Category: Investors

  • TIP’S OF INVESTORS FOR INVESTING

    TIP’S OF INVESTORS FOR INVESTING

     

    Today we are learning some strategies or techniques on how to deal with the share market and how to invest in the share market. Here, some legend investors share their knowledge & experience with us. These tips are more helpful for our trading/investing lifestyle. 

    Jack Schwager

     

    Jack Schwager (born 1948) is an American trader and author. His books include Market Wizards (1989), The New Market Wizards (1992), Stock Market Wizards (2001).

    Schwager is an eminent industry expert and author of a number of critically acclaimed financial books, including The Market Wizards series. He was one of the founders of Fund Seeder. Previously, he was a partner at a London-based hedge fund advisory firm, the Fortune Group (2001-2010). He has also been a Director of futures research for some of Wall Street’s leading firms.

    Tips for individuals who want to trade:

    1. Schwager advises individuals who want to pursue their career as traders to first do extensive reading. He doesn’t recommend any book in particular, but encourages individuals to just go and explore different books.
      Check on the web, go to a library or go to a bookstore, if you can still find one these days. However you do it, just pick up different things. Look at different things, See what they’re saying, Once you figure out where you’re gravitating to, read more on that,” he says.
    1. He also advises traders to start thinking about ideas based on what they have read and how they could implement them in the market.
    1. Then he recommends traders to evolve those ideas into some sort of a methodology for which they can define the rules and come up with risk management plans.
    1. Traders can practise dummy trading to check whether their methodology has the required edge to become successful.

     

    • Finally, once traders feel they have an edge, they can start trading with small amounts of money and implement their strategies.

     

      1. Gradually if one is trading with real money successfully, then one can increase the amount as per his comfort.

     

    Tobias Carlisle

     

    Tobias Carlisle is the Chief Investment Officer at Acquirers Funds, and is best known as the author of the book Deep Value: Why Activists Investors and Other Contrarians Battle for Control of Losing Corporations.

    A graduate from the University of Queensland in Australia with degrees in Law and Business (Management), Carlisle has plenty of experience in investment management, business valuation, corporate governance and corporate law and has also worked as an analyst at an activist hedge fund.

    7 principles of deep value investing

    Carlisle lists out 7 simple principles for deep-value investing that one can follow to ensure solid returns in the long run.

    1. Focus on cash flows: Carlisle feels a share of a company shouldn’t be considered a mere ticker symbol. When one invests in a stock, she becomes a partial owner of that business. This, Carlisle believes, has two important implications. First, a shareholder has rights and can exercise those rights by voting at meetings; and secondly, an owner pays attention to all that a company owns and owes, especially its cash.
    1. Zig when the crowd zags: Carlisle encourages investors to follow a contrarian approach towards investing, and advises them to avoid following the herd. But he warns that before taking a contrarian approach, one should know the crowd’s consensus, which can be found in the difference between a stock price and its value.
    1. Find a margin of safety: Deep value stocks have a built-in margin of safety, and they are undervalued because the possibility of a worst-case scenario is already priced in. That gives it a high upside/low downside bet, he says.

    “The worst-case scenario provides a low downside. So you can’t lose much if you’re wrong. But if you’re right, the high upside can bring exceptional returns. So even if you’re right as often as you’re wrong, you do okay. Be more right than wrong, you will do great,” he says.

    1. Be cautious of fast growing companies: Carlisle says fast-growing and profitable companies attract competition, leading to erosion of margins and profits. Although moats do help, strong and sustainable moats are hard to find, and it is tough to gauge whether a moat will remain strong and sustainable in the future, he says. Also, due to reversion to mean, over time, high growth and profit companies eventually become just average companies.

    So Carlisle advises investors to look at companies that are currently facing difficulties and have prices that reflect those challenges.

    1. Don’t have a concentrated portfolio: Carlisle believes a concentrated portfolio focuses only on a few high performing stocks for investment due to which it comes with two important trade-offs. First, a concentrated portfolio is more volatile than a diversified one, so a whole good year for the market can be a great year for the portfolio, but a bad year can turn out to be a terrible one.
    1. Follow simple, concrete rules to avoid errors: Investors should follow simple concrete rules that can be both back-tested and battle-tested to avoid major errors. Back-testing checks the rules for theoretical strength, especially when tested in different countries and different stock markets. A battle-test can ensure the rules work in the real world. “No strategy has ever failed in theory. Almost all have failed in reality,” says he.
    1. Have patience for long-term success: Carlisle says investors often misprice stocks of companies that are facing tough times. This, he feels, can be an opportunity for patient investors willing to put up with below-average results in the short term. Carlisle believes investors who follow a buy-and-hold strategy and wait for a turnaround to happen have an enduring edge as they are focused on the long-term gains.

