Keep INVESTING Simple and Safe (KISS) ****Investment Philosophy, Strategy and various Valuation Methods**** The same forces that bring risk into investing in the stock market also make possible the large gains many investors enjoy. It’s true that the fluctuations in the market make for losses as well as gains but if you have a proven strategy and stick with it over the long term you will be a winner!****Warren Buffett: Rule No. 1 - Never lose money. Rule No. 2 - Never forget Rule No. 1.
Tuesday, 28 June 2011
Monday, 27 June 2011
Visual Analysis of Sales, PTP and EPS lines in Take Stock (Ellis Traub).
It might make it easier if you consider the Visual Analysis one piece at a time.
Does the Sales line look straight? That means Sales growth is pretty consistent; usually what we'd prefer to see.
Is the Sales line getting steeper recently? That indicates more rapid Sales growth, but is unusual. Generally Sales growth slows as a company gets older and bigger. If there is a sudden large upward "jag" in Sales that often indicates a large acquisition. A large acquisition is a situation that tends to make the rest of the Visual Analysis harder to interpret and the future harder to project.
Is the Sales line getting less steep recently? That indicates slowing Sales growth. Slowing Sales growth is "normal" as a company gets larger. However, as an investor, too much slowing that persists over time is not a good sign. BBBY is a classic example of this.
The gap between the PTP and Sales lines shows exactly the same thing as SSG section 2A (pre-tax profit margins). If the gap changes enough that you notice it on the Visual Analysis, then PTP margins probably changed significantly.
With Sales above PTP on the graph, a smaller gap is the same thing as higher PTP margins, which is a good thing. More of every dollar of Sales is being kept as profit (less of every dollar of Sales is being spent on expenses). A larger gap is the same as lower PTP margins (not so good).
Variation in PTP margins is normal so look for a trend. Seeing changes in PTP margins before they show up on the Visual Analysis or SSG section 2A is perhaps the primary reason for looking at PERT-A. Remember that PERT-A tells you the same story as the Visual Analysis, just from a different point of view. If you think they're telling different stories, you're reading at least one of them wrong (or there is a data error).
The gap between the EPS and PTP lines shows the combined effect of changes in tax rate and shares. Anything that changes the size of this gap is unsustainable. If the gap changes enough that you notice it on the Visual Analysis, the underlying change (taxes and/or shares and/or other things) is probably significant. So, if the EPS line is getting steeper but the PTP line isn't following suit, don't expect that situation to continue. Without further investigation, It's generally not possible to know just what things caused a change in the size of this gap (and just how good or bad those things might be).
Remember that when the Sales line changes direction (i.e., isn't straight), the PTP and EPS lines generally also change direction in about the same way. If they don't, that's a warning that you should investigate the cause. If the gap between Sales and PTP lines changes noticably, investigate why PTP margins changed. If the gap between PTP and EPS lines changes noticably, investigate why taxes and/or shares (and/or something else below PTP on the income statement) changed
-Jim Thomas
----
http://community.compuserve.com/n/pfx/forum.aspx?msg=32627.1&nav=messages&webtag=ws-naic
Does the Sales line look straight? That means Sales growth is pretty consistent; usually what we'd prefer to see.
Is the Sales line getting steeper recently? That indicates more rapid Sales growth, but is unusual. Generally Sales growth slows as a company gets older and bigger. If there is a sudden large upward "jag" in Sales that often indicates a large acquisition. A large acquisition is a situation that tends to make the rest of the Visual Analysis harder to interpret and the future harder to project.
Is the Sales line getting less steep recently? That indicates slowing Sales growth. Slowing Sales growth is "normal" as a company gets larger. However, as an investor, too much slowing that persists over time is not a good sign. BBBY is a classic example of this.
The gap between the PTP and Sales lines shows exactly the same thing as SSG section 2A (pre-tax profit margins). If the gap changes enough that you notice it on the Visual Analysis, then PTP margins probably changed significantly.
With Sales above PTP on the graph, a smaller gap is the same thing as higher PTP margins, which is a good thing. More of every dollar of Sales is being kept as profit (less of every dollar of Sales is being spent on expenses). A larger gap is the same as lower PTP margins (not so good).
Variation in PTP margins is normal so look for a trend. Seeing changes in PTP margins before they show up on the Visual Analysis or SSG section 2A is perhaps the primary reason for looking at PERT-A. Remember that PERT-A tells you the same story as the Visual Analysis, just from a different point of view. If you think they're telling different stories, you're reading at least one of them wrong (or there is a data error).
The gap between the EPS and PTP lines shows the combined effect of changes in tax rate and shares. Anything that changes the size of this gap is unsustainable. If the gap changes enough that you notice it on the Visual Analysis, the underlying change (taxes and/or shares and/or other things) is probably significant. So, if the EPS line is getting steeper but the PTP line isn't following suit, don't expect that situation to continue. Without further investigation, It's generally not possible to know just what things caused a change in the size of this gap (and just how good or bad those things might be).
Remember that when the Sales line changes direction (i.e., isn't straight), the PTP and EPS lines generally also change direction in about the same way. If they don't, that's a warning that you should investigate the cause. If the gap between Sales and PTP lines changes noticably, investigate why PTP margins changed. If the gap between PTP and EPS lines changes noticably, investigate why taxes and/or shares (and/or something else below PTP on the income statement) changed
-Jim Thomas
----
I have an article in my BI binder from BI magazine, dated May 2006. The title is, "Introduction to the income statement" and it is written by Ann Cuneaz. In it, she talks about "reading the graph" from SSG section I, visual analysis. Most people align the graphs in the same order as on an income statement: Sales on top, followed by pre-tax profit (PTP)and earnings per share (EPS). The gap between Sales and PTP represents expenses; the gap between PTP and EPS represents both taxes & number of shares. If we only concern ourselves with graphs that have fairly straight lines for each of these three items, then we have seven different scenarios to consider:
Bob Mann |
http://community.compuserve.com/n/pfx/forum.aspx?msg=32627.1&nav=messages&webtag=ws-naic
Thursday, 23 June 2011
How to forecast a stock-market top
4/19/2011 2:43 PM ET.
By Mark Hulbert, MarketWatch.
How to forecast a stock-market top
A Wall Street research firm is tracking four key indicators for signs that the bull market is on its last legs. Here's what to look for.
How will we know when the bull market is coming to an end?
This is a timely question, given the extraordinary crosscurrents buffeting the market. Some advisers contend that the bull is alive and well, while others assert that the bull is living on borrowed time.
