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Showing posts with label Investment Portfolio Guide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Investment Portfolio Guide. Show all posts

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Know Your Investment Profile & Risk Tolerance

By answering 15 questions about your risk preferences, you can find out your investment profile and risk tolerance. This score will determine the asset allocation that best suits your risk preferences, you can use our simple excel workbook - Saral Gyan Asset Allocation Questionnaire which suggests the optimum split between cash, bonds and stocks.

The questions are simple to answer, with options provided to select answers using drop-down list, check boxes and radio buttons. They are designed to determine your tolerance to investment volatility, the size of your existing financial cushion, your time horizon, and what you want your investment to achieve.


Saral Gyan Investment Risk Profile & Asset Allocation workbook - Download

The questions asked in the excel workbook includes:

1.What is your total annual income before tax (including investment dividends but not including employment bonuses)?
2.How many sources of income do you have?
3.What is the value of your liquid (or investable assets)? This includes cash plus any easily sold investments like Gold, Bonds and Stocks.
4.What yearly income do you want from this investment portfolio?
5.How long do you intend to hold this investment portfolio?
6.What would you do if your investment portfolio fell in value by one-fifth (20%) over the course of 12 months?
7.What characteristics would you prefer your investments to have?
8.Do you prefer investments which have low volatility and low return, or investments which have high volatility and high returns?
9.What do you want this investment portfolio to do? Preserve capital, generate income, generate income with some capital appreciation etc.
10.What volatility (or risk) are you prepared to tolerate?
11.In the next five years, what percentage (if any) of the portfolio do you plant to sell to realize cash?
12.What kind of investments do you currently own, or would prefer to own? Domestic, international, aggressive, fixed income etc.
13.Assuming a time horizon of ten years, what annual return do you want?
14.Who do you normally get investment advice from?
15.How would you rate your current skill in managing investments?

Your answer to each question is rated with a score. The total score is used to suggest an asset allocation that is appropriate to your risk preferences; the workbook suggests a split between:

■ Cash
■ Bonds (high-yield, long-term, intermediate and international)
■ Stocks (large cap, mid cap, small cap and micro cap stocks)

You can also find out what kind of investor you’re considered; an income investor, a long term investor, an aggressive, moderate or conservative investor. Really helpful, do it yourself. Click here to Download our Investment profile and Asset Allocation workbook. 

Monday, February 11, 2013

Why Stock Diversification is Important?

Stock Diversification means buying stock in a range of different industries.

On the face of it, diversification ought to be simple: You don't put all your investing eggs in one basket because if you drop it, all the eggs will break!

But it's not that easy. Suppose you don't invest all your available capital in one stock. Suppose you buy two. Are two baskets enough? And which eggs go in which baskets?

No, not so simple indeed. But it's important to figure out because diversification allows investors to reduce risk in their portfolios without giving up any return.

The idea is that, because you cannot possibly know which stocks will perform better or worse than average, you cannot afford to put all your money into one company, or even in companies within a single industry.

You have to spread the risk and the opportunity.

Diversification of investment holdings is the most important shield against risk. Because some investments rise in value while others fall, diversification smoothes out much of the volatility of the overall return from a portfolio. Diversification sacrifices some of the upside potential, but this should be more than offset by the benefits of a lower level of risk.

The trade-off for the balancing of risk and return in a diversified portfolio is that your overall return might be somewhat lower than you could get in an undiversified portfolio. However, along the way, a diversified portfolio will have less volatility, and steadier returns.

The Point is: Don't put all of your eggs in one basket.

Only by diversifying you will be able to realize your average return objective with lower risk. The right level of diversification for you at a given time depends on a variety of factors, including where you are financially, what your goals are, and what the market is doing.

Though literally everyone talks about diversification for their investment portfolio, very few understand the true statistical data underlying the definition. As a result, the majority of portfolios are not properly diversified and an extended risk is being taken, unquestionably unwittingly, but nonetheless evident, by most investors.

In order to cope with the above problem, you have to understand the following:

1. Systematic Risk: This is a risk due to the movement of the market itself. The benchmark could be any Index. If you have one or a few investments in a given area, you could compare its return to that of the benchmark index to determine how well it is doing.

2. Unsystematic Risk: This is the risk of a single company causing a significant move, either up or down. This is usually the risk that most investors would want to eliminate, unless they are "true risk takers!" This risk may be tempered and in fact virtually eliminated, by the purchase of an increased number of stocks.

3. Time Risk: It is usually known that the longer one holds an investment, the less the overall risk. It means that sometimes if you have a risky stock, risk would lower the longer the stock was held.

Proper diversification is the foremost issue in all efficient investments, especially where individual stocks are purchased. It is impossible to properly judge a portfolio if the risk factor is missing. And even if you do understand your holdings, it is mandatory that you must "know your self", and therefore have detailed knowledge of all your investment assets in order to be able to determine the proper diversification and risk.

The importance of Professional Investment Guidance, regardless the performance of the market, cannot be overstated. A qualified financial consultant can assist you with portfolio review and to discuss strategies for achieving your financial goals.

By understanding the basics of investing, working with a professional to design an appropriate portfolio, and allowing your investments time to grow, you can invest successfully.

Sunday, August 19, 2012

How Many Stocks Should You Own?

How many different stocks should you own? There is no absolute answer to that question – every investor will come up with an answer that suits his or her particular situation.

However, many investors find holding around 15 - 20 individual stocks spread over five to seven different industries gives them a well-diversified portfolio.