    Geraldine Weiss

     

    Geraldine Weiss (born March 16, 1926) is the co-founder of Investment Quality Trends and is nicknamed “the Grande Dame of Dividends” and “The Dividend Detective” for her unconventional value approach investment style by focusing on a company’s dividends rather than earnings. Geraldine Weiss, known as the ‘blue chip stocks guru‘ is the founder of the advisory newsletter, Investment Quality Trends. She is also a co-author of two books.

    Weiss says, she shortlists companies that meet six “blue chip” criteria:

    1. The dividend must have been raised five times in the past 12 years
    2. Have an “A” credit rating from S&P
    3. At least five million shares must be outstanding
    4. It must have at least 80 institutional investors
    5. A total of 25 uninterrupted years of dividend payouts
    6. Earnings improvements must have been recorded in at least seven of the past 12 years

    Weiss’ 7 investing rules

    Weiss came up with seven rules of investing from her years of experience in the investing world, which has helped investors of all ages from time to time to make better investment decisions.

    1. Stocks must be undervalued as measured by its dividend yield on a historical basis
    2. It must be a growth stock that has raised dividends at a compound annual rate of at least 10% over the past 12 years
    3. It must be a stock that sells for two times its book value, or less
    4. It must have a price-to-earnings ratio of 20 or less
    5. It must have a dividend payout ratio of around 50% to ensure dividend safety plus room for growth
    6. The company’s debt must be 50% or less of its market value
    7. It must meet a total of six “blue chip” criteria
  • WARREN BUFFETT – THE KING OF STOCK MARKET

    WARREN BUFFETT – THE KING OF STOCK MARKET

    AGE – 88 YEARS OLD

    BORN – OMAHA, NEBRASKA, U.S.

    EDUCATION – COLUMBIA BUSINESS SCHOOL (1950 – 1951)

    NET WORTH – 8430 CRORE USD

     

    Warrent Buffett is an American business magnate, investors, speaker & he is the chairman CEO & the largest shareholder of Berkshire Hathway. Warren Buffett was born 30 August,1930, in Omaha, Nebraska. Warren Buffett is an investment guru & one of the richest & most respected businessman in the world. Buffett’s grandfather also ran grocery store & Buffett’s father howard, was a local stockbroker & banker who later become Republican congressman.

    Warren Buffett known as “Oracle of Omaha”. When he was 11-year-old, Buffett already bought stock & by 16 he had amassed more than $53000 from various business ventures & investment. From a young age, Buffett was bound for success. Buffett purchased shares of CITISES SERVICES preferred for $38 apiece.

    After graduating, Buffett applied to HARVAD BUSINESS SCHOOL. But he was rejected by HARVAD BUSINESS SCHOOL. In 1951 he received his master’s degree in economics at Columbia university, where he studied under economist Benjamin Graham (the father of value) & furthered his education at the New York Institute of finance.

    He was appointed at a starting salary of 12000 a year at Benjamin Graham’s partnership in 1954. His boss was a difficult man to work with & expected strict adherence to conventional rules of investing which Buffett’s young mind questioned.

    Benjamin Graham retired & closed his partnership in 1956. By this time Buffett had a large amount of personal savings with which he opened Buffett partnership Ltd, an investment partnership in Omaha.

    He become the richest person in the world in 2008 with a total net worth estimated at $62 billion by Forbes, overtaking Bill Gates who had been the no.1 on Forbes list for the past 13 years. The very next year Gates regained the first position & Warren Buffett moved to second place.

    When asked the key to his success, Warren Buffett pointed to a stock of books & said, read 500 pages like this every day. That’s how knowledge works. It’s build’s up, like compound interest.

    On February 16,2011, Warren Buffett was awarded the highest civilian honor, “the presidential medal of freedom,” by former president Barack Obama.