For insight, I turned to Ned Davis Research, the quantitative research firm, which monitors a basket of indicators to help determine when a market top is imminent.
Nearly two years ago I turned to the company for help in answering this very question. At the time, many were convinced the rally was but a bear-market correction. But Ned Davis, upon analyzing various indicators of a potential top, concluded that the bull market had further to go.
What does Davis' firm say now?
Ed Clissold, the global equity strategist at the company, said there are worrisome signs on the horizon, but the company is giving the bull the benefit of the doubt.
In assessing when the bull might end, Clissold said, the company has identified four major categories:
Valuation
Though stock valuations aren't at such an extreme as to cause this category of indicators to flash a sell signal, there are causes for concern, Clissold said.
One of these, according to a letter Ned Davis sent last week to institutional clients, is that "profit margins on the S&P are at record highs. . . . Using data back to 1954, very high profit margins, on average, have not been bullish for stocks, because the series is very mean-reverting."
Davis also was concerned with the cyclically adjusted P/E ratio made famous by Yale professor Robert Shiller.
At the same time, however, Clissold referred to other valuation measures that suggest stocks are not particularly expensive, such as the P/E ratio based on 12-month earnings (as opposed to the 10-year average Shiller prefers).
All in all, a split decision on valuation. As Davis wrote earlier this week: "I can certainly understand the bullish stance of those who argue stocks are still reasonably priced, based upon current earnings. Yet, I don't think that presents a complete picture of potential risks. I am just providing the evidence for clients to make their own decisions."
Sentiment
This is the one category of the four that, in Davis' opinion, comes closest to yelling "sell."
Davis maintains two sentiment indices, one of which is well into the zone of excessive optimism; the other borders on that zone.
On contrarian grounds, that is worrisome.
Market breadth
This category is perhaps the most bullish, according to Davis.
"One of the key characteristics of a major top in the stock market is considerable divergences," Davis wrote, and there are few signs of that.
Davis tracks the "High Low Logic Index," which represents the lesser of new 52-week highs or new 52-week lows as a percentage of all issues traded. The index traces its roots to a metric created three decades ago by Norman Fosback.
In his book "Stock Market Logic," Fosback describes the rationale behind the metric: "Under normal conditions, either a substantial number of stocks establish new annual highs or a large number set new lows -- but not both.
"As the (High Low) Logic Index is the lesser of the two percentages, high readings are therefore difficult to achieve," Fosback continued. "When the Index attains a high level, it indicates that the market is undergoing a period of extreme divergence. . . . Such divergence is not usually conducive to future rising stock prices."
Currently, according to Davis, the index is bullish, at 2.4%. At the stock market top prior to the 2007-2009 bear market, it rose to close to 6%. The only other time in recent decades the index got this high was in early 2000, right before the popping of the Internet bubble.
Interest rates
This category, like valuation, is providing some causes for concern, according to Clissold, but is not yet bearish.
The concerns derive from higher rates, which have caused some of the firm's interest-rate-trend indicators to enter bearish territory. However, Clissold said he doesn't think that these concerns yet amount to a "screaming sell signal."
One straw in the wind to look out for, he said, is the 10-year Treasury yield rising to around 4.25% -- three quarters of a percentage point above its current level.
Summing up the situation
The bottom line, according to Davis?
"There are a number of things about this market that concern me as a risk manager," he said. Still, all things considered, for now, he "leans bullish."
By Mark Hulbert, MarketWatch.
How to forecast a stock-market top
A Wall Street research firm is tracking four key indicators for signs that the bull market is on its last legs. Here's what to look for.
How will we know when the bull market is coming to an end?
This is a timely question, given the extraordinary crosscurrents buffeting the market. Some advisers contend that the bull is alive and well, while others assert that the bull is living on borrowed time.
For insight, I turned to Ned Davis Research, the quantitative research firm, which monitors a basket of indicators to help determine when a market top is imminent.
Nearly two years ago I turned to the company for help in answering this very question. At the time, many were convinced the rally was but a bear-market correction. But Ned Davis, upon analyzing various indicators of a potential top, concluded that the bull market had further to go.
What does Davis' firm say now?
Ed Clissold, the global equity strategist at the company, said there are worrisome signs on the horizon, but the company is giving the bull the benefit of the doubt.
In assessing when the bull might end, Clissold said, the company has identified four major categories:
Valuation
Though stock valuations aren't at such an extreme as to cause this category of indicators to flash a sell signal, there are causes for concern, Clissold said.
One of these, according to a letter Ned Davis sent last week to institutional clients, is that "profit margins on the S&P are at record highs. . . . Using data back to 1954, very high profit margins, on average, have not been bullish for stocks, because the series is very mean-reverting."
Davis also was concerned with the cyclically adjusted P/E ratio made famous by Yale professor Robert Shiller.
At the same time, however, Clissold referred to other valuation measures that suggest stocks are not particularly expensive, such as the P/E ratio based on 12-month earnings (as opposed to the 10-year average Shiller prefers).
All in all, a split decision on valuation. As Davis wrote earlier this week: "I can certainly understand the bullish stance of those who argue stocks are still reasonably priced, based upon current earnings. Yet, I don't think that presents a complete picture of potential risks. I am just providing the evidence for clients to make their own decisions."
Sentiment
This is the one category of the four that, in Davis' opinion, comes closest to yelling "sell."
Davis maintains two sentiment indices, one of which is well into the zone of excessive optimism; the other borders on that zone.
On contrarian grounds, that is worrisome.
Market breadth
This category is perhaps the most bullish, according to Davis.
"One of the key characteristics of a major top in the stock market is considerable divergences," Davis wrote, and there are few signs of that.
Davis tracks the "High Low Logic Index," which represents the lesser of new 52-week highs or new 52-week lows as a percentage of all issues traded. The index traces its roots to a metric created three decades ago by Norman Fosback.
In his book "Stock Market Logic," Fosback describes the rationale behind the metric: "Under normal conditions, either a substantial number of stocks establish new annual highs or a large number set new lows -- but not both.
"As the (High Low) Logic Index is the lesser of the two percentages, high readings are therefore difficult to achieve," Fosback continued. "When the Index attains a high level, it indicates that the market is undergoing a period of extreme divergence. . . . Such divergence is not usually conducive to future rising stock prices."
Currently, according to Davis, the index is bullish, at 2.4%. At the stock market top prior to the 2007-2009 bear market, it rose to close to 6%. The only other time in recent decades the index got this high was in early 2000, right before the popping of the Internet bubble.
Interest rates
This category, like valuation, is providing some causes for concern, according to Clissold, but is not yet bearish.