If you are just starting out, don’t panic and think you have to get to this level all at once. This is a goal, not a starting point.

Even then, the most successful individual investor of all times, Warren Buffett is not sold on the value of spreading your money over a large number of stocks. However, since we’re not Warren Buffett, the prudent thing to do is protect yourself with a diversified portfolio.

What your stock portfolio looks like depends on several things:

• Your financial goals

• Your risk tolerance

• Your time horizon

These factors will drive how conservative or aggressive your mix of stocks is.

If your strategy is conservative, your portfolio will favor stocks from industries that tend toward slow, but steady growth in all types of business cycles, such as:

• Consumer staples stocks

• Utility stocks

A more aggressive approach might target these investments:

• High growth stocks

• Technology stocks

The conservative investor will want to focus more on larger, well-established companies, while a more aggressive investor might look for some percentage of investment to go toward smaller, emerging companies with larger potential for growth, but at a higher risk.

Of course, stocks are just one part of a diversified portfolio. Spreading your money over different asset classes to include bonds and cash as well as stocks gives you a better risk profile.

The more conservative investor will place more assets in bonds and cash, while the aggressive investor will do the opposite and fund stocks over bonds and cash.

Don’ get hung up on meeting an arbitrary number for filling out your portfolio of stocks. The important consideration is to find a balance that meets your financial goals and works with your risk tolerance. As long as your portfolio is diversified by industry and asset class, you are taking the right steps toward building a sound financial future.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Saral Gyan Portfolio of 12 for 2012 - Returns @ 17.2%

We circulated portfolio of 12 of 2012 with all Saral Gyan subscribers in the beginning of the year. While reviewing the mid year performance, we are pleased to share that Saral Gyan model portfolio is outperforming sensex by 8.1%.

Sensex was at 15,495 at beginning of this year and today closed at 16863, giving returns  of 9.1% since 1st Jan 2012 whereas Saral Gyan portfolio is giving returns of 17.2%. 11 out of 12 stocks gave positive returns, Petronet LNG returns is the only stock which gave negative returns, stock has gone seen a steep correction in price due to margin pressures. Star performers of the portfolio are from mid and small cap space giving returns of almost 50% in last 6 months.


Looking at above table, you can observe that best of large cap stocks have given single digit returns since beginning of the year but mid caps and little known small / micro cap stocks have given astonishing returns upto 50% in last 6 months, and that is one of the strong reason why we like to power our model portfolio with best of small and mid cap stocks.

Our equity analysts team keep on exploring investment ideas in small and mid cap companies which offer great value for money. As investments in small and mid cap stocks is more risky compared to large cap stocks, our team keep a close watch on these stocks and update our members in case of any adverse news.

You can download the stock portfolio circulated by Saral Gyan team by clicking on download link. Saral Gyan Portfolio of 12 for 2012 - Download

Saral Gyan offers Hidden Gems (unexplored multibagger small cap stocks) and Value Picks (Mid caps with plenty of upside potential) annual subscription services. For details about subscription services, click here.

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Shall We Start Buying Equities Now?

The question which everybody is asking : Shall i buy equities now? And here comes the counter question: what is your horizon?

If your horizon is three-four months and if you are trying to catch a bottom just to trade then maybe the time is not here but if your horizon is two to three years sure you could buy and buy more if the market falls and still make a lot of money in two-three years time.

Lets understand what happened in last 3-4 weeks time to well known mid cap stocks. Some of the well known mid cap stocks corrected so sharply that investors trying to do bottom fishing are worried now with their losses leaving others to avoid any fresh buying at current levels.

While markets have been correcting, the shock and awe for a lot of people happened during last week because of the way the mid-caps just collapsed. 

Mid Cap stocks are offering great value right now but the same stocks were looking dirt cheap last week as well. A lot of people bought Lanco Infratech at Rs 28 and Rs 30 saying there is great value in that stock and how much lower can it get? It’s Rs 15 now so who so ever entered at that level lost 50% of their wealth in 10 to 15 days. As the old wisdom don’t try and bottom fish stocks which you don’t have assurance of quality in.

Considering above example, if we say that this is not the time to invest then we are ignoring the basic fundamentals of valuation. Of course, markets are falling and probably there is no prize for guessing where markets will move in coming weeks. But this is the time to catch the falling knife. At 13.5-14 times one year forward earnings, at 2.2 times price to book if you don’t buy then when will you buy? Can markets go down 10-15% from current levels? The answer is, yes, it is possible but what is the probability of that?

The fact is that in a rising market it is always easy to invest and in a falling market it is always difficult to invest. Our request will be keep on nibbling in the stock market. Don’t buy on a day when the market is up but buy on a day when market is falling. You will get plenty of those opportunities over the next three-six months. It is unlikely that the way markets have fallen they are going to go up. If you build your portfolio in this downturn, probably you will see a far better and handsome return over the next 18-24 months.

If you are planning to invest in stocks with a time horizon of 2-3 years, its a great opportunity to enter into the stock market now by investing in fundamentally strong small and mid cap companies.  Nifty hovering around 4850 trades at PE valuation of 13.5. Historically, Nifty and Sensex traded at a PE range of 10 to 27. If we look at stock markets across the globe, most of the stock markets are trading at single digit PE, so is Indian stock market expensive at current levels? We do not think so, India deserve higher PE multiple because our economy is expected to do well in coming quarters delivering robust growth which we cant expect from other stock markets globally. 

