Sunday 15 April 2012

Value Investing - Warren Buffett's Methodology

Warren Buffett's Methodology  Warren Buffett descends from the Benjamin Graham school of value investing. He takes this value investing approach to another level. He chooses stocks solely on the basis of their overall potential as a company - he looks at each as a whole. Holding these stocks as a long-term play, Buffett seeks not capital gain but ownership in quality companies extremely capable of generating earnings. When Buffett invests in a company, he isn't concerned with whether the market will eventually recognize its worth; he is concerned with how well that company can make money as a business.

Brief summary Buffett's methodology:
1. Has the company consistently performed well? 
Sometimes return on equity (ROE) is referred to as "stockholder's return on investment". It reveals the rate at which shareholders are earning income on their shares. Buffett always looks at ROE to see whether or not a company has consistently performed well in comparison to other companies in the same industry.
2. Has the company avoided excess debt? 
The debt/equity ratio is another key characteristic Buffett considers carefully. Buffett prefers to see a small amount of debt so that earnings growth is being generated from shareholders' equity as opposed to borrowed money.
3. Are profit margins high? Are they increasing? 
The profitability of a company depends not only on having a good profit margin but also on consistently increasing this profit margin. To get a good indication of historical profit margins, investors should look back at least five years. A high profit margin indicates the company is executing its business well, but increasing margins means management has been extremely efficient and successful at controlling expenses.
4. How long has the company been public? 
Buffett typically considers only companies that have been around for at least 10 years. It makes sense that one of Buffet's criteria is longevity: value investing means looking at companies that have stood the test of time but are currently undervalued.
5. Do the company's products rely on a commodity? 
Buffett sees this question as an important one. He tends to shy away (but not always) from companies whose products are indistinguishable from those of competitors, and those that rely solely on a commodity such as oil and gas. If the company does not offer anything different than another firm within the same industry, Buffett sees little that sets the company apart. Any characteristic that is hard to replicate is what Buffett calls a company's economic moat, or competitive advantage. The wider the moat, the tougher it is for a competitor to gain market share.
6. Is the stock selling at a 25% discount to its real value? 
Buffett's most important skill is determining whether a company is undervalued. To do this, an investor must determine the intrinsic value of a company by analyzing a number of business fundamentals, including earnings, revenues and assets. And a company's intrinsic value is usually higher (and more complicated) than its liquidation value - what a company would be worth if it were broken up and sold today. The liquidation value doesn't include intangibles such as the value of a brand name, which is not directly stated on the financial statements.   Once Buffett determines the intrinsic value of the company as a whole, he compares it to its current market capitalization - the current total worth (price). If his measurement of intrinsic value is at least 25% higher than the company's market capitalization, Buffett sees the company as one that has value to buy.



http://www.trade4rich.com/Buffett.html

Our aim as value investors is to find quality businesses at discounts to their intrinsic values.


To Invest or Not to Invest?

When making decisions about a company it is vital to asses not just if they are making profits but if they are generating a suitable return on equity for you, the shareholder. Imagine a business XYZ you invest 10million of your money into it. By the end the year it is made a net profit of 5 million. Pretty good; a 50% return on equity is a business I would like to invest in. Basically this is the golden key to value investing. Avoid the newspapers. This is how I invest and this is what works for me. 

Technical analysis requires to much "if this goes up it will do this" and "if this breaks through it will do this". Regularly I frequently hear analysis say this keyword "IF". For me, I don't like "IF", I like a sure thing. This is why finding good quality businesses, with a proven track record of success is the best way to financial success.

Our aim as value investors is to find quality businesses at discounts to their intrinsic values. 


http://valueinvest101.blogspot.com/2011/03/to-invest-or-not-to-invest.html

What’s Wrong with the Stock Market?


What’s Wrong with the Stock Market?

