decision. Nevertheless, there are the plenty of additional particularities of the stock market, which are common for the every single stock exchange. We are talking about the stability, dividends, visibility and the international exposure of the definite stock exchange. However, you might take into consideration the fact that relate the education and experience of brokers that are gambling at the very stock exchange before you would invest your money in it. Frankly speaking, the brokers are the person directly responsible for the profit and benefit of the stock market. The only broker might deal with the speculations at the stock exchange and make you win or lose additional funds.

The beauty of the stock market is that it can be used for various purposes. Even the people who are involved into retirement investing use the investing into the stock market to be a great investment tool.

So, people who are without any jokes interested in getting income with the stock market – please check out the latest stock market news.

Strategy during crisis investment: Revisiting the recent 2008 bear market

Although we may not know where the bear bottom is, buying in a down market may still lead to losing money. This is definitely true. As long as the purchase is not at market bottom, it may still result in losses for the time being. This is likely to be a short-term loss but compensated by a probable long-term gain. Even if we cannot time the market perfectly, we are definitely better off to “buy low and sell high” then to “buy high and sell low”.

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Prices fell but value intact

Presently stock prices have fallen sharply. 
  • Banks are trading at 1x book value, 
  • property stocks sold at 50% discount from net asset value, 
  • utility stocks trading at single-digit price-earnings ratio providing an earnings yield of more than 10% net of tax and 
  • there are many good stocks trading at dividend yield of 2x bank interest rates. 

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Warren Buffett, the second richest man in the world who makes his fortune from stock investment, is busy buying undervalued companies. He sees the value and he also sees prices detaching away from the intrinsic values. He said: “I haven’t the faintest idea as to whether stocks will be higher or lower a month — or a year — from now. What is likely, however, is that the market will move higher, perhaps substantially so, well before either sentiment or the economy turn up.”  

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Catching a falling knife

Some may argue that buying now is like catching a falling knife. If you are not careful, you may be hurt and suffer more losses from falling stock prices. There is no doubt that we may incur short-term losses as long as we do not buy at the bottom. On the other hand, who can determine where and when is the bottom. As long as there are still unknown events or hidden problems, an apparent bottom now may not be the eventual bottom. Since we do not have all the information in the market, it is almost impossible to guess where the bottom will be.

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In most cases, we only realise the bottom after it is over and by that time stock prices are running high with much improved market confidence. Market bottom could be there only for a short period. In most cases, market did not stay at the bottom waiting for investors. It will just move on.

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Since market moves ahead of the economy by about six months, the market bottoms out when the economy is still gloomy, news are still negative, analysts are still calling underweights and most investors are staying at the sidelines. 

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Handling something we know is definitely much easier than dealing with the unknown risks, something which hits from behind without warning. When we invest during a crisis we actually go in with our eyes open. We know it is definitely risky but we also know it could also be very profitable. If we can handle the risk, the risk-reward trade-off will be very rewarding.

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Emphasise strategies

What we need is to buy near the bottom, not right at the bottom. Investors’ frequent question now is when to buy, that is where is the bottom? Perhaps it is more intelligent to ask how much to buy now since nobody will be able to guess where is the market bottom.

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Staggered buying is preferred over bullet purchase which is taking the risk of timing the market bottom. In staggered buying, a pre-determined amount will be set aside for investment over time, say in 10 equal portions.

One common method of staggered investment is dollar cost averaging, an investment scheme made in equal portions periodically, either by a small amount monthly or larger amount quarterly. There are also several variations of staggered investment.

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Anyway, staggered purchase is a preferred method to avoid the anxiety of market timing and the mixed feeling of fear of further downside and worry of missing the market rebound. As long as the market is undervalued, the strategy of staggered investment ensures that investors are in and are benefiting from the undervalued market. 

http://klsecounters.blogspot.com/2008/11/strategy-during-crisis-investment.html    

A check-list to evaluate your selling of stocks.