Wealth-Builder: Saral Gyan offers Wealth-Builder: An offline portfolio management service which build investor's wealth by investing in fundamentally strong small and mid cap stocks.

Start building wealth by investing in Wealth-Builder stocks. Read more about Wealth-Builder - Click here!

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Strategies to Build Investment Portfolio in 2011

Dear Saral Gyan Reader,

We Wish You A Very Happy and Prosperous New Year!

This is our first article for the New Year 2011. We thought the best way to wish a happy new year to our readers will be by giving them valuable investing strategies for new year 2011. The investing strategies for 2011 will be related to building of investment portfolio. We would like our readers to know the importance of building a good portfolio for best investment management. There is a big corelation between the effectiveness of your portfolio and your investment goal. If you have decided that you want at least 12% return p.a. on your investment over a period of 5 years then by seeing the composition of your portfolio an expert can estimate that whether you are going to achieve your goal or not. So we will request our readers to start giving equal importance to your total portfolio same a what you give to every individual shares you buy. There is more to building a solid investment portfolio than just picking good shares and bonds.

The investment strategies for 2011 should start with consideration that you are going to manage your porfolio same as your wardrobe. It may be possible that you have top class fashion clothings in your closet but this is not enough. All individual clothes should compliment other clothes to give a good get-up. Investment porfolio is also the same.

In this article we will discuss several tips of designing a good investment portfolio that matches your goals. We will give your five essential strategies required to be considered for building a great investment portfolio.

BUILDING A TAILOR MADE INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO

Investment portfolio is like a designer wear, they are tailor made as per your body-shape and personality. Similarly your investment portfolio should fit your goal and risk-taking capability.

Investing Strategy No (1): Building a porfolio as per your goal

It may be possible that you are inevsting with a goal for your child’s future, or for your retirement, or for your dream house etc. Before starting to build your investment portfolio, setting up goals gives very important information required to plan a good investment strategy. Your goals will basically answer three important question:

i) How much money you need?
ii) When you will need this money?
iii) What level of returns (8%, 10% or 12% ..) is required to meet your goals?

The less time you have in your hand the more difficult it is to get high returns. Lesser investing time (< 3 years) means more focus on protecting the capital than generating higher returns.

Investing Strategy No (2): How to diversify your investment?

Till you become an expert investor it is very important for people to save your invested money from the wrath of investment risks. This can be easily done by diversifying your investment portfolio. We think that the investing strategies related to portfolio diversification must be known to all investors. Let us understand an easy to implement rule of thumb related to investment diversification (related to retirement planning).

TAKE YOUR AGE AS YOUR GUIDE

For example if your age is say 35 years, it means 35% of your porfolio should consist of debt linked assets (bonds, deposits, debt linked mutual funds etc) and balance 65% into stocks and equity linked mutual funds. And when we are talking about shares, again diversify based on your age, 35% in large cap stocks, balance 65% on mid caps and small cap stocks.

TRY TO ANSWER SOME KEY QUESTION ABOUT YOUR PRESENT HOLDINGS

It may be possible that you remember all stocks you presently hold in your portfolio but it is important that you should answer some key questions about your holdings.

Investing Strategy No (3): Realize how your individual shares perform as a portfolio?

When market is upbeat you will not realize the importance of effect of individual shares on your total porfolio. But when the market starts to dip you will start realising the necessity of knowing the characteristics of individual shares. Try to categorize your portfolio on basis of the below questions, it will give your great insights about your investments:

i) What is the average return of your total portfolio?
ii) What constitues your core investment holdings? (like which shares, deposits..)
iii) Is your porfolio well diversified? (like are you holding shares of only few sectors..)

OBSERVE AND MONITOR YOUR INVESTMENTS

After you have answered questions about your goal, need of investment diversification and your present share holding pattern, it becomes essential to answer another important question. A real good answer of this question is important in building a good investment strategy for 2011

Investing Strategy No (4): Does your current portfolio compliment your investment goals?

You may be having some excellent shares in your portfolio but are they good enough to support your goals during bad financial weather? The objective is that even in bad times your investment portfolio should be strong enough to meet your investment goals. Try to categorize your investment holdings on basis of questions asked below:

i) Are your holding subjected to tax when you decide to redeem?
(like debt linked investments)

ii) Are you owning too many large cap stocks which are growing too slowly?
(often large cap stocks become complacent and their growth prospects become feeble)

iii) Do you know about your core sector that is going to contibute maximum to your goal?
(try to keep yourself updated with the news related to this sector, this way you can afford to put money in this sector as compared to other)

To conclude, Investment strategies for 2011 should be more focused on building a good investment portfolio. Your portfolio should be well diversified and try to fill your portfolio with value stocks.

Happy Investing in 2011 and beyond!


Warm Regards,
 
Saral Gyan Team 




Thursday, September 2, 2010

How to Manage a Stock Portfolio?

Retails investors often trade in stocks without understanding the deeper implications of their buy or sell decisions. When you invest in stocks, you implicitly are building a stock portfolio.

Here is a set of actionable steps that you must keep in mind to help you with building your stock portfolio.

1. Diversify:

Just buying stocks in 1 or 2 companies is not enough. You could be taking on too much risk through a concentrated portfolio, akin to  putting all your eggs in one basket. Ideally, your portfolio should have no more than 20-25 names to give you the benefits of diversification.

However, this also does not mean that you can have just say 5 shares of one company and 2 shares of another, because that is all you can afford because you can’t create wealth through just purchasing a handful of shares in a company.