The concerns derive from higher rates, which have caused some of the firm's interest-rate-trend indicators to enter bearish territory. However, Clissold said he doesn't think that these concerns yet amount to a "screaming sell signal."
One straw in the wind to look out for, he said, is the 10-year Treasury yield rising to around 4.25% -- three quarters of a percentage point above its current level.
Summing up the situation
The bottom line, according to Davis?
"There are a number of things about this market that concern me as a risk manager," he said. Still, all things considered, for now, he "leans bullish."
7 keys to mistake-free investing
6/15/2011 11:55 AM ET.
By U.S. News & World Report
7 keys to mistake-free investing
In a survey, wealthy investors acknowledge a tendency to let emotions drive investment decisions. Plus: Why women are better at long-term investing.
Overcoming emotional and personality-driven investing mistakes is widely recommended but hard to achieve. One of the keys to success is recognizing that a problem exists and devising mechanisms to control or limit bad decisions.
According to a recent global survey by Barclays Wealth, a large percentage of wealthy investors not only realize their tendency to make decisions based on emotions but would welcome help in dealing with the problem.
The report, "Risk and Rules: The Role of Control in Financial Decision Making," also revealed an extensive set of control strategies that people use to limit bad decisions. The most successful at doing so happen to be the wealthiest, although there could be other factors contributing to high-wealth achievement.
Psychology of successful investors
Perhaps the most interesting finding of the research involved what the report called "the trading paradox," said Greg Davies, who directs Barclays Wealth's work in behavioral and quantitative finance. Many wealthy investors believe they need to trade frequently to maximize investment gains. At the same time, wealthy investors were most likely to believe their overall returns suffered because they traded too much.
"Almost 50% of traders who believe you have to trade often to do well think they overdo it," the report said.
"Failures of rationality," as the report called them, were seen in four types of investment decisions:
1. Failing to see the big picture. Considering decisions in isolation and not including their impact on an entire portfolio was cited as a problem.
Consequence: Investing too much in a single asset class, industry or geographic market because you know a lot about it and are comfortable with such decisions.
2. Using a short-term decision horizon. Ignoring the appropriate goal of long-term wealth accumulation in favor of short-term returns hindered investors.
Consequence: Statistically, losses are more likely in the short run. Because people are twice as sensitive to losses as to gains -- a behavioral phenomenon known as "myopic loss aversion" -- their willingness to take short-term risks is too low and they often make the wrong investment decisions.
3. Buying high and selling low. Investors tend to do what's comfortable amid bullish or bearish market conditions.
Consequence: Buying when markets are high or selling when markets are low is a risky strategy that fails to take advantage of market opportunities. A buy-and-hold strategy is superior.
4. Trading too frequently. Multiple emotional and personality traits produce an irrational bias toward action.
Consequence: Investment costs are higher, and the frequency of other poor decisions is increased.
"This lack of control over our emotions is not an abstract problem," the Barclays study said, and "it can have tangible, detrimental effects on both investor satisfaction and performance."
Over the past two decades, the average equity investor earned 3.8% a year, while the Standard & Poor's 500 Index ($INX) returned 9.1% annually, according to a recent Dalbar study into investor behavior.
The report also found substantial improvement in investment decisions as people aged. Older investors were much less likely to trade too often, try to time the market or base investments on short-term considerations.
They were also more satisfied with their financial situation.
Barclays Wealth also found that women are better long-term investors than men, who tend to take more risks and are more likely to favor frequent trading and efforts to time the market.
"Women tend to have lower composure and a greater desire for financial self-control, which is associated with a desire to use self-control strategies," the report said.
"Women are also more likely to believe that these strategies are effective." As a consequence, women tended to trade less and earn higher returns over time.
Barclays Wealth sponsored surveys of more than 2,000 people from 20 countries who had at least $1.5 million in investment assets, including 200 with at least $15 million. These investors may not have known the details of their emotional flaws as documented by behavioral economists. But they were aware that they were prone to bad decisions and were open to getting help.
The report identified seven self-control strategies to help people counter their tendencies to make bad decisions. The use of these strategies was not limited to investments and often included other behaviors, such as big-ticket purchases or dieting and exercise.
Here are the seven strategies and their application to financial decisions:
1. Limit the options. Purchase illiquid investments to avoid the urge to sell investments when the market is falling.
2. Avoidance. Avoid information about how the market or portfolio is performing in order to stick to a long-term investment strategy.
3. Rules. Establish and use rules to help make better financial decisions, such as spend only out of income and never out of capital.
4. Deadlines. Set financial deadlines. For example, aim to save a certain amount of money by the end of the year.
5. Cool off. Wait a few days after making a big financial decision before executing it.
6. Delegation. Delegate financial decisions to others, such as allowing an investment adviser to manage your portfolio.
7. Other people. Use other people to help reach financial goals. An example would be meeting with a financial adviser to make and execute a financial plan.
This article was reported by Philip Moeller for U.S. News & World Report.
By U.S. News & World Report
7 keys to mistake-free investing
In a survey, wealthy investors acknowledge a tendency to let emotions drive investment decisions. Plus: Why women are better at long-term investing.
Overcoming emotional and personality-driven investing mistakes is widely recommended but hard to achieve. One of the keys to success is recognizing that a problem exists and devising mechanisms to control or limit bad decisions.
According to a recent global survey by Barclays Wealth, a large percentage of wealthy investors not only realize their tendency to make decisions based on emotions but would welcome help in dealing with the problem.
The report, "Risk and Rules: The Role of Control in Financial Decision Making," also revealed an extensive set of control strategies that people use to limit bad decisions. The most successful at doing so happen to be the wealthiest, although there could be other factors contributing to high-wealth achievement.
Psychology of successful investors
Perhaps the most interesting finding of the research involved what the report called "the trading paradox," said Greg Davies, who directs Barclays Wealth's work in behavioral and quantitative finance. Many wealthy investors believe they need to trade frequently to maximize investment gains. At the same time, wealthy investors were most likely to believe their overall returns suffered because they traded too much.
"Almost 50% of traders who believe you have to trade often to do well think they overdo it," the report said.
"Failures of rationality," as the report called them, were seen in four types of investment decisions:
1. Failing to see the big picture. Considering decisions in isolation and not including their impact on an entire portfolio was cited as a problem.
Consequence: Investing too much in a single asset class, industry or geographic market because you know a lot about it and are comfortable with such decisions.
2. Using a short-term decision horizon. Ignoring the appropriate goal of long-term wealth accumulation in favor of short-term returns hindered investors.