April 14th, 2009
The problem with the stock market started back before the end of the 18th century—in 1792 as a matter of fact. This was when the stock market as we know it was born under a tree in lower Manhattan. It was there and then that those who first bought and sold stocks as a business got together and formed what became the New York Stock Exchange. From those beginnings, an industry was born that has grown to be one of the most powerful and financially influential in the world.
Transaction-based Compensation – the Wrong Dynamic
Actually, the problem arose from the fact that these people made their money not from any appreciation in the value of the investments they bought and sold but rather from just putting buyers and sellers of those shares together. They profited from the transaction itself. To this day, the majority of brokers receive their compensation as a result of the purchase or sale. It makes no financial difference to them whether their customer gains or loses.
I don’t mean to imply that, just because these people fill a need and are compensated for doing so, they’re bad people. Certainly the existence of this industry is what makes the ownership of stock feasible for the average person. It’s responsible for elevating common stock to the level of liquidity that allows us to own it without fear of being stuck with it when or if we choose to sell it. And it certainly makes it much easier for us to buy those shares when we wish to. If we’re interested in putting our money to work for us in what is arguably the most lucrative manner possible for the least amount of risk, we can’t get along without this industry. But, the difference in perception and fact between what a broker does or is qualified to do and what the uninitiated think he or she is qualified to do is a major source of the problem.
In the beginning, the whole idea of shares was just that: sharing in the fortunes of an enterprise. Where it might be difficult for a company or individual to come up with enough money to finance all that was necessary alone, sharing the business with others in a fashion that limited their liability and exposure to only the amount of money invested was a great way to obtain the necessary funds. Anyone who wanted to participate in a business—sharing both the rewards and the risks—would buy shares and hold them as legal documents that vouched for their entitlement to a proportionate share in the fruits of that enterprise’s operations. Originally, therefore, folks bought shares because they thought the business would be profitable one and they wanted a piece of the action.
The formation of a ready market for stocks, while it performed a very useful service in terms of liquidity and convenience, had a serious side effect. So easy was it to trade that the perception of what a share of stock really was became obscured, giving way to the notion that the stock, like currency, had some intrinsic value that could vary for reasons other than the success or failure of the underlying enterprise.
Easy Trading changed the Nature of the Market
Moreover, the ability to manipulate the perceived value of those shares erected a persistent barrier between those that manipulated it and those that didn’t. It was de rigueur for unscrupulous traders to spread rumors appealing to the fear of the uninitiated, driving down the price of a certain stock, and furnishing an opportunity to pick up a large position at that favorable price. And then it was an equally simple process for those same individuals to spread favorable rumors that appealed to the greedy, drove up the price, and resulted in a great selling opportunity for those who then owned it. Not until well into the 20th century, after the devastating crash of 1929, was there a real effort to address that issue legislatively and make such activities illegal.
However, there was—and is—no way to legislate the greed and fear out of the stock market. Those are still its basic drivers. In fact, as recently as within the last decade, a young kid from New Jersey managed to make nearly a million dollars when he flooded the Internet with glowing stories about a penny stock he had selected for his venture. Unwitting investors bid up the price of the stock with no more to go on than his fiction; and he made a killing.
Disconnect Between Value and Price Creates Bubbles and Busts
The very same dynamics of greed and fear were responsible for an even more spectacular event that impacted millions of shareholders.
The appeal of the dot.coms, most of them with no visible means of support—and the technology companies that depended upon them for their burgeoning customer base—inflated one of history’s biggest bubbles. Investors, eager to make a killing, continued to bid up the price of the stock in those companies with no regard for or even any understanding of the factors that comprised their underlying value. This was what the Street refers to as the Greater Fool Theory: “I may be a fool to buy this stock at this price; but I’ll find a greater fool to take it off my hands for more than I paid for it!”
The market of course collapsed when those companies—like Wiley Coyote racing off a cliff only to discover he had nothing under him—learned the hard way that a company had to earn money to live. The extent of that collapse went well beyond rational concerns about the profitability of the affected companies, being exacerbated in large measure by irrational fears growing out of the September 11th, 2001, attack on New York’s World Trade Center and our country’s bellicose activities following that tragedy.



http://www.financialiteracy.us/wordpress/articles/what%E2%80%99s-wrong-with-the-stock-market/

Saturday 14 April 2012

Matters of the Heart - Politics

What is the Present Value of Your Lifetime Income?

Utility of money depends on your whole lifetime wealth.

Do this interesting exercise - Estimate the Present Value of your Lifetime Income.

What is gaining, losing or giving $10,000 or $100,000 today to you when compared to the Present Value of your lifetime income?