Good stockpicking is about knowing how to allocate your capital efficiently across your best ideas in a diverse portfolio.

2. Review Your Exposure Frequently:

While one investment strategy is to buy and hold, that does not imply that you do not manage your exposure by ignoring your portfolio. Market prices move, sometimes dramatically.

As a result, you might have too much or too little exposure to one sector or stock. Avoid this by being disciplined about setting aside some time to review your exposure. This will help you understand if you need to trim or add to the exposure to a certain sector or stock in your portfolio and take care of risk management.

3. Create your own set of rules to guide you:

Formulate your own rules for when to buy or sell a stock based on an investment philosophy that you can be disciplined about. Don’t just follow the herd or come under peer pressure.

What is good for others might not be suitable for you or your portfolio because your risk, investment criteria, tax situation and entry price might be different. If a stock has met your price target, have some rules that guide you whether you will take money off the table or stay invested.

If a stock is a constant underperformer, will you continue holding on to it because psychologically you are unwilling to admit that you made a poor decision, or will you be unemotional and make the rational decision to cut your losses and sell?

4. Keep some cash available:

This is one area where the professional investors stand out. They recognize that good investment opportunities come unannounced, but in order to take advantage of them they need to have cash available to make these investments.

So make sure that you keep some cash available in your portfolio to pounce on these ideas. If you are fully invested, you might miss good opportunities due to lack of liquidity.

If the above sounds challenging and tough for you to follow, then a do-it-yourself portfolio management is not recommended. As an alternative you might be better invest in the stock markets based on equity advisor services with stock specific research and recommendations or you can invest through mutual funds, where you can take advantage of the resources and risk management skills of the professionals, rather than compete against them.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

How to Manage Investing Risks?

"To make a mistake is only human; to persist in a mistake is idiotic." - Cicero (106 - 43BC)

Reduce your risks by:

Setting your sights on the long term, patiently riding with the ups and downs!

If you have the time to be patient, you can benefit from time diversification. The more numerous good years for stocks outweigh the bad, pulling your return up.

Thus, if you hold equities for many years, you can expect to realize significant positive growth in your wealth.


Weeding out your laggards!

Don't be too patient with laggards. This is the management risk referred to earlier. Underperforming the market benchmarks is a big risk to which many people are oblivious.

The more years you remain with a subpar performer, the greater the damage to your nest egg. Weed out funds that have lagged their peers over the past 18 to 24 months.

Avoiding hard-core market timing!

It's not uncommon for hard-core market timers to move between the extremes of 100% stocks during an up market to 100% cash when their indicators signal a major turning point in prices.

Market timing is especially easy to do with mutual funds. Resist the temptation.

Participation in the best up months is far more important than avoiding the worst down months, and the really dramatic upward surges in stocks are unpredictable, of short duration, and few and far between. Market timers risk being in cash when the bull stampedes. Missing out can make a big difference in your long-run returns.

Being disciplined and using cost averaging!

Investing monthly in a specific stock is a great way to build wealth and cope with market ups and downs. Your fixed investments buy more shares when prices are down and fewer at higher levels.

Cost averaging can help people become more disciplined because it encourages investing during market nadirs when individuals otherwise might be too fearful.

A particularly good strategy is to double up on your investments when prices are depressed, if you're able to. This will help enhance your long-term performance, by further reducing your average cost per share.

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Benefits of Investing and Starting Early

"The greatest loss of time is delay and expectation, which depend upon the future. We let go the present, which we have in our power, and look forward to that which depends upon chance, and so relinquish a certainty for an uncertainty." - Lucius Annaeus Seneca (5BC - 65AD)

There is never a bad time to get start investing. And there is never a really good excuse for not starting.

We don't care if you think the market today, or tomorrow, or next year is too high, or is going to drop even lower.

We don't care if you think you don't know enough about investing.

We don't care if you think you don't have enough money.

In Simple words, start investing as soon as possible.

It is not the amount of money invested that is really important, but when an investor gets started with a long term plan is critical.

Time is the real best friend to an investor.

The biggest success factor influencing your portfolio is how well you harness the power of time and the rate of return you earn on your investments.

The beauty of time is that it doesn't depend on how smart you are or how much money you have? Time is the great equalizer for investors. Indeed, time is available to everyone.

If time is the most influential factor on your portfolio's performance, it follows that the most important thing you can do is to get started in an investment program as soon as possible.

When Is the Right Time to Start Investing?

We Believe that the Best Time Is Right Now.

And this holds true whether you are 20 years old, 60 years old or somewhere in between.

Starting early gives you two major advantages.

First:

The longer you have to invest, the more aggressive you can be when selecting investments, knowing you will have the time to ride out any possible short-term fluctuations.

Second:

A longer investment time frame enables you to capitalize on the true long-term value possibilities of your selected investments.

Monday, July 26, 2010

Investment Portfolio Mistakes to Avoid

Are you a truly expert investor as you really believe?

Do you consider yourself as a well-informed investor who is capable of anticipating and avoiding the majority of the risks that are usually associated with investing?

Chances are, you are making many common errors that are costing you a lot of money and may even harm your financial independence and security.

Below you can find the two most costly errors investors make with their investment portfolios:

1. Asset Classes and Subclasses

How you allocate your portfolio, rather than which investments you select or when you buy or sell them, determines the majority of your investment performance over time.

The solution is to allocate your portfolio to many asset classes and subclasses and be careful not to over or under weight any asset class.