Consequence: Statistically, losses are more likely in the short run. Because people are twice as sensitive to losses as to gains -- a behavioral phenomenon known as "myopic loss aversion" -- their willingness to take short-term risks is too low and they often make the wrong investment decisions.
3. Buying high and selling low. Investors tend to do what's comfortable amid bullish or bearish market conditions.
Consequence: Buying when markets are high or selling when markets are low is a risky strategy that fails to take advantage of market opportunities. A buy-and-hold strategy is superior.
4. Trading too frequently. Multiple emotional and personality traits produce an irrational bias toward action.
Consequence: Investment costs are higher, and the frequency of other poor decisions is increased.
"This lack of control over our emotions is not an abstract problem," the Barclays study said, and "it can have tangible, detrimental effects on both investor satisfaction and performance."
Over the past two decades, the average equity investor earned 3.8% a year, while the Standard & Poor's 500 Index ($INX) returned 9.1% annually, according to a recent Dalbar study into investor behavior.
The report also found substantial improvement in investment decisions as people aged. Older investors were much less likely to trade too often, try to time the market or base investments on short-term considerations.
They were also more satisfied with their financial situation.
Barclays Wealth also found that women are better long-term investors than men, who tend to take more risks and are more likely to favor frequent trading and efforts to time the market.
"Women tend to have lower composure and a greater desire for financial self-control, which is associated with a desire to use self-control strategies," the report said.
"Women are also more likely to believe that these strategies are effective." As a consequence, women tended to trade less and earn higher returns over time.
Barclays Wealth sponsored surveys of more than 2,000 people from 20 countries who had at least $1.5 million in investment assets, including 200 with at least $15 million. These investors may not have known the details of their emotional flaws as documented by behavioral economists. But they were aware that they were prone to bad decisions and were open to getting help.
The report identified seven self-control strategies to help people counter their tendencies to make bad decisions. The use of these strategies was not limited to investments and often included other behaviors, such as big-ticket purchases or dieting and exercise.
Here are the seven strategies and their application to financial decisions:
1. Limit the options. Purchase illiquid investments to avoid the urge to sell investments when the market is falling.
2. Avoidance. Avoid information about how the market or portfolio is performing in order to stick to a long-term investment strategy.
3. Rules. Establish and use rules to help make better financial decisions, such as spend only out of income and never out of capital.
4. Deadlines. Set financial deadlines. For example, aim to save a certain amount of money by the end of the year.
5. Cool off. Wait a few days after making a big financial decision before executing it.
6. Delegation. Delegate financial decisions to others, such as allowing an investment adviser to manage your portfolio.
7. Other people. Use other people to help reach financial goals. An example would be meeting with a financial adviser to make and execute a financial plan.
This article was reported by Philip Moeller for U.S. News & World Report.
Monday, 20 June 2011
Is day trading for you?
It's no secret that stocks can earn phenomenal returns in the long term. Some of the shares in Warren Buffett's portfolio were picked up almost 20-25 years ago. But Jayesh Shah doesn't have so much patience. "I don't remain invested for more than 20-30 minutes," says the Ahmedabad-based bank manager. Shah dabbles in stocks and makes an average of 12,000 a month with his ultra shortterm trading strategy. Viral Nagori, who teaches computer science at a government college in the Gujarat capital, has a relatively longer investment horizon. He sells his stocks as soon as he is `800-1 ,000 in the green.
Welcome to the world of intra-day trading, where tens of thousands of small investors throng every day to make a fortune from the minute by minute change in stock prices. Small businessmen, retirees, salaried professionals, academicians, even students, are playing the intra-day market and making money from it. They buy stocks in the morning and sell them before the closing bell, pocketing profits from the trade. Of course, they often end up making losses, but this does not stop them from starting afresh the next day.
For the buyer, the biggest draw of intra-day trading is the instant gratification it offers. You can literally see your money grow as the stock price goes up. It also gives the buyer the feeling that he is in control of his finances. "When you invest in a mutual fund, you have to wait for the net asset value (NAV) to go up. Here, you can see your profits immediately," says Nagori.
Unfortunately, the lure of quick money has also sucked in people who should not be indulging in intra-day trading. Experts say that a day trader should be able to monitor the stock markets from opening bell at 9.00 a.m. till the trading session ends at 3.30 p.m. During those six and a half hours, the markets and your stock holdings need your undivided attention. "Day trading is not for someone who has a busy profession or holds a full-time job elsewhere," says Rohit Gadia, CEO of the Indore-based CapitalVia Global Research. Gadia runs a website that offers tips on stocks for intra-day trading.
It's a world where many of the established canons of stock investing are turned on their heads. "Day trading is a different game with different rules," says AK Auddy, executive director of intradaytrade.net. The website gives daily tips on stocks for day trading to its members . Here are 10 basic rules of intra-day trading that can help you make money. Follow these tenets to avoid losing your shirt in this highrisk arena.
Invest what you can afford to lose
Intra-day trading carries more risk than investing in stocks. Invest only the amount that you can afford to lose. An unexpected movement can wipe out your entire investment in a few minutes. In January 2009, the Satyam Computer scrip fell more than 80% from Rs 188 to Rs 31 in one day. If it is a leveraged position, you could lose more than you invested.
Choose highly liquid shares
Day traders must square their positions at the end of the trading session. This is easy if you are trading in large-cap , index-based stocks, which are very liquid and get traded in large volumes every day. Don't dabble in mid-cap and small-cap shares, where the traded volumes are not very large. You could end up holding shares that have no buyers at the end of the day.
Trade only in 2-3 scrips at a time
It's prudent to diversify your portfolio when you are investing in stocks, but when it comes to day trading, confine yourself to just 1-2 stocks. You can have up to 8-10 large-cap , indexbased stocks on your watch list, but don't trade in more than 2-3 stocks at a time. Stock movements need to be tracked closely by the day trader and you won't be able to monitor more than 2-3 stocks at a time.
Research watch list thoroughly
Read up on the 8-10 stocks on your day trading watch list. You should know about all corporate actions (stock splits, bonuses, dividends, result dates, mergers, etc) as well as technical levels of the stock. There are websites, such as khelostocks.com, where you can feed in the price (high, low and closing) to know the resistance and support levels.
Fix entry price and target levels
Before you buy, fix your entry price and target level. The psychology of the buyer changes after he has bought a stock, which could interfere with his judgement and nudge him into selling too quickly. This might cost him the opportunity to fully gain from the upside. If you set yourself a price target and adhere to it, your psychological frame will not change.