Are you rational or irrational in your handling and managing of your finances, work and leisure time today?


[In economics, utility is a measure of satisfaction, referring to the total satisfaction received by a consumer from consuming a good or service but also referring to satisfaction received by its contingent production relations. Given this measure, one may speak meaningfully of increasing or decreasing utility, and thereby explain economic behavior in terms of attempts to increase one's utility. Utility is often modeled to be affected by consumption of various goods and services, possession of wealth and spending of leisure time.]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utility

How to Fail: Mark Pincus


By Mark Pincus on April 12, 2012

I’m sometimes called a serial entrepreneur, but that’s only because, before Zynga (ZNGA), I failed to create a sustainable company. After starting two companies in the ’90s, I had a social networking startup, Tribe.net, in 2003. One of the things I try to instill at Zynga is to fail fast, look at the data, and move on, and at Tribe I failed to do that. We came up with ideas purely based on intuition, and it could take us three to six months to build it and launch. Those bullets were expensive, and many of them were not on target. Tribe reached the point where the investors literally gave up, resigned from the board, and walked away. It was just me, my team, and a creditor. We ended up selling the company to Cisco (CSCO) and paying back all that debt.

One thing I learned is that while your vision should never change, you should keep trying different strategies until one works. If you can fine-tune your instinct and have confidence in it, then you can keep taking different bites of the apple and keep approaching the problem in different ways until you get it right. I did that with Tribe, pursuing the social opportunity from multiple angles. I invested in Twitter and Facebook and bought a social networking patent in 2004.

I think failing is the best way to keep you grounded, curious, and humble. Success is dangerous because often you don’t understand why you succeeded. You almost always know why you’ve failed. You have a lot of time to think about it. — As told to Brad Stone

Pincus is the founder and CEO of Zynga.

http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2012-04-12/how-to-fail-mark-pincus

Why College Isn't for Everyone


By  on April 09, 2012



A person who compares the annual earnings of college and high school graduates would no doubt conclude that higher education is a good investment—the present value of the college earnings premium (the better part of $1 million) seemingly far outdistances college costs, yielding a high rate of return. But for many, attending college is unequivocally not the right decision on purely economic grounds.

First of all, college graduates on average are smarter and have better work habits than high school graduates. Those who graduated from college were better students in high school, for example. Thus, at least a portion of the earnings premium associated with college has nothing to do with college per se, but rather with other traits.

Second, a goodly proportion (more than 40 percent) of those attending four-year colleges full-time fail to graduate, even within six years. At some colleges, the dropout rate is strikingly higher. While college students sometimes still gain marketable skills from partial attendance, others end up taking jobs that are often given to high school graduates, making little more money but having college debts and some lost earnings accrued while unsuccessfully pursing a degree.

Third, not everyone is average. A non-swimmer trying to cross a stream that on average is three feet deep might drown because part of the stream is seven feet in depth. The same kind of thing sometimes happens to college graduates too entranced by statistics on averages. Earnings vary considerably between the graduates of different schools, and within schools, earnings differ a great deal between majors. Accounting, computer science, and engineering majors, for example, almost always make more than those majoring in education, social work, or ethnic studies.

Fourth, the number of new college graduates far exceeds the growth in the number of technical, managerial, and professional jobs where graduates traditionally have gravitated. As a consequence, we have a new phenomenon: underemployed college graduates doing jobs historically performed by those with much less education. We have, for example, more than 100,000 janitors with college degrees, and 16,000 degree-holding parking lot attendants.

Does this mean no one should go to college? Of course not. First of all, college is more than training for a career, and many might benefit from the social and non-purely academic aspects of advanced schooling, even if the rate of return on college as a financial investment is low. Second, high school students with certain attributes are far less likely to drop out of school, and are likely to equal or excel the average statistics.

Students who do well in high school and on college entrance exams are much more likely to graduate. Those going to private schools may pay more in tuition, but they also have lower dropout rates. Those majoring in some subjects, such as education or one of the humanities, can sometimes improve their job situation by double majoring or earning a minor in, say, economics.

As a general rule, I would say graduates in the top quarter of their class at a high-quality high school should go on to a four-year degree program, while those in the bottom quarter of their class at a high school with a mediocre educational reputation should not (opting instead for alternative methods of credentialing and training).