Do not mistakenly believe that a properly diversified portfolio is a properly allocated portfolio. Properly allocate your portfolio among the different asset classes first and then diversify the investments within each asset class.

Diversification is the cornerstone of asset allocation and is key to reducing risk, namely company-specific risk. To properly diversify, you should hold sufficient quantities of not-too-similar securities with comparable risk and return trade-off profiles.

2. Inflation

Inflation can destroy the real value of your portfolio over time, thus placing your future financial security at risk.

As a general rule, the longer your investment time horizon, the more you should allocate to equity investments. For shorter investment time horizons, emphasize fixed-income and cash and equivalent investments.

By avoiding these two mistakes, besides other investing mistakes, you will be able to design an investment portfolio that will provide the best opportunity to achieve and protect your financial independence and security.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Invest in Individual Stock or Mutual Fund?

Many people just assume that mutual funds are the best way to save, but like most "conventional wisdom," it's often wrong.

Conventional wisdom will tell you to put your money in a mutual fund. Well, conventional wisdom does not apply in the stock market. Today, there are more mutual funds with various schemes than there are stocks to buy from the stock indices. A mutual fund can be your worst investment decision.

There is an enormous amount of money being put into mutual funds every year. These so-called "safe" investments have been consistently under performing the markets over the years.

That's right, when the market goes up 40%, your mutual fund probably returned 25%. What happens when the market goes down? And believe us, it does go down! If the market is down 20%, your fund will probably be down 30% and you lose both ways.

If there are almost more mutual funds than there are stocks, then how do you pick a mutual fund?

Do you need a mutual fund that helps you pick a mutual fund? Sounds silly, doesn't it? Guess what, they already exist. There are mutual funds that take your money and pick different mutual funds to invest in.

With all the free information available today, you're better off picking the stocks yourself. You would save yourself a lot of money.

You can dramatically reduce your investment expenses by cautiously selecting your individual stocks, and minimizing the number of your trades. The average mutual fund has fees and expenses of over 1.00% per year for the privilege of underperforming the market. Between 85% and 95% of mutual fund managers underperform the indices, depending on who's doing the counting.

One of the big advantages of mutual funds is diversification. Your mutual fund manager pools your money with thousands of other people and builds a portfolio containing hundreds of securities representing companies in dozens of industries.

Unfortunately, too much diversification isn't good for you. You don't need to hold hundreds of securities to be properly diversified. Increasing the number of securities held does reduce your risk, but the reduction becomes negligible once the portfolio reaches 20 or 25 securities, spread across several industries.

If you need only 25 securities to be completely diversified, why is your fund manager holding 200 securities in your mutual fund?

He can't buy enough stock in the companies he likes, so he has to add second and third rate issues to remain fully invested. Even if your mutual fund manager is a bona fide genius, it's unlikely he has more than 5 or 6 good investment ideas a year. You want your mutual fund manager's best ideas, not the 200 mediocre ones.

Once a mutual fund gets too large, the manager has to buy large capitalization stocks for liquidity. Also there are restrictions on how much of any one stock they can hold.

So, how do you decide what stocks to buy?

People have many different ways to pick stocks. Some people will only look at companies which have good earnings and sound fundamentals.

Others will look at the core of the business and determine if the products or services offered is better than it's competitors or they might only look at the charts of stocks and try to determine if the stock is going higher or lower.

Many might even not look at anything and just get in and get out of stocks in matter of seconds.

Do you think that you don't have time to become an amateur securities analyst?

In such a case stock picking answer is really simple:

Just listen to equity analysts and evaluate their stock research and investment ideas in terms of company background, past performance, management views, dividend payments & risk involvement. Check your risk factor and accordingly break up your stock investments by investing in Small, Mid & Large cap stocks. 

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Hold may not be the Best Strategy

Many people believe that buy and hold is the best strategy to employ for the long term.

However, over a period of couple of years, a person who buys 100 XYZ shares at 100 each, sees them rise to 140, sees them decline to 70, and then rise back up to 135, he is not getting an overall return as good as he thinks.

What he has lost is the opportunity cost associated with the down period of time.

However, the return over the same period would have been much greater, if the investor had sold the securities and then bought them back at a lower price.

This works whether the investor takes the cash proceeds from the sale and puts them to work in a savings account, or any other investment.

Of course, the overall return will vary depending on the alternative investment and the prices at which the transactions are executed.

The reason for the return being greater is because in the middle years the investor did not suffer the drawdown he did in the buy and hold example. And he was able to purchase more than 100 shares the next time he bought XYZ.

Instead of the drawdown he received an extra positive return, because he had the cash available when XYZ did turn around and begin to climb back up.

Therefore, he was able to invest the entire proceeds in more than the original 100 shares.

In real life, the investor would not sell exactly at the top and he would not buy exactly at the bottom. He would sell below the top and buy above the bottom.

Nevertheless, the return is still superior to the buy and hold strategy.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Investing Risks and Rewards

Before you can begin to build a successful investment portfolio, you should understand the basic elements of investing and how they can affect the potential value of your investments over the years.

When you invest, there is no guarantee that you will end up with more money when you withdraw your investment than you put in to begin with, and that's a very scary prospect.

Loss of value in your investment is what is considered risk in investing.

Even so, the opportunity for investment growth that is possible through investments far exceeds that concern for most investors.

At the cornerstone of investing is the basic principal that the greater the risk you take, the greater the potential reward.

You get what you pay for and you get paid a higher return only when you're willing to accept more volatility. Risk then, refers to the volatility.