Use stop losses to contain impact
A stop loss is a trigger for selling shares if the price moves beyond a specified limit. It helps the buyer limit his losses in case the share belies his expectations and moves down (or up). Suppose you buy 20 shares of Reliance at 940 each and set a stop loss of 920. If the share falls to `920, your shares will be sold. In this manner, your losses will be curtailed even if the share drops to `900. A stop loss takes the emotions out of the decision to sell.
Don't be an investor
Day trading and investing are like chalk and cheese. Both involve buying shares but the factors considered are completely different. One takes into account technical data, while the other looks at its fundamentals. Don't mix the two. Often, if an intra-day bet goes wrong, the buyer does not book his loss, but takes delivery of the shares and then waits for the price to recover. This can be a mistake because the shares were bought with an ultra short-term horizon. They may not be worth investing in.
Book profits when targets are met
Greed and fear are the two biggest hurdles for the day trader. Just as he should not flinch from booking losses when the trade goes wrong, he should book his profits when the shares reach his target. If he feels that there is more upside to the stock, he should reset the stop loss. Suppose you invest at `100 for a target of 110 and set a stop loss of 95. If the price goes up to `110 but you are bullish, raise the stop loss to `108. This will reserve some profit.
Don't fight the market trend
Even the most sophisticated analysis cannot predict which way the market will move.
All technical factors may be bullish but the market may decline. Technical factors only point to the likely movement of the market, they don't guarantee it. If the movement is not as per your expectations, don't try and be a contrarian. You may end up losing more.
Small is beautiful
While stock investments can yield stupendous returns, be content with small gains from intra-day trading. Day traders get a leverage of almost 3-4 times their investment , so even if your stocks go up by 3%, you would have earned 9-12 % on your investment. In any case, it's rare for large-cap stocks to move by more than 5-6 % in a day. Even if you get a return of 10-12 % on your capital, it's not bad for a day's work.
Welcome to the world of intra-day trading, where tens of thousands of small investors throng every day to make a fortune from the minute by minute change in stock prices. Small businessmen, retirees, salaried professionals, academicians, even students, are playing the intra-day market and making money from it. They buy stocks in the morning and sell them before the closing bell, pocketing profits from the trade. Of course, they often end up making losses, but this does not stop them from starting afresh the next day.
For the buyer, the biggest draw of intra-day trading is the instant gratification it offers. You can literally see your money grow as the stock price goes up. It also gives the buyer the feeling that he is in control of his finances. "When you invest in a mutual fund, you have to wait for the net asset value (NAV) to go up. Here, you can see your profits immediately," says Nagori.
Unfortunately, the lure of quick money has also sucked in people who should not be indulging in intra-day trading. Experts say that a day trader should be able to monitor the stock markets from opening bell at 9.00 a.m. till the trading session ends at 3.30 p.m. During those six and a half hours, the markets and your stock holdings need your undivided attention. "Day trading is not for someone who has a busy profession or holds a full-time job elsewhere," says Rohit Gadia, CEO of the Indore-based CapitalVia Global Research. Gadia runs a website that offers tips on stocks for intra-day trading.
It's a world where many of the established canons of stock investing are turned on their heads. "Day trading is a different game with different rules," says AK Auddy, executive director of intradaytrade.net. The website gives daily tips on stocks for day trading to its members . Here are 10 basic rules of intra-day trading that can help you make money. Follow these tenets to avoid losing your shirt in this highrisk arena.
Invest what you can afford to lose
Intra-day trading carries more risk than investing in stocks. Invest only the amount that you can afford to lose. An unexpected movement can wipe out your entire investment in a few minutes. In January 2009, the Satyam Computer scrip fell more than 80% from Rs 188 to Rs 31 in one day. If it is a leveraged position, you could lose more than you invested.
Choose highly liquid shares
Day traders must square their positions at the end of the trading session. This is easy if you are trading in large-cap , index-based stocks, which are very liquid and get traded in large volumes every day. Don't dabble in mid-cap and small-cap shares, where the traded volumes are not very large. You could end up holding shares that have no buyers at the end of the day.
Trade only in 2-3 scrips at a time
It's prudent to diversify your portfolio when you are investing in stocks, but when it comes to day trading, confine yourself to just 1-2 stocks. You can have up to 8-10 large-cap , indexbased stocks on your watch list, but don't trade in more than 2-3 stocks at a time. Stock movements need to be tracked closely by the day trader and you won't be able to monitor more than 2-3 stocks at a time.
Research watch list thoroughly
Read up on the 8-10 stocks on your day trading watch list. You should know about all corporate actions (stock splits, bonuses, dividends, result dates, mergers, etc) as well as technical levels of the stock. There are websites, such as khelostocks.com, where you can feed in the price (high, low and closing) to know the resistance and support levels.
Fix entry price and target levels
Before you buy, fix your entry price and target level. The psychology of the buyer changes after he has bought a stock, which could interfere with his judgement and nudge him into selling too quickly. This might cost him the opportunity to fully gain from the upside. If you set yourself a price target and adhere to it, your psychological frame will not change.
Use stop losses to contain impact
A stop loss is a trigger for selling shares if the price moves beyond a specified limit. It helps the buyer limit his losses in case the share belies his expectations and moves down (or up). Suppose you buy 20 shares of Reliance at 940 each and set a stop loss of 920. If the share falls to `920, your shares will be sold. In this manner, your losses will be curtailed even if the share drops to `900. A stop loss takes the emotions out of the decision to sell.
Don't be an investor
Day trading and investing are like chalk and cheese. Both involve buying shares but the factors considered are completely different. One takes into account technical data, while the other looks at its fundamentals. Don't mix the two. Often, if an intra-day bet goes wrong, the buyer does not book his loss, but takes delivery of the shares and then waits for the price to recover. This can be a mistake because the shares were bought with an ultra short-term horizon. They may not be worth investing in.
Book profits when targets are met
Greed and fear are the two biggest hurdles for the day trader. Just as he should not flinch from booking losses when the trade goes wrong, he should book his profits when the shares reach his target. If he feels that there is more upside to the stock, he should reset the stop loss. Suppose you invest at `100 for a target of 110 and set a stop loss of 95. If the price goes up to `110 but you are bullish, raise the stop loss to `108. This will reserve some profit.
Don't fight the market trend
Even the most sophisticated analysis cannot predict which way the market will move.
All technical factors may be bullish but the market may decline. Technical factors only point to the likely movement of the market, they don't guarantee it. If the movement is not as per your expectations, don't try and be a contrarian. You may end up losing more.