Those in between should consider perhaps doing a two-year program and then transferring to a four-year school. There are, of course, exceptions to this rule, but it is important for us to keep in mind that college is not for everyone.


Richard Vedder directs the Center for College Affordability and Productivity and teaches economic at Ohio University

http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2012-04-09/why-college-isnt-for-everyone

Value investing will almost always be right.


How to Play the Market: Irving Kahn

By  on April 12, 2012

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No two recoveries are alike. When I came to Wall Street in 1928, I thought the market was crazy. It hit the brakes in ’29. You have to be careful to distinguish between one recovery and the other. You stick to value, to Benjamin Graham, the man who wrote the bible for the market. It’s a mistake to believe you can do more, I warn you. John Maynard Keynes was one of the most famous economists in history. He was a genius, but he failed as a macro investor. It was hard to believe at the time. But when he became a bottom-up value guy, well, he became very successful. With value investing, you don’t have to bend the truth to accommodate periods with derivatives and manias. Value investing will almost always be right.

I’ve seen a lot of recoveries. I saw crash, recovery, World War II. A lot of economic decline and recovery. What’s different about this time is the huge amount of quote-unquote information. So many people watch financial TV—at bars, in the barber shop. This superfluity of information, all this static in the air.

There’s a huge number of people trading for themselves. You couldn’t do this before 1975, when commissions were fixed by law. It’s a hyperactivity that I never saw in the ’40s, ’50s, and ’60s. A commission used to cost you a hell of a lot; you couldn’t buy and sell the same thing 16 times a day.

You say you feel a recovery? Your feelings don’t count. The economy, the market: They don’t care about your feelings. Leave your feelings out of it. 

  • Buy the out-of-favor, the unpopular. 
  • Nobody can predict the market. 
  • Take that premise to heart and look to invest in dollar bills selling for 50¢. 
  • If you’re going to do your own research and investing, think value. 
  • Think downside risk. 
  • Think total return, with dividends tiding you over. 
  • We’re in a period of extraordinarily low rates—be careful with fixed income. 
  • Stay away from options. 
  • Look for securities to hold for three to five years with downside protection. 
You hope you’re in a recovery, but you don’t know for certain. The recovery could stall. Protect yourself. — As told to Roben Farzad

Kahn, chairman of investment firm Kahn Brothers Group, was born in 1905

http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2012-04-12/how-to-play-the-market-irving-kahn

Quantifying Uncertainty and Risk

Learning from and Responding to Financial Crisis I (Lawrence Summers)

Trend Trading Tips for Swing Trading and Day Traders



Trend trading using higher highs and higher lows can be devastating to your account. Here's a more accurate way to trend trade whether you are a day trader or you are swing trading.

Guest Lecture by David Swensen: Investment Management (Yale lecture)




Uploaded by  on Nov 19, 2008
Financial Markets (ECON 252)

David Swensen, Yale's Chief Investment Officer and manager of the University's endowment, discusses the tactics and tools that Yale and other endowments use to create long-term, positive investment returns. He emphasizes the importance of asset allocation and diversification and the limited effects of market timing and security selection. Also, the extraordinary returns of hedge funds, one of the more recent phenomena of portfolio management, should be looked at closely, with an eye for survivorship and back-fill biases.

00:00 - Chapter 1. Introduction: Changing Institutional Portfolio Management
03:59 - Chapter 2. Asset Allocation: The Power of Diversification
16:44 - Chapter 3. Balancing the Equity Bias into Sensible Diversification
20:48 - Chapter 4. The Emotional Pitfalls of Market Timing
32:58 - Chapter 5. Survivorship and Backfill Biases in Security Selection
43:17 - Chapter 6. Finding Value Investing Opportunities as an Active Manager
49:02 - Chapter 7. Yale's Portfolio and Results
54:48 - Chapter 8. Questions on New Investments, Remaining Bullish, and Time Horizons

Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website:http://open.yale.edu/courses

This course was recorded in Spring 2008.

Friday 13 April 2012

George Soros Lecture Series: Financial Markets




Uploaded by  on Oct 11, 2010
The Lecture Series

Open Society Institute chairman and founder George Soros shares his latest thinking on economics and politics in a five-part lecture series recorded at Central European University, October 26-30, 2009. The lectures are the culmination of a lifetime of practical and philosophical reflection.