Why are you considering a sale?

http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=tHiylpG5cLz_2kpZc5W_iZA&output=html

Relating Price of Stock to its Earnings and Earnings Growth Rate

Here is an interesting way to think about your stock.  What do you think will be the price of Company A next year or 5 years from now? 

The obvious answer is no one knows.

However, one can in general, agree that if Company A grows its earnings, this will be reflected in a higher price of its stock.  Therefore to answer the question objectively, one would need to know exactly what will be company A's earnings for next year and in 5 years time.  As this is impossible, one can only guess or have a good 'hunch' about its future earnings.  Accordingly, there will always a speculative element in your estimates of future earnings when you invest in a stock.

Nevertheless, price of a stock is intimately linked to earnings.  When the company increases its earnings, this will be reflected in its share price also increasing.  However, short term volatility in price can be large and the price correlation with the earnings likewise volatile over the short term.  It is important for long term investors to know that the correlation between price and earnings over the long term is indeed very strong.  This relationship is to be exploited by the intelligent investors.

Therefore, when asked if the share price of Company A will double in 5 years from today, assuming that its present price is fair price, an appropriate answer might be be, definitely yes, IF it can double its earnings in 5 years.

For earnings to double in 5 years, the EARNINGS GROWTH RATE should be about 15% per year over these 5 years.  The company growing its earnings at lower than 15% per year is less likely to double its share price in 5 years from its fair price.  (Its share price may double at lower earnings growth rate if it started off severely undervalued.)   For example, a company with earnings growing at 7% per year is anticipated to see its share price doubled in 10 years.

On the other hand, a company growing its earnings at greater than 15% per year sustainably, will see its share price doubling in 5 years.  However, a company growing at high growth rates carries with it certain risks related to this fast growth.   Another paradox of a high earnings growth company is that its share price tends to be high due to popularity of the company amongst investors.  Therefore, though it may be a great company, it may not be a great investment if bought at very high price.

For those aiming for high returns in their investing, focusing on the quality of earnings and earnings growth (besides other business characteristics, risks and fundamentals) of a company, is important.  Is the company able to grow its business and earnings sustainably over many years?

Thursday, 25 February 2010

Malaysia's Maxis 2009 profit misses estimate

Thu Feb 25, 2010 5:19pm

* Q4 net profit 503 mln rgt vs 668 mln rgt Nomura estimate

* FY net profit 1.6 bln rgt vs 2.4 bln rgt consensus estimate

* Says optimistic about Malaysian telecoms market

* Shares end up 0.6 pct at 5.52 ringgit ahead of results



KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 25 (Reuters) - Malaysia's leading mobile phone service provider Maxis Berhad (MXSC.KL: Quote, Profile, Research) reported lower quarterly profits on Thursday, hit by higher finance charges and expenses related to its listing last November.

Maxis, which debuted on the stock exchange as Southeast Asia's biggest initial public offering last year, said it is optimistic about growth in the telecommunications market after adding 556,000 new subscriptions in the fourth quarter.

"Despite the entry of a number of new players in the market, and maintaining a large subscription base, the company recorded another year of over 50 percent EBITDA margin," said Sandip Das, Maxis' chief executive officer. Maxis reported October-December net profit of 503 million ringgit ($147.8 million) against 615 million ringgit in the third quarter.

Analysts generally do not provide quarterly earnings forecasts for Malaysian companies, but Nomura put its estimate for Maxis' fourth-quarter net profit at 668 million ringgit.

The company made a net profit of 1.6 billion ringgit for the full year, missing the 2.4 billion ringgit consensus estimate of 19 analysts tracked by Thomson Reuters StarMine.

Maxis is valued at 41.2 billion ringgit ($12.1 billion), making it the biggest mobile provider by market capitalisation in Malaysia, the second most developed mobile market in Southeast Asia after Singapore.

It competes with smaller rivals like Axiata (AXIA.KL: Quote, Profile, Research) and DiGi (DSOM.KL: Quote, Profile, Research) and controls 40 percent of the local mobile phone market.