    WARREN BUFFETT TIP’S

    • Never depend on single income. Make investment to create a second source.
    • Saving first, spending last.
    • Don’t buy things you don’t need.
    • Create more earning source.
    • Think long – term & be patient.
    • Do not put all eggs in one basket.
    • If the business does well, the stock eventually follows.
    • Invest yourself.
    • Our favorite holding period forever.
    • It’s far to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price.

    WARREN BUFFETT QUOTES

    1. “Without passion, you don’t have energy. Without energy, you have nothing.”
    2. “The stock market is a device for transferring money from the impatient to the patient.”
    3. “Someone is setting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago.”
    4. “The difference between successful people is that really successful people say no to almost everything.”
    5. “Focus on your customer & lead your people as though their lives depended on your success.”
    6. “If you don’t find a way to make money while you sleep, you will work until you die.”
    7. “If you cannot control your emotions, you cannot control your money.”
    8. “I look for 3 things in hiring people: integrity, intelligence & a high energy level. But if you don’t have the first, the other two will kill you.”
    9. “You are your best ASSET.”
    10. “We have long felt that the only value of stock forecasters is to make fortune tellers look good. Even now, Charlie & I continue to believe that short-term market forecast is poison & should be kept locked up in a safe place, away from children & also from grown ups who behave in the market like children.”
    11. “Risk comes from not knowing what you’re doing.”
    12. “No matter how great the talent or efforts, some things just take time. You can’t produce a baby in one month by getting nine women pregnant.”
    13. “Read 500 pages every day. That’s how knowledge works. It builds up like compound interest.”
    14. “Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.”
    15. “I never invest in anything that I don’t understand.”
    16. “Failure comes from ego, greed, envy, fear, imitation. I have success not because I am smart, but because I am rational.”
    17. “The more you lean the more you earn.”
    18. “The best investment you can make, is an investment in yourself…The more you learn, the more you’ll earn.”
    19. “Only buy something that you’d be perfectly happy to hold if the market shut down for 10 years.”
    20. “I always knew I was going to be rich. I don’t think I ever doubted it for a minute.”
    21. “Time is on your side when you own shares of superior companies.”
    22. “Don’t save what is left after spending, but spend what is a left after savings.”
    23. “Investors making purchases in an overheated market need to recognize that it may often take an extended period for the value of even an outstanding company to catch up with the price they paid.”
    24. “Unless you can watch your stock, holding decline by 50% without becoming panic stricken, you should not be in the stock market.”
    25. “Great investment opportunities come around when excellent companies are surrounded by unusual circumstances that causes the stock to be mis appraised.”
    26. “The stock market is a no called strike game. You don’t have to swing at everything you can wait for your pitch.”
    27. “If you are not thinking about owning a stock for 10 years, don’t even think about owning it for 10 minutes.”
    28. “Its good to learn from your mistakes. It’s better to learn from people’s mistakes.”
    29. “Wall street makes it’s money on ACTIVITY… you make your money on INACTIVITY.”
    30. “People who know the edge of their own competency are safe, and those who don’t, aren’t.”
    31. “First, many in wall street- a community in which quality control is not prized- will sell investors anything they will buy.”
    32. “I don’t try to jump over seven- foot bars; I look around for one-foot bars that I can step over.”
    33. “Never feel guilty for starting again.”
    34. “Opportunities come infrequently. When it rains gold, put out the bucket, not the thimble.”
    35. “I mean, I can buy anything I want, basically, but I can’t buy time.”
    36. “An idiot with a plan can beat a genius without a plan.”
    37. “If you are happy every day, I think you are going to live longer.”
    38. “Don’t pass something that attractive today because you will find something way more attractive tomorrow.”
    39. “Stay away from credit cards & invest in yourself.”
    40. “In insurance, as elsewhere, the reaction of weak management to weak operations is often weak accounting.”
    41. “Don’t put all your eggs in one basket.”
    42. “I go out & do what I believe I should be doing. And I’m not influenced by what other people think.”
    43. “If you think being entrepreneur is risky, try working for someone else for 40 years & living off social security.”
    44. “I learned very early in my life that my favorite employer was myself.”
    45. “Never count on making a good sale. Have purchase price be so attractive even a mediocre sale gives good results.”
    46. “There comes a time when you ought to start doing what you want. Take a job that you love.”
    47. “I try to invest in businesses that are so wonderful that an idiot can run them. Because sooner or later, one will.”
    48. “Remember, money doesn’t create man, its man who creates the money.”
    49. “Predicting rain doesn’t count; building arks does.”
    50. “Success is walking from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm.”
    51. “Never test the depth of river with both feet.”
    52. “Successful investing takes time, discipline & patience.”
    53. “It takes twenty years to builds a reputation & five minutes to ruin it.”
    54. “Smart doesn’t always equal rational.”
    55. “What we learn from history is that people don’t learn from history.”
    56. “What the wise do in the beginning, fools do in the end.”
    57. “Charlie & I would follow a buy & hold policy even if we ran a tax-exempt institution.”
    58. “If each of us hires people who are smaller than we are, we shall become a company of dwarfs. But , if each of us hires people who are bigger than we are, we shall become a company of gaints.”
    59. “The best thing that happens to us is when a great company gets into temporary trouble……. We want o buy them when they are on the operating table.”
    60. “The most important thing to do if you find yourself in a hole is to stop digging.”
    61. “You only find out who is swimming naked when the tide goes out.”
    62. “It is not necessary to do extraordinary things to get extraordinary results.”
    63. “Its better to hang out with people better than you.”
    64. “Without passion, you don’t have energy. Without energy, you have nothing.”
    65. “You can’t make a good deal with a bad person.”
    66. “Honesty is a very expensive gift. Don’t expect it from cheap people.”
    67. “Having money makes you rich, having time makes you wealthy.”
    68. “To change your life, you have to change your mindset.”
    69. “Forget managing the situation. Manage your mind.”