Soros discusses his general theory of reflexivity and its application to financial markets, providing insights into the recent financial crisis. The third and fourth lectures examine the concept of open society, which has guided Soros's global philanthropy, as well as the potential for conflict between capitalism and open society. The closing lecture focuses on the way ahead, examining the increasingly important economic and political role that China will play in the future.

Learn More and watch the Lecture Series:http://www.soros.org/resources/multimedia/sorosceu_20091112

Behavioral Finance: The Role of Psychology




Uploaded by  on Nov 19, 2008
Financial Markets (ECON 252)

Behavioral Finance is a relatively recent revolution in finance that applies insights from all of the social sciences to finance. New decision-making models incorporate psychology and sociology, among other disciplines, to explain economic and financial phenomenon, such as erratic stock price variations. Psychological patterns such as overconfidence and perceived kinks in the value function seem to impact financial decision-making, but are not included in classical theories such as the Expected Utility Theory. Kahneman and Tversky's Prospect Theory addresses such issues and sheds light on irrational deviations from traditional decision-making models.

00:00 - Chapter 1. What Is Behavioral Finance?
09:01 - Chapter 2. Market Volatility: Random, or Socially Influenced? A Present Value Analysis
19:58 - Chapter 3. Overconfidence: Its Ubiquity and Impact on Financial Markets
38:29 - Chapter 4. The Kahneman and Tversky Prospect Theory or, How People Make Choices
58:50 - Chapter 5. The Regret Theory and Fashion as a Measure of the Market

Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website:http://open.yale.edu/courses

This course was recorded in Spring 2008.


Warren Buffett - The World's Greatest Money Maker





"How to Choose Your Strategy" Presented by Nicole Wachs of TradeKing

Warren Buffett - What is Franchise Value?



For the latest Warren Buffett, go to http://WarrenBuffettNews.com - 

There is much less difference between buying a whole company and buying shares of a company. One difference is that you can change the managers much easier. But if you have to change the managers, then it probably isn't a business that you want to be in anyway. Another advantage to owning 100% is that you can decide how to allocate the excess capital. You can't do that if you only own 5%. At Berkshire, the game is to try to figure out where to put capital. 

Most managers like to grow. They prefer to grow intelligently, but if they can't do that they will try other methods. In the banking industry, they measure themselves by size of their balance sheets, not by profits. Banks don't necessarily have economies of scale beyond a certain point. It is much better to have a large competitive advantage in a smaller market. There isn't much advantage to shareholders for the banks that they own to expand. 

Gillette makes about 2/3 of its money outside of the United States. Companies that can do well in international markets are great. Depending on the different countries they are in, there are many factors that can be better or worse because of tax rates or public opinion. A good business can be found anywhere, but it is easier in the United States if you understand the economy and the business landscape a bit better. 

Franchise value is what a brand has if a customer will leave a store if they don't carry the brand. They would rather walk across the street and pay a nickle more than to buy another brand. That is franchise value, and it is very valuable. It is wholly in the customer's mind. If you've got the right product in that way, you may be paying for taste or something else. The second thing to think about is how durable that franchise value is.

Grantham on China and value investing

Value Investing Tips - How to Assess a Company's Management

Value Investing Academy - Real People, Real Results


Mary Buffett Reccommends Value Investing Academy

Invest from Business Perspective and Importance of Ability to Raise Prices

The Power of Consumer Monopoly

Warren's Criterias for Choosing Winning Business

Key Differences Between Warren Buffett and others in Wall Street

Warren Buffett On Value Investing- How to allocate capital.

Trading Losses - Why It's So Hard To Get Back To Breakeven

The Importance of Exit Strategy







*Make BIG Money Trading -WATCH NOW!