Axiata, Malaysia's No.2 mobile telecoms provider, posted better-than-expected 2009 net profit on Wednesday but said competition was heating up in its key markets. [nSGE61M079]

Eleven out of 21 analysts tracked by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S have "hold" ratings on Maxis, with six calling it a "buy" or "strong buy", two rating it a "sell" and two others rating it an "underperform".

Shares of Maxis were up 3 percent so far this year, outperforming the 0.3 percent gain in the broader market index .

($1=3.403 Malaysian Ringgit)

(Reporting by Julie Goh; Editing by Soo Ai Peng)

http://in.reuters.com/article/technology-media-telco-SP/idINSGE61M07O20100225?sp=true

Stock Valuation Model – 3 Simple Techniques to Value Stock

Stock valuation models are methods to value stocks. Everybody knows the stock price but only few understand how much it worth and the other investors do not even care. The reason can be due to different strategies, do not know how to value stock or just do not care how much it worth as long as the price increase the next day. If you are one of the intelligent investors, consider these valuation models in your next purchase.

Discounted Cash Flow (DCF)
This is probably the most common model that you ever heard when it comes to stock valuation. However, I found it a bit tough to do it. Simply because the discounted cash flow model have to consider revenue growth and the escalated cost at the same time, which can be too difficult to estimate and forecast as an outside investor.

Nevertheless, you can use this method in valuing stock by projecting future cash flow; from the sales and costs, and discount back to current value with Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC).

Dividend Discount Model (DD)
This model suits best for income investors. The idea is to project future dividend distribution based on the average historical dividend payout ratio and discount it back to present value. Although this is the simplest among all, it works best for high dividend yield stocks.

Nonetheless, the stocks must have very strong business performances that can guarantee the dividend payments 10 years down the road. And normally, penny stocks cannot be evaluated this way.


Earnings Growth Model (EG)
This is my favourite method as it is very practical and easy to do. Initially, I project its future earnings using constant or variable growth rate. Either constant or variable growth rate is depends on the expectation of its business performance within that period. Often than not, I normally use the historical business performance as a baseline provided its fundamental value remain intact. Then, I discount the future earnings with the expected return on investment (ROI).

I found this model as highly valuable since the stock price is easily reflected by its earnings. For example, the stock price will reflect its earnings and earnings growth. Assuming the P/E is the same throughout the year, you can expect the stock price to increase the same rate as the company’s growth rate.

So, before buying anymore shares in the future, put some efforts to value the stock. You can reduce the risk of losing money significantly if you buy the stock at much cheaper price than its intrinsic value.


http://mystocks.netai.net/4665/stock-valuation-model-3-simple-techniques-to-value-stock/

Lessons Learned From Investing Genius Peter Lynch

Lessons Learned From Investing Genius Peter Lynch

by: Wade Slome February 24, 2010

Those readers who have frequented my Investing Caffeine site are familiar with the numerous profiles on professional investors of both current and prior periods (See Profiles). Many of the individuals described have a tremendous track record of success, while others have a tremendous ability of making outrageous forecasts. I have covered both. Regardless, much can be learned from the successes and failures by mirroring the behavior of the greats, not much different than modeling your golf swing after Tiger Woods (O.K., since Tiger is out of favor right now, let’s say Phil Mickelson). My investment swing borrows techniques and tips from many great investors, but Peter Lynch (ex-Fidelity fund manager), probably more than any icon, has had the most influence on my investing philosophy and career as any investor. His breadth of knowledge and versatility across styles has allowed him to compile a record that few, if any, could match – outside perhaps the great Warren Buffett.

Consider that Lynch’s Magellan fund averaged +29% per year from 1977 – 1990 (almost doubling the return of the S&P 500 index for that period). In 1977, the obscure Magellan Fund started with about $20 million, and by Lynch's retirement the fund grew to approximately $14 billion. Cynics believed that Magellan was too big to adequately perform at $1 billion, $2B, $3B, $5B and then $10B, but Lynch ultimately silenced the critics. Despite the fund’s gargantuan size, over the final five years of Lynch’s tenure, Magellan outperformed 99.5% of all other funds, according to Barron’s. How did Magellan investors fare in the period under Lynch’s watch? A $10,000 investment initiated when he took the helm would have grown to roughly $280,00 by the day he retired. Not too shabby.