Small is beautiful
While stock investments can yield stupendous returns, be content with small gains from intra-day trading. Day traders get a leverage of almost 3-4 times their investment , so even if your stocks go up by 3%, you would have earned 9-12 % on your investment. In any case, it's rare for large-cap stocks to move by more than 5-6 % in a day. Even if you get a return of 10-12 % on your capital, it's not bad for a day's work.
Learn to Manage Risk
Several investors clamour for risk-free products, assurances, guarantees and promises. But just as we do not have perfect spouses and perfect jobs in the real world, we don't have risk-free investment products as well. So, we must understand and manage risk in our investments.
We all invest our capital in an enterprise or a business activity. The entity with which we entrust our capital uses it to create assets. The primary source of business risk is that despite the assets being managed well, their performance is subject to multiple, unknown factors . The ability of the enterprise to service and return our capital is impacted by these risk factors. If a bank deposit is seen by investors as safe and risk-free , this comes is due to the the bank's capital to bear any risk arising from the assets it has funded with those deposits.
The only other way to ensure that an investment is risk-free is to back it by sovereign guarantee. The government is not expected to default because it can raise taxes, borrow internationally, or in the worst case, print currency notes. However, the Indian government no longer guarantees any investment product other than its own borrowings through the issuance of government securities, for funding the deficit in its annual income and expenditure. The products offered under the National Savings Schemes are the only exception.
To the investor who is seeking safety, government bonds and savings schemes are the first choice. However , the returns from these products may be quite low, exposing the investor to inflation risk, thereby making it unsuitbale for long-term investors. The investors who seek fixed return and relative safety of principal can invest in deposits, bonds and certificates issued by borrowers such as banks and companies. The risk of default is inherent in these instruments. It can be managed only by choosing and monitoring the quality of assets of these businesses and the adequacy of equity capital to bear those risks. Credit rating agencies offer rating services to gauge these risks. However, investors may still face the risk of illiquidity of such investments.
The investors who are willing to take on business risks by directly investing in equity of enterprises bear the risk arising from the changing quality of assets. They can take this risk only if they are provided adequate , accurate and complete information about how the assets are performing. They should be able to assess their business risk on a continuous basis and quit if they are uncomfortable with the changing levels of risk. This is why equity investors can sell their equity in a stock market where it is listed. But in this case, they are exposed to the market risk. Every investment is exposed to risk and each of these is of a different nature. If equity bears direct business risk, in case of debt, it is of an indirect nature as a possible default. If non-government debt is exposed to default risk, government debt is open to inflation risk. The only time-tested strategy to manage investment risks is diversification. Holding assets that are exposed to different risk factors reduces the overall risk of the investment portfolio. Rather than running away from risk, we must understand and use it to our advantage.
The author is MD, Centre for Investment Education and Learning, and can be reached at uma.shashikant@ ciel.co.in
We all invest our capital in an enterprise or a business activity. The entity with which we entrust our capital uses it to create assets. The primary source of business risk is that despite the assets being managed well, their performance is subject to multiple, unknown factors . The ability of the enterprise to service and return our capital is impacted by these risk factors. If a bank deposit is seen by investors as safe and risk-free , this comes is due to the the bank's capital to bear any risk arising from the assets it has funded with those deposits.
The only other way to ensure that an investment is risk-free is to back it by sovereign guarantee. The government is not expected to default because it can raise taxes, borrow internationally, or in the worst case, print currency notes. However, the Indian government no longer guarantees any investment product other than its own borrowings through the issuance of government securities, for funding the deficit in its annual income and expenditure. The products offered under the National Savings Schemes are the only exception.
To the investor who is seeking safety, government bonds and savings schemes are the first choice. However , the returns from these products may be quite low, exposing the investor to inflation risk, thereby making it unsuitbale for long-term investors. The investors who seek fixed return and relative safety of principal can invest in deposits, bonds and certificates issued by borrowers such as banks and companies. The risk of default is inherent in these instruments. It can be managed only by choosing and monitoring the quality of assets of these businesses and the adequacy of equity capital to bear those risks. Credit rating agencies offer rating services to gauge these risks. However, investors may still face the risk of illiquidity of such investments.
The investors who are willing to take on business risks by directly investing in equity of enterprises bear the risk arising from the changing quality of assets. They can take this risk only if they are provided adequate , accurate and complete information about how the assets are performing. They should be able to assess their business risk on a continuous basis and quit if they are uncomfortable with the changing levels of risk. This is why equity investors can sell their equity in a stock market where it is listed. But in this case, they are exposed to the market risk. Every investment is exposed to risk and each of these is of a different nature. If equity bears direct business risk, in case of debt, it is of an indirect nature as a possible default. If non-government debt is exposed to default risk, government debt is open to inflation risk. The only time-tested strategy to manage investment risks is diversification. Holding assets that are exposed to different risk factors reduces the overall risk of the investment portfolio. Rather than running away from risk, we must understand and use it to our advantage.
The author is MD, Centre for Investment Education and Learning, and can be reached at uma.shashikant@ ciel.co.in
Warren Buffet's Strategy on Technical Analysis
After much research and experience in investing I've discovered a simple strategy which works very well for profitable investing. It's a composite of Charles Schwab's and Warren Buffet's strategy.
As you may know, Warren Buffet started with a little investment decades ago and now he's the third richest man in the world with over $30,000,000,000 in stock in the company he built. Charles Schwab is the genius who began the most successful off-price brokerage in the world. Here's what they say about investing and technical analysis:
As you may know, Warren Buffet started with a little investment decades ago and now he's the third richest man in the world with over $30,000,000,000 in stock in the company he built. Charles Schwab is the genius who began the most successful off-price brokerage in the world. Here's what they say about investing and technical analysis:
Rule #1: Buy a company you'd be willing to hold for a lifetime
When you put your money in a stock, you become an owner of that firm. You're essentially buying part of it and you reap the profit from the shares you buy in terms of earnings per share. Then the company may pay out those earnings per share in dividends or invest back into the company for growth. Make sure that you're buying a firm that you can depend on, even when the market is down. Investing isn't about the quick in-and-out schemes that lose most day-traders money. That's called gambling. Investing is putting your trust and your resources into a firm which you're willing to commit your hard-earned money to. This leads to my next point.