- Ultimate Trading Cycles - by Greg Secker

The Hidden Secret of Technical Analysis

Candlestick Patterns for Trading





Martin J. Pring's Trading Rules - Webinar



Rule 1: When in Doubt Stay Out
Rule 2: Never Invest or Trade Based on Hope
Rule 3: Act on Your Own Judgment or Else Absolutely and Entirely on the Judgment of Others
Rule 4: Buy Low (into weakness), Sell High (into strength)
Rule 5: Don't Overtrade

Rule 6: After a Successful and Profitable Trading Campaign, Take a Trading Vacation
Rule 7: Take a Periodic Mental Inventory to Check How You Are Doing
Rule 8: Constantly Analyze Your Mistakes
Rule 9: Don't Jump the Gun
Rule 10: Don';t Try to Call Every Market Turn

Rule 11: Never Enter into a Position Without First Establishing a Reward to Risk
Rule 12: Cut Losses Short, Let Profits Run
Rule 13: Place Numerous Bets on Low Risk Ideas
Rule 14: Look Down (at the risk potential) not Up (before your reward potential)
Rule 15: Never Trade or Invest More Than you Can Reasonably Afford

Rule 16: Don't Fight the Trend
Rule 17: Whenever Possible Trade Liquid Markets
Rule 18: Never Meet a Margin Call
Rule 19: If You are Going to Place Stop, Put it in a Logical, Not Convenient Place

Technical Analysis Tutorial - Candlesticks

How to Interpret Volume

How to Shortsell, Trade Example




Let's take a look at a trade made during this "TOUGH" market!

The Stock Market is Falling, How I trade Down Markets.



Trade with the trend.

Reward-to-Risk Ratio -The Basics







This video will outline the concept of Reward-to-Risk.

Teach you the 3 components you must have to calculate your RR.

Trading "Math" (Win% + RR) I hit you with the numbers! How the relationship between your RR and how often you win affects your trading.

Slide after slide of examples and figures that is going to blow your mind if you were unaware of the power of this concept.

Thursday 12 April 2012

How to Control Your Emotions When Trading





Learn why I think trading psychology is worth 95% to the overall success of your trading. Find out if you fall in the average trader category and why you make poor trading decision that is holding you back.

Discover how to overcome these pitfalls and improve your trading skills.

Are Traders PREPROGRAMMED TO FAIL?













Are traders preprogrammed to fail? What is it about trading that causes 90% of intelligent, rational people to fall to the wayside each year? Is there a common thread among us as human beings that derails our best efforts and intentions? In this video series, Senior Trader Todd Brown explores the psychological inner workings of traders and shines a spotlight on the obstacles between unsuccessful traders and their profit goals.

A Short History of UK house prices

Trading in the Zone: Master the Market with Confidence Mark Douglas

Trading Lessons - Five Fundamental Truths



Five Fundamental Truths

1. Anything can happen.
2. You don't need to know what is going to happen next in order to make money.
3. There is a random distribution between wins and losses for any given set of variables that define an edge.
4. An edge is nothing more than an indication of a higher probability of one thing happening over another.
5. Every moment in the market is unique.

Trading Psychology









10 Golden Trading Rules




1. Have a Game Plan
2. Follow the Game Plan
3. Always trade with Stop Loss to protect your capital
4. Diversify to reduce your risk
5. Filter your trade to capture the Big Moves
6. Trade with the Trend
7. Not to listen to the news (many are planted by traders to affect the market). Listen only to the market.
8. Don't listen to your broker (they have interest in putting money into their own pocket)
9. Money Management
10. Must be Discipline (with your game plan, your stop and your profit taking).

My Trading Quotes Collection



Market Mania Montage - A New Mania coming to Market near You SOON

The Jesse Livermore Story in 3 Minutes

How Jesse Livermore Made Fortunes in the Stock Market

Trading vs. Gambling - Reasons They Lose Money

Global Financial Crisis and World Collapse Explained

Global Financial Crisis explained in 96 seconds.



World Collapse Explained in 3 Minutes

Why Our Chimp-Like Brains Lose Money on the Stock Market

When Should I Buy Stock? And how much should I buy?



Have your own personal goals.
Have a good investment philosophy and strategy.
You don't need to know everything to get started.
Seek a mentor.
Most mistakes happen early on when decisions are made on emotion and
when investment principles are not followed.
Not all mistakes will result in financial ruin.
Don't procrastinate!
You learn better while doing.

The Best Portfolio Balance

The Best Portfolio Balance
April 11, 2012

There isn't one. Wasn't that easy?