Volatility is the up and down activity in the markets and individual issues that occurs constantly over time. This volatility can be caused by a number of factors such as interest rate changes, inflation or general economic conditions.

It is this variability, uncertainty and potential for loss, that causes investors to worry. We all fear the possibility that a stock or bond we invest in will fall substantially. But it is this very volatility in stocks, bonds and their markets that is the exact reason that you can expect to earn a higher long-term return from these investments than you can from CDs and savings accounts.

Different types of investments have different levels of volatility or potential price changes, and those with the greater chance of losing value are also the investments that can produce the greater returns for you over time.

So risk has two sides:

A. It causes the value of your investments to fluctuate,

B. It is precisely the reason you can expect to earn higher returns.

You might find it helpful to always remember that all financial investments will fluctuate.

There are very few perfectly "safe havens" and those simply don't pay enough to beat inflation over the long run.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Know your financials before Investing in Stocks

Investing in stocks is just one part of your financial life. Before you begin a program of investing in stocks, you should get your financial life in order. Here are steps you should complete before beginning a program to invest in stocks:

Emergency Funds

Every household needs an emergency fund to see them through financial disasters, such as losing a job or a major illness.

Many financial experts say a six-month cash reserve is the minimum. The fund should be sufficient to pay all of your major bills (food, housing, medical and so on) for six months. If the problem may take longer than six months to resolve, the emergency fund will buy you some time to make adjustments in your lifestyle (less expensive housing, cars and so on).

The fund should be perfectly safe from loss, which means bank CDs or other secured funds - absolutely none of your emergency fund should be in the stock market (mutual funds or individual stocks).

Make Your Wishes

Every family should have a will, especially if you have children or other dependents. In addition, if you own real estate or valuable assets, a will can clear any confusion. Estate laws vary from state to state, so it is important to connect with a professional who can prepare your will appropriately. Not only do you need to let your survivors know your wishes, but also a well-prepared will can spare them additional financial burdens and costly legal proceedings.

Retirement Planning

Retirement planning is not something you should put off until later in life. Start with your first job as an adult and when the time comes, you'll be much better prepared for the financial needs of retirement.
However, no matter your age, retirement planning is an important part of putting your finances in order.
Stocks will figure into your retirement plans, but there are some beginning steps. If your employer offers a retirement plan, that is the place to start. If you do not have access to an employer-sponsored program, look into the other options such as annuities.

Funding a retirement program should come before investing in stocks outside of such a program.

Short Term Financial Goals

Short-term financial goals are those you hope to accomplish in five or fewer years, such as saving for a down payment on a house, new car and so on. The stock market is not the right place to save for short-term goals.

Protect Your Assets

Insurance protects you from catastrophic losses, whether it's your house, your income or your life.
It doesn't make sense to work hard accumulating assets only to lose them all in a disaster.

Property insurance, including home and vehicles; health insurance, life insurance and disability insurance all protect you from their respective disasters.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Major Type of Risks for Stock Investors

Investing in stocks is a risky business. There are some risks you have some control over and others that you can only guard against.

Thoughtful investment selections that meet your goals and risk profile keep individual stock and bond risks at an acceptable level.

However, other risks are inherent to investing you have no control over. Most of these risks affect the market or the economy and require investors to adjust portfolios or ride out the storm.

Here are four major types of risks that investors face and some strategies, where appropriate for dealing with the problems caused by these market and economic shifts.

Economic Risks

One of the most obvious risks of investing is that the economy can go bad. Following the market bust in 2000 and the terrorists’ attacks in 2001, the economy settled into a sour spell.

A combination of factors saw the market indexes lose significant percentages. It took years to return to same levels and later moved northward only to have the bottom fall out again in 2008-09.

For young investors, the best strategy is often to just hunker down and ride out these downturns. If you can increase your position in good solid companies, these troughs are often good times to do so.

Foreign stocks can be a bright spot when the domestic market is in the dumps if you do your homework. Thanks to globalization, some Indian companies earn a majority of their profits overseas.

However, in collapses like the 2008-09 disaster, there may be no truly safe places to turn.

Older investors are in a tighter bind. If you are in or near retirement, a major downturn in stocks can be devastating if you haven’t shifted significant assets to bonds or fixed income securities.

Inflation

Inflation is the tax on everyone. It destroys value and creates recessions.

Although we believe inflation is under our control, the cure of higher interest rates may at some point be as bad as the problem. With the massive government borrowing to fund the stimulus packages, it is only a matter of time before inflation returns.

Investors historically have retreated to “hard assets” such as real estate and precious metals, especially gold, in times of inflation.

Inflation hurts investors on fixed incomes the most, since it erodes the value of their income stream. Stocks are the best protection against inflation since companies have the ability to adjust prices to the rate of inflation.

A global recession may mean stocks will struggle for a protracted amount of time before the economy is strong enough to bear higher prices.

It is not a perfect solution, but that is why even retired investors should maintain some of their assets in stocks.

Market Value Risk

Market value risk refers to what happens when the market turns against or ignores your investment.

This happens when the market goes off chasing the “next hot thing” and leaves many good, but unexciting companies behind.

It also happens when the market collapses - good stocks as well as bad stocks suffer as investors stampede out of the market.

Some investors find this a good thing and view it as an opportunity to load up on great stocks at a time when the market isn’t bidding down the price.

On the other hand, it doesn’t advance your cause to watch your investment flat-line month after month while other parts of the market are going up.

The lesson is don’t get caught with all you investments in one sector of the economy. By spreading your investments across several sectors, you have a better chance of participating in growth of some of your stocks at any one time.