Rule #2: Ignore technical analysis
Technical analysis is used to predict whether or not a stock will go up or down in the short term. Some people think that they can ignore the fundamentals of the companies they buy based on technical analysis and end up losing large amounts of money. Yet, no responsible financial advisor would recommend or practice buying based solely or largely on technical analysis. That practice is used for what I defined to be gambling. Essentially relying on technical analysis involves looking at the volume of trading, advances/declines in the share price, and trying to determine whether or not the price will continue upward or reverse. For example, a lot of people buy or sell based on momentum. They jump on the bandwagon or abandon ship with the rest of the crowd. Yet, these fluctuations based on the herd mentality do less for those playing on technical analysis and more for the investor who looks for good value in shares. For, often people selling on technical analysis overshoot and cause a stock's value to be worth less than its fair value. Thanks to people who get burned on these losses, investors find unique opportunities to snatch up great comanies at bargain-basement prices.
Rule #3: Focus on the Fundamentals
You cannot accurately predict the short term price fluctuations of stocks. Let me repeat myself: You CANNOT accurately predict the short term price fluctuations of stocks. If you could, those stock experts working at Merrill Lynch and Goldman Sachs wouldn't be working. Believe me: they've got a lot more experience than you or I do, and they're not gambling. So, instead of "investing on luck" or momentum, take control and do your research. Find out whether the company is consistantly outpacing the industry. See what the price to earnings ratio is and whether it's being undervalued. Find out whether earnings per share has been increasing or decreasing. See what the financial community thinks by examining analyst opinions covering the firm. All this information is easily accessable over the internet and free of charge. IF you do your homework your gains will be all but certain OVER TIME and you'll feel satisfied and proud with your investment choices. You may even become attached to your company and become well acquainted with it.
Rule #4: Buy long term
Besides your liklihood of making money going up, there are tax advantages to holding stocks long term. For one thing, if you simply hold onto your stock, you won't be taxed until you pull out and your investment can continue to compound, without erosion, until you sell. But, if you constantly buy and sell, then you're taxed on all your gains and you don't get to pay the lower capital gains tax. Instead, it's taxed as regular income, which is a higher tax rate. For most daytraders, tax erosion is one of the biggest problems with making any profit. But, if you do sell make sure it's because your company has been consistently underperforming. This leads to the next point:
Rule #5: Buy low sell high
Lots of people buy stocks and when the price dips they get scared and sell. Other people see the price of their stock go up and buy more. But, this seems like reverse logic, right? If you own a good company, short-cited investors can drive down a stock price temporarily because of one below-expected earnings report or a bit of bad news. Let these be times for you to take advantage of other people's hysteria and buy at an attractive price.
Be smart in your investment decisions. Warren Buffet didn't find himself where he is today by buying on momentum or following technical analysis. Instead, it took research, patience, and commitment. If you can commit yourself to these same principles, you too will enjoy financial success.
Saturday, 18 June 2011
The fast and the furious
June 15, 2011
Is it better to prepare well or go with your gut instinct? Photo: iStock
Consider two entrepreneurs: the first spends months researching an idea, prepares a detailed business plan, invests heavily in the idea, and has a big product launch; the second spends far less time on research, has a loose business plan, invests less in the idea and has a smaller product launch.
Which is the better approach? It depends on the business, of course. No one would launch a capital-intensive venture without serious research. Certainly, most business schools teach students how to analyse markets and industries, prepare business plans, and follow the first approach.
But is that approach best for all start-up entrepreneurs? One I know told me the business plan “is in my head”. He meant the venture’s strategy was constantly changing and adapting every time he met a customer or saw an opportunity. A written business plan, or adherence to a concrete strategy, can be too rigid. It kills that great entrepreneurial trait: nimbleness.
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What’s your view:
- Have you wasted time and money on business plans that are quickly dated?
- Do business plans stifle creativity and nimbleness?
- Are you better off starting small and fast and letting the market tell you what’s working?
- In this era of social networking and technology, do we need to re-think how we research business idea and launch start-up ventures?
My first venture suffered from following the traditional research approach. My business partner and I spent many months researching an idea for the education market, conducting focus groups and meeting industry people. We had an almost text-book business plan, invested (thankfully not heavily) in the product, and followed a predefined strategy. It disappointed, partly because of the idea itself and also because better opportunities emerged that produced cash faster.
Aside from launching the venture weeks before the GFC, it was clear the market for our idea had changed. New technologies had developed or strengthened even in the year between the idea’s conception and product launch. The founders’ personal circumstances changed (joyously), with new babies. If I had my time over, I would have started small, cheap and fast – and let the market tell me what the product should look like. I would have focused on a few ideas, rather than one.
A few months later, I entered a venture-finance competition with an idea hatched over a weekend, no real prototype and barely any research. It won and my team pocketed $10,000, had a venture-capital firm seriously interested, and university support to develop the idea and take it to global venture-capital competitions. An average idea suddenly had legs, and more momentum than the much stronger education idea that had taken a year to plan and launch.
Other entrepreneurs make the same mistake of over-researching ideas. They come up with what, at the time, looks a ground-breaking concept and put everything into it. Six months later they realise no amount of research could have prepared them for the realities of the market – or life. They over-estimated their odds of success and persevered with a bad idea longer than they should have, because so much financial and personal capital was invested. They failed to adapt.
I am not suggesting start-up entrepreneurs should launch ideas on a whim, or focus on several ideas and never develop any. Nor am I against the traditional approach of researching and launching one idea and putting everything into it. But the reality is, many more new ideas fail than succeed. There is a randomness to success when it comes to new ideas, which entrepreneurs should consider.
I was reminded of this while reading Tim Harford’s book, Adapt: Why Success Starts with Failure. Like most management texts, its message is aimed more at big rather than small companies. I did not find a whole lot new in the core ideas: the notion of encouraging innovation from the ground up in workforces, having a portfolio of business experiments, and protecting innovations from bureaucracy, have been presented before. And I have read other research showing the majority of business forecasters get more predictions wrong than right.
Harford’s biggest contribution is showing how people succeed through trial and error, which forces us to adapt to changing conditions. He shows why big companies and governments struggle with the trial-and-error concept – organisational structures, business-planning processes, an inability to deal with failure, and the personal risk of career setback get in the way. His book is worth reading for this alone.
Consider how this trial-and-error concept plays out in entrepreneurship. As I’ve written before, start-up entrepreneurs manage opportunities; small business owners manage resources. An entrepreneur may move between several ideas, compared to a small business owner who focuses mostly on one. There is nothing wrong with either approach; it’s just that many would-be entrepreneurs get them mixed up.
A true start-up entrepreneur might build a portfolio of opportunities; some big, some small. They allocate capital – financial and their time – accordingly. They know some ideas will fail and that real success comes from their ability to control risk and stay in the game longer. They acknowledge that the best research is ultimately what the market says when their product is live, not a static industry report, market statistic, or business trend forecast.