In the same manner, there isn't one diet that fits everyone. Depending on your body fat makeup and what you're trying to accomplish (increasing endurance, building muscle, losing weight), the proportions of protein, fat and carbohydrates you should consume can vary widely.

SEE: Introduction To Investment Diversification

Balancing Act
Thus it goes for balancing your portfolio. A former client of mine once stated that her overriding investment objective was to "maximize my return, while minimizing my risk." The holy grail of investing. She could have said "I want to make good investments" and it would have been just as helpful. As long as humans continue to vary in age, income, net worth, desire to build wealth, propensity to spend, aversion to risk, number of children, hometown with its concomitant cost of living and a million other variables, there'll never be a blanket optimal portfolio balance for everyone.

That being said, there are trends and generalities germane to people in particular life situations; many investors don't balance in anything approaching the right mix. Seniors who invest like 20-somethings ought to, and parents who invest like singles should, are everywhere, and they're cheating themselves out of untold returns every year. 

Fortune Favors the Bold
If you recently graduated college – and was able to do so without incurring significant debt – congratulations. The prudence that got you this far should propel you even further. (If you did incur debt, then depending on the interest rate you're being charged, your priority should be to pay it off as quickly as possible, regardless of any short-term pain.) But if you're ever going to invest aggressively, this is the time to do it. Yes, inclusive index funds are the ultimate safe stock investment, and attractive to someone who fears losing everything. (The S&P 500's minimal returns over the last 13 years is a testament to its "safety.") Still, why not incorporate a little more unpredictability into your investments, in the hopes of building your portfolio faster?

So you put it all in OfficeMax stock last January, and lost three-quarters of it by the end of the year. So what? How much were you planning on amassing at this age anyway, and what better time to dust yourself off and start again than now? It's hard to overemphasize how important is to have time on your side. As a general rule of life, you're going to make mistakes, and serendipity is going to smile on you once in a while. Better to get the mistakes out of the way early if need be, and give yourself a potential cushion. "Fortune favors the bold" isn't just an empty saying, it's got legitimate meaning.

Retirement Years
Fortune doesn't favor the reckless, however. If you're past retirement age and think that going long on mining penny stocks on the TSX Venture Exchange will make you wealthy beyond measure, well, hopefully at least one of your children has a comfortable couch for you to sleep on.

Start with the three traditional classes of securities – in decreasing order of risk (and of potential return), that's stocksbonds and cash. (If you're thinking about investing in esoteric like credit default swaps and rainbow options, you're welcome to sit in on the advanced class.) The traditional rule of thumb, and it's an overly simple and outdated one, is that your age in years should equal the percentage of your portfolio invested in bonds and cash combined. (Which is why George Beverly Shea has -3% of his portfolio in stocks.)

It's unlikely that there is someone on the planet who celebrates his birthday every year by going to his investment advisor and saying, "Please move 1% of my portfolio from stocks to bonds and cash." Besides, life expectancy has increased since that axiom first got popular, and now the received wisdom is to add 15 to your age before allocating the appropriate portion of your portfolio to stocks and bonds.

That the rule has changed over the years should give you an idea of its value. The logic goes that the more life you have ahead of you, the more of your money should be held in stocks (with their greater potential for growth than bonds and cash have.) What this neglects to mention is that the more wealth you have, irrespective of age, the more conservative you can afford to be. The inevitable corollary might be less obvious, and more dissonant to cautious ears, but it goes like this: the less wealth you have, the more aggressive you need to be.

The Bottom Line
Investing isn't a hard science like chemistry, where the same experiment under the same conditions leads to the same result every time. Investing's most exciting chapters are still being written, and the one that states that there are exactly three possible portfolio components needs to be put through the shredder. Real estate is neither stock, bond nor cash equivalent, and the same goes for precious metals. The former can increase your wealth rapidly with sufficient leverage, and the latter can maintain your wealth regardless of whether inflation or deflation besets the underlying currency that you conduct transactions in. As for the best portfolio balance, it's the one that fits the criteria you determine, but only when you assess your unique situation and regard your capacity for risk and reward with the utmost frankness.