     

    GOLDEN RULES OF WARREN BUFFETT:

    RULE NUMBER 1

    Never Lose Money

    RULE NUMBER 2

    Never Forget Rule Number 1…..

  • MOST SUCCESSFUL INVESTORS

    MOST SUCCESSFUL INVESTORS

     

    The most successful investor is an individual who has achieved remarkable success in the world of investing through their exceptional knowledge, skills, and decision-making abilities. They possess a deep understanding of the financial markets, economic trends, and various investment instruments.

    This investor demonstrates a unique ability to identify lucrative investment opportunities and accurately assess their potential risks and rewards. They possess a sharp analytical mind and extensive experience, allowing them to make informed investment decisions that consistently yield impressive returns.

    What sets this investor apart is their long-term perspective and the ability to see beyond short-term market fluctuations. They have a strategic mindset and understand the importance of patience and discipline in achieving consistent growth over time.

    The most successful investor is highly adaptable and stays updated with the latest market developments and emerging trends. They possess excellent research skills and are constantly seeking new knowledge to enhance their investment strategies.

     

    RADHAKISHAN DAMANI

    BORN: BIKANER

    AGE: 61

    NETWORTH: 1,040 CRORE USD

    He entered the market at an age of 32. Radhakishan Damani is a stock market investor, stockbroker, trader, the founder & promoter of Dmart retail store in India.Radhakishan Damani is also known as“Mr. white & white” because of his simple dressing. Radhakishan Damani is a veteran stock market investor & founder of Supermarket chain Dmart. Mr. white & white  is a master in picking multibagger stock. He is famous as a man with Midas touch.

    The Badshah of Dalal Street Rakesh Jhunjhunwal calls him a mentor / guru. Rakesh Jhunjhunwala has credited Damari for guiding him in the stock market.

    His retails chain accounts for 91 stores across India & is the third biggest in the industry. Radhakishan owns 52% stocks in the parent company of Dmart called Avenue Supermarts & Bright star investment- his investment company, holds other 16% stake. Overall – Dmart’s success is focused on three things: Customers, Vendors & Employees.

    RAKESH JHUNJHUNWALA

    BORN: MUMBAI, INDIA

    AGE: 58

    EDUCATION: UNIVERSITY OF MUMBAI, SYDENHAM COLLEGE OF COMMERCE & ECONOMICS

    NETWORTH: 240 CRORE USD

    Rakesh jhunjhunwala entered the Indian market in 1985. Rakesh jhunjhunwala also known as “India’s Warren Buffett” & “The Big Bull” is one of the most renowned & successful Stock Market investors in India.His father was also interested in stocks.