My point is, the world is so complex and fast-moving that it is impossible to know how a market will react to your new idea. Start-up entrepreneurs with scarce resources do not get many second chances if their big idea flops. The good entrepreneurs constantly change and develop ideas as they go.
If you are starting a venture, at least consider the second approach. It may be that months of research, high investment and an all-or-nothing approach for one venture is the way to go. You may need a carefully crafted business plan to raise capital or for other marketing purposes. All your research may pay off in spades.
But if the idea has never been tried before, a better approach may be to view it as a part of portfolio of considered opportunities, where the market shapes the idea and the entrepreneur’s real skill is the ability move quickly, control risk, and preserve capital.
For some ideas, the best strategy might be not to have a strategy. Or at least planning to change business strategy every day, week or month as circumstances dictate, rather than doggedly sticking to a predefined strategy that could be out of date as soon as the venture is launched.
http://www.smh.com.au/small-business/managing/blogs/the-venture/the-fast-and-the-furious-20110613-1g04t.html#ixzz1PZfgOXHn
Tuesday, 14 June 2011
Recruitment ads increase on new investments
Tuesday June 14, 2011
Malaysia job ads rose 33% in Q1
By SHARIDAN M. ALI
sharidan@thestar.com.my
Recruitment ads increase on new investments
PETALING JAYA: Malaysia, recently included in the Asia Job Index, recorded a 33% rise in job advertising numbers from January to March this year.
Asia Job Index is published by international recruitment consultancy Robert Walters.
According to Robert Walters Malaysia country manager Sally Raj, recruitment advertising levels in Malaysia had gradually increased over the past quarter as companies continued to invest in new business development initiatives to spur growth.
“The region remains something of a safe haven from the effects of the global financial crisis and the Government continues to introduce projects and initiatives for both developing and existing businesses and attracting skilled Malaysians back to meet demand for professional and skilled talents.
“The main challenge for businesses is the ability to retain and attract the best talents,” she said in a statement yesterday.
Quarter on quarter (q-o-q) or year-on-year (y-o-y) comparison were not available for Malaysia as the country is new to the index.
For other countries in the region, Robert Walters noted that hiring levels within China had remained stable over the past quarter, with the number of job advertisements increasing by 3% the first quarter on a on a q-o-q basis.
China's job advertisements for roles in marketing and advertising saw a 11% growth q-o-q as companies looked to maximise sales due to returning consumer confidence.
For Hong Kong, the level of job advertisements remained largely consistent from the fourth quarter of last year to the first quarter this year, with a rise of only 4% with property management and operations and logistics sectors showing significant growth.
In Singapore, the number of job advertisements grew by 22% q-o-q following strong growth in March, as companies ended any short term recruitment freezes and recruitment levels increased as a result of its recent election.
In Japan, advertising activity slowly gained momentum through the quarter until the devastating earthquake and tsunami of early March.
In the first quarter this year, Japan's job advertisements contracted by 18% from the previous quarter.
South Korea, also a first time entrant in the index, saw job advertising through the quarter increased by 70% from January to March.
In a nutshell, Robert Walters said recruitment advertising volumes in March reached their highest levels since the inception of the Asia Job Index in the second quarter of 2008.
“Recruitment advertising activity has remained steady, rising 2% from the fourth quarter of 2010 to the first quarter this year.
“This is largely due to the effects of the festive period and pending bonus payments, which historically result in a slowdown in hiring activities.
“Y-o-y growth in job advertising remains strong across the region, increasing by 61% from the first quarter of 2010 to the first quarter of 2011, predominantly on the back of strong growth in China and Japan,” it said.
Property at ‘upper band’
Tuesday June 14, 2011
Property at ‘upper band’
By Jagdev Singh Sidhu
jagdev@thestar.com.my
Local property stocks trading at higher valuations against regional peers
KUALA LUMPUR: Property companies on Bursa Malaysia, which have lagged behind the performance of the broader market in the past month, are trading at valuations that put such counters at the upper band against its regional peers.
Some analysts admit the valuations of the larger property companies are frothy but say there are reasons why such stocks are seeing such valuation differences from property companies in Singapore, Hong Kong or Indonesia.
“They have a premium because of execution, a track record and branding,” said HwangDBS Vickers Research analyst Yee Mei Hui, when comparing SP Setia Bhd, the country's top property company, with companies from other countries.
The regional comparison, which was made by CIMB after SP Setia released its second quarter results, showed the biggest property companies on Bursa Malaysia are generally trading at a slim discount to their share price as compared with the regional peers on a revalued net asset value (RNAV) basis.
The RNAV is what analysts think the market value of land and assets on a company's books amounted to compared with the book value of such land.
The small discount is more pronounced for the country's largest property counter by market-capitalisation terms - UEM Land Holdings Bhd, which has a market capitalisation of US$3.8bil - as the counter is trading at about a 9% discount to the stock's RNAV. SP Setia was trading at about 2% as of last week.
In comparison, the larger property companies, such as CapitaLand in Singapore and China Overseas Land & Investments Ltd, are trading at a much steeper discount to their RNAV.
One analyst thinks the difference in pricing compared with Singapore and Hong Kong is down to the mechanics of the markets there.
“Property prices there are volatile and investors who buy such stocks can overshoot in either way,” said ECM Libra Investment Bank Bhdresearch head Bernard Ching.
He said the land value in Malaysia was not as volatile and tended to rise on a gradual basis.
Concerns over a property bubble in Hong Kong and Singapore has also led to investors taking a much more cautious view of the value of property stocks in those countries in relation to their RNAV.
Some analysts feel the reason why Malaysian property counters have a higher valuation than regional companies was also down to a few factors.
Concentration of Malaysia-based funds seeking investments in Malaysia has seen a lot of money chasing a few quality companies and the bigger the stock, the better their following is.
“Property development is a medium term business and it's not solely about land value,” explained an analyst. He said investors generally want to look at stocks that generate a return on the value of the land the companies own and explained that companies that generally sit on large land reserves with little activity often see bigger discounts to their RNAV.
That argument has been used to explain Mah Sing Group Bhd's share price that is trading close to the company's estimated RNAV.
“Mah Sing works on a fast turnaround model and does not have a lot of landbank,” said an analyst.
Although property stock valuations were high, analysts said the divergence of the property index and that of the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) was down to investors chasing after the more liquid blue chip counters.
“The property index has a big number of mid and small cap stocks,” said an analyst.
“When the market turns south, buying will concentrate on the large, blue chip stocks.”
Property companies on Bursa Malaysia still, on average, attract “buy” calls with analysts saying the prospects of choice developers are still bright.
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