Read more: http://www.investopedia.com/financial-edge/0412/The-Best-Portfolio-Balance.aspx#ixzz1rmK2PKWi

Origins of the Financial Mess

Wednesday 11 April 2012

Personal Finance - Part 1 of 12

There are Two Types of Debts: Good Debt and Bad Debt (Real Estate Investing)



Invest for cash flows and not for capital appreciation.

Good Debt vs Bad Debt vs Ugly Debt





The Financial Planning Timeline...in 90 Seconds or Less

Financial Planning Introduction



Review regularly.
Adjust financial goals.
Be prepared to act when situations change.

When is the best time to plant a tree? 20 years ago.

So, when is the 2nd best time to plant a tree? As soon as you can!







How should I choose a stock brokerage?

Rule - Know what you don't need

Full service brokers
Thumbs UpOffer help and advice over the phone or in person
Thumbs DownCharge higher fee per trade
Thumbs DownAdvice is, at best, an educated opinion.
Thumbs DownBecomes an expensive luxury that reduce investment returns.

Discount online brokers
Thumbs UpSelf directed stock research services
Thumbs UpFast, easy trade executions
Thumbs UpConvenient, cost-effective solution
Thumbs UpFocus on low cost brokers with a clean, clear interface.

What makes a company valuable and what makes a stock a "Buy"?

What's the difference between a great company and a great stock?

The price paid for a company is just as important as the quality of the company.

Rule of Thumb:

PE above 11: Market expects positive growth

PE at 11: Market expects zero growth

PE below 11: Market expects negative growth

Using Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Analysis to Value Stocks

Small Business Valuation











Basic Truths about business valuations:
1. Purpose of business valuation is to determine a PRICE RANGE, not a specific number.
2. The earnings of your company should be the basis of the valuation. The buyer buys your company for one reason only, that is, for its earnings.
3. For small businesses, using the multiples of earnings is the common method of valuation.


The earning use in small business valuations is OWNER'S BENEFIT. It is suggested that past 3 years Owner's Benefit be used.

Owner's Benefit 
= Annual Pretax Profit 
+ Owner's salary + Owner's perks/benefits 
+ interest + depreciation.

(Contrast with: EBITDA = Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization)


When you are selling your small business, you can hope for a higher multiple of earnings when:
1. Your business is in a growing trend.
2. You are able to provide your own finance to the buyer to purchase your business.

Wall Street Prep Lessons: Cash Flow, DCF, WACC, LBO, M&A, Trading and Transactions










Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Explained in Two Minutes

A Buffett Disciple Shares His Secrets (Morningstar)



Low risk, high uncertainty situations.

Wall Street punishes uncertainties. The rewards can be very high for such low risk situations.

Intrinsic value described by Ben Graham in Security Analysis.

In a bull market, be prepared for the bear.

"It is not difficult to outperform the benchmark in a rising market.  For the investor, it is more important to be with a portfolio that is defensive enough not to drop too much in a down market."

Value Investing - The Bottom Line

"You need to worry about where the company and the stock will be in three to five years.  If you can buy something today with little chance of permanent impairment and a high likelihood that you'll double your money over the next five years, you should go ahead and do it."

-  Seth Klarman


Start Early

Valuing a company using adjusted P/E

Average long-term P/E = 15

Company average long term P/E = 13 ( =$530m / $41m)

Market cap = $530 m
ttm Earnings = $41 m
$161 m in cash (no debt) or $4.75 per share

Cash-adjusted P/E is 9.[ = ($530m - $161m) / $41m]

Earnings yield ( 1/PE) of 11% is too cheap.

If company has a lot of debt, you wouldn't bother about the cash-adjusted P/E.

Simple DCF

Valuation

At the end of the day, every company is worth whatever the current value of all its future cash flows are discounted backward to today's terms.


It is a hint, not an answer.  Based on a lot of assumptions, using conservative figures.

1st 10 years Cash flow. using OWNERS EARNINGS (FCF).
Cash flow beyond the 10th year (Terminal value):  Assumes growth at 3% per year.
Add all the above discounted cashflows to get the present value..

Only the FCFs are hard data, all others are assumptions.

Time 14.13
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zA8udp8uRnw&feature=relmfu

Key Points about Risks

Risk unequivocally exist in investing in any stock  ...

... but important to distinguish between volatility in stock price and business risk ...

... and my point is that none are large or imminent enough to explain why shares are so cheap.