Background

Lynch graduated from Boston College in 1965 and earned a Master of Business Administration from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania in 1968. Like the previously mentioned Warren Buffett, Peter Lynch shared his knowledge with the investing masses through his writings, including his two seminal books One Up on Wall Street and Beating the Street. Subsequently, Lynch authored Learn to Earn, a book targeted at younger, novice investors. Regardless, the ideas and lessons from his writings, including contributing author to Worth magazine, are still transferrable to investors across a broad spectrum of skill levels, even today.

The Lessons of Lynch

Although Lynch has left enough financially rich content to write a full-blown textbook, I will limit the meat of this article to lessons and quotations coming directly from the horse’s mouth. Here is a selective list of gems Lynch has shared with investors over the years:

Buy within Your Comfort Zone: Lynch simply urges investors to “Buy what you know.” In similar fashion to Warren Buffett, who stuck to investing in stocks within his “circle of competence,” Lynch focused on investments he understood or on industries he felt he had an edge over others. Perhaps if investors would have heeded this advice, the leveraged, toxic derivative debacle occurring over previous years could have been avoided.

Do Your Homework: Building the conviction to ride through equity market volatility requires rigorous homework. Lynch adds,

A company does not tell you to buy it, there is always something to worry about. There are always respected investors that say you are wrong. You have to know the story better than they do, and have faith in what you know.

Price Follows Earnings: Investing is often unnecessarily made complicated. Lynch fundamentally believes stock prices will follow the long-term trajectory of earnings growth. He makes the point that

People may bet on hourly wiggles of the market, but it’s the earnings that waggle the wiggle long term.

In a publically attended group meeting, Michael Dell, CEO of Dell Inc. (DELL), asked Peter Lynch about the direction of Dell’s future stock price. Lynch’s answer:


If your earnings are higher in 5 years, your stock will be higher.

Maybe Dell’s price decline over the last five years can be attributed to its earnings decline over the same period? It’s no surprise that Hewlett-Packard’s (HPQ) dramatic stock price outperformance (relative to Dell) has something to do with the more than doubling of HP’s earnings over the same time frame.

Valuation & Price Declines:

People concentrate too much on the P (Price), but the E (Earnings) really makes the difference.

In a nutshell, Lynch believes valuation metrics play an important role, but long-term earnings growth will have a larger impact on future stock price appreciation.

Two Key Stock Questions: 1) “Is the stock still attractively priced relative to earnings?” and 2) “What is happening in the company to make the earnings go up?” Improving fundamentals at an attractive price are key components to Lynch’s investing strategy.

Lynch on Buffett: Lynch was given an opportunity to write the foreword in Buffett’s biography, The Warren Buffett Way. Lynch did not believe in “pulling out flowers and watering the weeds,” or in other words, selling winners and buying losers. In highlighting this weed-flower concept, Lynch said this about Buffett:

He purchased over $1 billion of Coca-Cola (KO) in 1988 and 1989 after the stock had risen over fivefold the prior six years and over five-hundredfold the previous sixty years. He made four times his money in three years and plans to make a lot more the next five, ten, and twenty years with Coke.

Hammering home the idea that a few good stocks a decade can make an investment career, Lynch had this to say about Buffett:

Warren states that twelve investments decisions in his forty year career have made all the difference.

You Don’t Need Perfect Batting Average: In order to significantly outperform the market, investors need not generate near perfect results. According to Lynch,

If you’re terrific in this business, you’re right six times out of 10 – I’ve had stocks go from $11 to 7 cents (American Intl Airways).

Here is one recipe Lynch shares with others on how to beat the market:

All you have to do really is find the best hundred stocks in the S&P 500 and find another few hundred outside the S&P 500 to beat the market.