Conservative Investors 

There is nothing wrong with being a conservative or careful investor. However, if you never take any risk it may be difficult to reach your financial goals.

You may have to finance 15 to 20 years of retirement after crossing age of 58 or 60. Keeping it all in savings instruments may not get the job done.

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Building & Managing an Equity Portfolio

Investor with a long-term horizon should not be worried by volatile market movements and hold on to their positions. The current market correction has given a good opportunity for investors looking at building an equity portfolio.

Below are some significant aspects of building and managing an equity portfolio in these conditions:

Risk & Returns

It is very important to set realistic expectations from your equity investments. An investor's expectations of unrealistically high returns from the stock markets force him/her to take some irrational decisions where he/she will end up losing his/her hard-earned money.

It is important for you to understand your risk profile which depends on many individual factors like age, financial background, earning visibility and stability and family background. This also helps in taking decisions on picking the right set of stocks.

Equity investments should be a part of the total investment portfolio. You should also look at other instruments such as life insurance cover, medical insurance cover, investments in tax-saving instruments etc, apart from maintaining sufficient liquidity.

Picking Stocks

In the equity markets, stocks are categorised into sectors based on their business focus and industry. It is advisable to identify sectors whose outlook is good in the current market conditions. Look at diversification in terms of identifying more than one sector, and within a sector, selecting more than one stock to invest in.

An ideal equity portfolio will have 10-12 carefully selected stocks.

Do evaluate your equity portfolio on regular time intervals, this will help you to know whether stocks in your portfolio are meeting your expectations as compared to peers in the same sector in terms of QonQ as well as YonY growth, expansion plans, dividend payouts etc.

Stock Analysis

An analysis is very important before investing in any stock. This includes past performance of the stock with respect to market indices, outlook of the sector , management guidelines for the future on business/earnings visibility etc. An analysis is recommended even more for investors who are new in the markets and mostly rely on tips.

Analysis and questioning helps in increasing your understanding of stocks, and taking the right decisions based on your investment objectives and risk profile.

Stock Tips & Recommendations

Many investors rely on tips from analysts, stock brokers, and the media. Try to understand the basis of these recommendations rather than just following the advice. Discuss with other investors to identify stocks to invest in. This also helps in building knowledge about the market as well as stocks.

Due to the dynamic nature of the stock markets, it is very difficult for an individual to track and react to significant developments. Investors can share their views with others in the same community, various financial websites with discussion forums is a good platform to learn through interaction and be attentive to many significant market developments.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Diversify your Investment Portfolio

You probably know it is not a smart decision to put all of your investments in a single stock.

Diversifying your stock portfolio is a smart way to reduce - but not eliminate - risk. Diversification spreads your investments so no one piece will be deadly to your portfolio if it fails.

But, what is the best way to diversify?

You should spread your stock investments in the following ways:
  1. Own big, middle and small companies as measured by market capitalization. The more conservative your strategy is, the larger percentage of big companies.
  2. A more aggressive strategy will favor middle and small companies, since they offer the most opportunity for growth (or failure).
  3. Own companies in different industry sectors - some manufacturing, some financial, some telecom and so on.
  4. Mix up growth and value stocks. If you are more risk oriented, favor growth over value.
  5. Add a small percentage of foreign stocks (usually no more than 5-10 percent).  
  6. You can probably do this with 8 to 12 individual stocks. If you are concerned about picking foreign stocks, buy a good low-fee mutual fund or an Exchange Trade Fund. 
There are two other components you need to consider in diversifying your total portfolio:
  • Bonds should be in all but the youngest investors portfolio. Subtract your age from 100 and that's a good place to start. The answer is how much you should have in stocks. 
  • Cash is always good. When interest rates are low, cash may not provide much of a return, however some part of your total portfolio should be in cash (money market funds, short-term Treasury issues, bank CDs, for example).
If you want to take diversification a step further, add in hard assets such as precious metals or real estate.

There are no hard and fast rules on diversification, but these guidelines will get you started.

Make adjustments based on your investment goals and tolerance for risk. Once you find a mixture you like, stick with it. That means at least once a year you should rebalance your portfolio if needed.

Monday, May 17, 2010

Understanding Stock Diversification

We’ve all heard about the value of diversification in reducing risk in our portfolio, but be sure you understand that there are two types of diversification.

The purpose of diversification is to reduce volatility and improve overall performance. It works if you do diversification correctly.

The first type of diversification is the one most commonly understood as “don’t put all you eggs in one basket.”

This simply means don’t just own one or two stocks. One common way people get in trouble is owning too much of their employer’s stocks.

You may get a good deal on company stock and load up in your retirement fund and buy more for your investment fund because you believe in your company.

It may even seem disloyal not to buy lots of company stock. However, it is not in your best interest if most or your entire portfolio in your company’s stock.

To be truly diversified in your stock selection, you need to own stocks in different industries and in different size companies.

You want your investments spread over large, medium and small companies in a variety of industries. It is especially important to watch the relationship between the stocks so they are not all affected by the same economic factors.

For example, if all of the stocks you owned were extra sensitive to interest rates, then you would not be diversified. The stocks would move in correlation with the interest rates and each other.

Stocks that have a low degree of correlation don’t move as one unit and therefore are less likely to react the same way to bad economic news.

The lesson here for investors is that if a sector of the market is really hot, avoid the temptation to dump “all your eggs into one basket.” However, you should also be aware of those market or economic influences that may adversely affect a group of your stocks.