    He is a Chartered Accountant. He manages his own portfolio as a partner in his asset management firm, RARE Enterprises. The name RARE is derived from the initial of his name & his wife’s name.

    He is also the chairman of APTECH LIMITED & HUNGAMA DIGITAL MEDIA ENTERAINMENT PVT LTD. Rakesh jhunjhunwala follows the ideology of warren Buffett & believes in long term investment. He strongly advocates the growth of India & its rising company. Mr. Rakesh Jhunjhunwala is also confident in learning from mistakes. He often says- “Mistakes are your learning friends. The idea is to keep these mistakes small.”   

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QGep7gSWRNI&t=26s

    CHANDRAKANT SAMPT

             “Markets & Mistakes are the best education. The convential education just close the mind.”

    Chandrakant Sampt was known to many as the Warren Buffett of India & was regarded as a veteran stock market investor. The 82-year-old investor lead an active yet simple life that included daily jugging & yoga exercises. Sampt hardly looked like one of the most successful investors in the country. He believed in investing in companies with strong cash flow & predictable business. He made a killing in the 1970’s with the introduction of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act Or FERA.

    He began accumulating shares of blue chip like Hindustan Unilever (then Hindustan Lever), Procter & Gamble, (Initially Richardson Hindustan), Gillette (then Indian Shaving Products) & Colgate, from the time they went public.

    “His greatest contribution to the Indian market was that he shared his immense knowledge about investing by mentoring many as prising investors”, Ramesh Damani.

    “The one man who has had a lasting impression on him is none other than the greatest management theorist of all time”, Peter F. Drucker.

    His investment philosophy; identify great businesses & let the power of compounding to the rest. Invest in a business you understand the company should have either zero or very little debt, the share should be available at a P/E ratio of 13 to 14 times the current year’s earnings & lastly, it should be available between 3.5% & 4%, “it is that simple!” he says.

    RAMESH DAMANI

    AGE: 61

    EDUCATION: HR COLLEGE, MUMBAI (Bachelor’s degree in commerce) CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY (Master’s Degree in Business Administration)

    OCCUPATION: FOUNDER OF RAMESH S. DAMANI FINANCE PVT LTD.

    Ramesh Damani, the investment guru & one of the most successful stock market investors in India, started his journey to riches in 1990’s when Sensex was 600 points. He holds a bachelor’s degree in commerce from HR college, Mumbai & master’s degree in business Administration from California state university.

    Investor Ramesh Damani has been known for his investment in both unlisted & listed companies. Damani is popular for his high- quality value picks, that can be retained in the portfolio for long periods of time. He follows the Warren Buffett model of investing, which favors companies with strong management credentials & processes.

    Ramesh Damani works at privately owned Ramesh S. Damani finance PVT Ltd.

    Ramesh Damani’s first famous investment was ‘Infosys’. Coming from a techie background in the US, he knew the Infosys has great future potentials. So, when Infosys become public in 1993, he invested Rs.10 lakhs in it. By 1999, this investment has given him more than 100 times return.

                           “I learned that just become a stock double, it is not a reason to sell it.”

    PORINJU VELIYATH                  

     BORN: 6 JUNE,1962, CHALAKUDY

    AGE: 56

    EDUCATION: BACHELOR OF LAWS

    Porinju Veliyath is one of the most successful stock market investors of India. He has become one of the most respected value stock picker of India. Porinju Veliyath is an Indian investor & fund manager.  He manage his own portfolio & the portfolios of investors in his fund management firm Equity Intelligence been called a Small- Cap Czar by economic times. “I buy lesser known, high quality businesses to derive maximum portfolio value. I didn’t shy away from smaller companies like other ‘knowledgeable people’ do. And I don’t buy a lot of great companies with clean balance sheet, honest management & clear business visibility. If you invest in such companies even bank FDs would beat your portfolio returns”, Porinju Veliyath.

    PORINJU  VELIYATH  INVESTMENT  STYLE

    1. Identify & invest in future muilti baggers.
    2. Make strategy when to exit from stock.
    3. Buy lesser known, high quality businesses to derive maximum portfolio value.
    4. Invest in companies with clean balance sheet, honest management & clear business visibility.

     

    Also Read | Best Stocks For Long Term Investment

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