The Critical Element of Patience: With the explosion of information, expansion of the internet age, and the reduction of trading costs has come the itchy trading finger. This hasty investment principle runs contrary to Lynch’s core beliefs. Here’s what he had to say regarding the importance of a steady investment hand:

*“In my investing career, the best gains usually have come in the third or fourth year, not in the third or fourth week or the third or fourth month.”

*“Whatever method you use to pick stocks or stock mutual funds, your ultimate success or failure will depend on your ability to ignore the worries of the world long enough to allow your investments to succeed.”

*“Often, there is no correlation between the success of a company’s operations and the success of its stock over a few months or even a few years. In the long term, there is a 100% correlation between the success of a company and the success of its stock. It pays to be patient, and to own successful companies.”

*“The key to making money in stocks is not to get scared out of them.”

Bear Market Beliefs:

I’m always more depressed by an overpriced market in which many stocks are hitting new highs every day than by a beaten-down market in a recession,

says Lynch. The media responds in exactly the opposite manner – bear markets lead to an inundation of headlines driven by panic-based fear. Lynch shares a similar sentiment to Warren Buffett when it comes to holding a glass half full view in bear markets.

Market Worries: Is worrying about market concerns worth the stress? Not according to Lynch. His belief:

I’ve always said if you spend 13 minutes a year on economics, you’ve wasted 10 minutes.

Just this last March, Lynch used history to drive home his views:

We’ve had 11 recessions since World War II and we’ve had a perfect score — 11 recoveries. There are a lot of natural cushions in the economy now that weren’t there in the 1930s. They keep things from getting out of control. We have the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation [which insures bank deposits]. We have social security. We have pensions. We have two-person, working families. We have unemployment payments. And we have a Federal Reserve with a brain.

Thoughts on Cyclicals: Lynch divided his portfolio into several buckets, and cyclical stocks occupied one of the buckets.

Cyclicals are like blackjack: stay in the game too long and it’s bound to take all your profit,

Lynch emphasized.

Selling Discipline: The rationale behind Lynch’s selling discipline is straightforward – here are some of his thoughts on the subject:

*“When the fundamentals change, sell your mistakes.”

*“Write down why you own a stock and sell it if the reason isn’t true anymore.”

*“Sell a stock because the company’s fundamentals deteriorate, not because the sky is falling.”

Distilling the genius of an investing legend like Peter Lynch down to a single article is not only a grueling challenge, but it also cannot bring complete justice to the vast accomplishments of this incredible investment legend. Nonetheless, his record should be meticulously studied in hopes of adding jewels of investment knowledge to the repertoires of all investors. If delving into the head of this investing mastermind can provide access to even a fraction of his vast knowledge pool, then we can all benefit by adding a slice of greatness to our investment portfolios.


http://seekingalpha.com/article/190389-lessons-learned-from-investing-genius-peter-lynch

Stock Market Strategy For Big Profits

Stock Market Strategy For Big Profits

by Gary E Kerkow

Article Source: www.linkroll.com - Stock Market Strategy For Big Profits

Buying the best growth stocks at the right time certainly can make you decent money in the stock market. If you want to make really big profits, adding to a winning position at the right time can achieve this for you.

First, if you have any losing stocks, sell them. This will give you extra cash to buy more shares of your best stocks at a proper strategic point.

Its always wise to only make new stock purchases or add shares to winning stocks when the general market direction is in a confirmed uptrend. This is because approximately 75% of all stocks follow the current general market direction.

Big institutional stock market participants such as mutual funds, pension funds and banks like to add shares to their winning stocks when they retreat back to their 50 day moving average line. This is usually done after the stock makes a solid price advance,then retreats to the 50 day line. You can use this same strategy with your best winning stocks. Just make sure your stock bounces off the 50 day line and starts advancing again. You don't want your stock to break below the 50 day line, especially on heavy volume.

Always remember to implement good money management when trading or investing. Cut your losses short and let your profits ride. That is the golden rule of trading. I suggest to never let your stock go down more than 10% from your original buying point. If you bought a stock at 40 dollars per share, you should set a stop loss at 36 dollars to protect your trading capital. You can always move the stop higher as the price of your stock advances.