Don’t put all your eggs in one basket and don’t put all you baskets in the same wagon.

Another type of Diversification:

(Another type of diversification involves the other parts of your portfolio)

If you tie up all of your investments in stocks, no matter how uncorrelated, you are still not diversified in the sense of reducing risk and improving performance.

You need to also spread your investments over different asset classes such as bonds, cash, real estate, precious metals and other alternative investments.

Monday, May 10, 2010

Averaging Down - Good or Bad Strategy?

Averaging down is a strategy to lower your average cost in a stock that has dropped in price. Is this a good idea or throwing good money after bad?

The answer depends on several factors. First, let us describe how it works. You buy 500 shares at Rs50 per share, but the stock drops to Rs46 per share. You then buy another 500 shares at Rs46 per share, which lowers your average price to Rs48 per share.

Admittedly, this is a simple example, but you get the idea.

Good Strategy or Bad?

Now, is this a good strategy or not? If the stock rebounds to Rs60 per share, then it was a great strategy. However, if the stock continues falling, you have to decide to keep averaging down or bail out and take a loss.
Which brings us back to the question, is averaging down a good strategy or not? Before we can answer that question, we need to decide if we are investing in a stock or a company. The distinction is very important.

Investing in Stock: If you are investing in a stock, you look for buy and sell signals based on a number of indicators. Your goal is to make money on the trade and you have no real interest in the underlying company other than how it might be affected by market, news or economic changes.
In most cases, you don’t know enough about the underlying company to determine if a drop in price is temporary or a reflection of a serious problem. Your best course of action when investing in a stock (as opposed to a company) is to cut your losses at no more than 7%. When the stock drops that much, sell and move on to the next deal.

Investing in a Company: If you are investing in a company (as opposed to a stock), you have done your homework and know what’s going on within the firm and its industry. You should know if a drop in the stock’s price is temporary or sign of trouble.
If you truly believe in the company, averaging down may make sense if you want to increase your holdings in the company. Accumulating more stock at a lower price makes sense if you plan to hold it for a long period.

This is not a strategy you should employ lightly. If there is a heavy volume of selling against the company, you may want to ask yourself if they know something you don’t. The “they” is this case will almost certainly be mutual funds and institutional investors.

Swimming against the current can sometimes prove profitable, but it can also get you swept over the waterfall.

Hence, if you’re playing stocks, averaging down probably doesn’t make any sense. Take a small loss before it becomes a big loss and move on to the next trade.

If you invest in companies, averaging down may make sense if you want to accumulate more shares and are convinced the company is fundamentally sound.

Friday, April 30, 2010

Benefits of Long Term Investing

Like the fabled tortoise that beat the hare in the race, the investor who stays in for the long term is more likely to achieve his or her goals than the investor who chases “hot tips” for quick profits in the stock market.

Time is an investor’s best friend (or worst enemy if you wait too long) because it gives compounding time to work its magic. Compounding is the mathematical process where interest on your money in turn earns interest and is added to your principal.

Consider the following four investors ages 25 – 55. Each invests Rs 2,000 per year and earns 8%.

At age 65:

The investor who started at age 25 has over Rs. 585,000

The investor who started at age 35 has just Rs. 250,000

The investor who started at age 45 has just Rs. 98,800

The investor who started at age 55 has just Rs. 30,700

The results are quite dramatic and, as you might expect, the youngest investor comes out the best. However, look at the difference starting 10 years sooner can make. The fewer years invested the more dramatic the difference with the next youngest age. The investor who starts at age 45 still earns over three times as much as the investor who starts at age 55. Of course, part of the difference is the 45-year-old investor has 10 years (Rs. 20,000) more to invest, but the rest of the difference is the power of compounding.

This may not be the most “real life” example, since we can’t go back to age 25 and start over. Let’s look at the power of long-term investing from a different goal. What will it take for each of these investors to accumulate Rs 750,000 at age 65, assuming they all earn 8% and ignoring inflation and taxes?

The investor who started at age 25 needs to invest Rs 213 per month

The investor who started at age 35 needs to invest Rs 500 per month

The investor who started at age 45 needs to invest Rs 1,650 per month

The investor who started at age 55 needs to invest Rs 4,072 per month

While all four investors reach the goal of Rs 750,000, it is obvious that the younger investors get a lot more “heavy lifting” from their investments. The lesson is clear: The earlier you start the less you have to invest to reach your goal.

Problems & Corrections

The examples above describe the mathematical advantage of starting early, however they don’t represent a “real world” situation. It is highly unlikely that you could achieve a constant return of 8% over a long period. The reality is there will be times when your investments earn less and other times when you will lose money. There may also be times when you will earn more.

The investor with a long- term perspective can also correct for mistakes along the way. For example, that stock you thought was going to soar like an eagle turned out to be a turkey. If you have a long-term perspective, you can change investments that aren’t working for other alternatives. However, if you will need the money from your investment in the near future (fewer than 5-7 years), a mistaken investment can create real problems in meeting your goals.

Long-term investors, especially those who invest in a diversified portfolio, can ride out down markets like the one that began in March of 2000 without dramatically affecting his or her ability to reach their goals.

However, for the investor just starting out at age 55, a market downturn can be disastrous. There is no room for error with only 10 years left before retirement at age 65. The reality of investing is that the market will go up and the market will go down. Investors that begin early and stay in the market have a much better chance of riding out the bad times and capitalizing on the periods when the market is rising.