One
up on Wall Street, written by Peter Lynch, erstwhile manager of the Fidelity
Magellan fund ($3 Billion at that time – that’s like if the entire world put in
50 cents each, the corpus was be managed by him!) is a timeless classic on
investing. One of my personal favorites to facilitate mindset conditioning for
investing (stock investing is what is targeted in the book). I would put it in
the league of ‘Rich dad poor dad’ & ‘The intelligent investor’. Below is my
interpretation of the book –
(The way I’ll structure this
is to cater to our basic questions/apprehensions)
Who, ME? How
could I possibly be better at investing as a beginner than my professional
consultant?
- The average common investor has the edge over the
professional investor as he can sight
multibagger from the beginning of the business in his day to day life.
The business reaches the professional investor after it has already taken
multi-fold leaps – Imagine a new store opens in your neighbourhood that is
always flooded with customers, you must wonder who owns this & is it
listed?
- Stock doesn’t get traction by professional houses as a lot
of times the business doesn’t get classified into existing industry
categories. Other times they just take too long to put it on their
watchlist. It’s a choice between
chance of making a large profit on an unknown company and the assurance of
losing a small amount on an established company. Fund managers
generally choose the latter. You’ll
never lose your job losing money on IBM. If IBM stock does not rise,
fund managers won’t question the buy decision of the manager. Instead they’ll
ask “What is wrong with IBM”?
- Fund
managers too, just like you, spend a quarter of their working hours
explaining what they just did - to their immediate bosses and ultimate bosses (shareholders).
Both who can be very critical to the fund as well as to his career!
- The SEC (SEBI
in our case) also poses a lot of well intentioned restrictions on holdings
of funds that may rule out a lot of Multiple baggers – I remember just
recently all the small cap crashed without anything wrong with their
fundamentals. I could only link it to the reason that most Large/Mid Cap
mutual funds were asked by SEBI (with good intentions) to get their Small
Cap holdings within prescribed %. Now all of them sold their small cap
holdings sending the stock prices nosediving!
OK, I may
have an edge, but I don’t understand the numbers or any industry in depth. Do
you want me start learning it from the scratch now?
- Investing in stocks is an art. Not a science. All the math you need in the stock
market you get in fourth grade – Always remember the stock market is a
Voting machine & not a Weighing machine. But here the votes
favour the one with strong fundamentals in the long term!
- Most dot coms (start-ups in today’s reference) cannot
be rated on the p/e yardstick. There’s
no ‘e’ in the all important P/E ratio. There’s no track of ‘e’ but people
always keep a track of ‘p’ which gives absolutely no information. EDS
once sold for 500 times it’s earnings. This means it would take you 5
centuries to make back your money, if EDS earnings stayed constant
- If you
don’t understand any industry/technology (eg internet), look for
industries that indirectly benefit from it. In the gold rush, the
would-be miners lost money, but the people who sold them picks, shovels
and blue denims made a lot of money - Instead of manufacturer of
technology (highly competitive), better invest in a company that is a user
of technology
Fair
Enough, but there are huge number of companies out there. Where do I start or
how do I filter?
- Step 1: Possess
these virtues – Patience, self reliance, common sense, tolerance for
pain, open minded ness, detachment, persistence, humility, willingness to
do independent research and admit mistakes.
- Try & classify the companies into 6 broad categories - Slow growers, Stalwarts, Fast growers,
Cyclicals, Asset plays and Turnarounds
- “Any idiot
can run this business” is one characteristic of the perfect company, the kind of stock I
dream about!
- A no
growth industry is where winners are developed. Whenever the next
breakthrough arrives in an industry, there are hundred companies working
to make it cheaper in Taiwan. This does not happen with bottle caps, oil
drum retrieval or motel chains
- Invest in
companies that have products that people have to keep buying – Well, clothes &
basic hygiene/packaging is here to stay till the time humans walk this
planet!
Well this
seems easy, anything nuances that I MUST take care of?
- Before you own a share of anything, answer 3 questions
for yourself –
- Do I own
a house? If
no, stop!
- Do I need
the money in the near term? If yes, stop!
- Do I have
the personal qualities that’ll bring me success in stocks? (remember point 1 in
last section) – If no, duh! STOP!
- Once you have the tip or identified a good business, it
does not mean you simply buy it. Investing
without research is like playing stud poker and never looking at the cards
- It is easy to forget sometimes, a share of stock is not
a lottery ticket. It’s part ownership of a business. Value will eventually
catch up with the earnings. Always
keep an eye on earnings and assets – Compare growth to earnings - (long
term growth rate + dividend yield)/ P/E
- Learning
on each stock that you must possess - p/e, % institutional ownership (lower the better),
insider buying/buyback, trend of earnings (keep in mind the asset play),
debt-equity ratio, cash position
- 5 basic
ways in which companies can increase earnings - Reduce cost, Raise
price, Expand into new market, Sell more in old market, Dispose losing
operation
- When in
doubt, tune in later. Have patience. Most importantly, invest at least as much time and effort in choosing a new stock as
you would in choosing a new refrigerator
OK got it!
Anything that I need to be wary of?
1. You
don’t need to make money on every stock you pick. 6/10 winners in a portfolio
can produce satisfying results
- If there
were a way to avoid the obsession with the latest ups and downs, and check
prices every six months or so, the way you’d check oil in the car,
investors might be more relaxed. Day trading is a casino that supports a lot of
accountants & brokers!
- Humans go through 3
emotions that make them bad timers of the market –
- Concern (when market is low)
which keeps him from buying good companies
- Complacency when he buys at higher
prices and stocks are going up (so he gets complacent and doesn’t check
fundamentals)
- Then when stock falls
below the price he actually paid, he Capitulates
and sells
- Perhaps a
winning investment seems unlikely in the first place that people can
imagine the best happening as far away as possible, somewhere off in the
great beyond, just as we all imagine that perfect behaviour happens in
heaven and not earth
- If
inventories are increasing faster than sales, it’s a red flag. People may talk about
FIFO or LIFO as accounting principles. But mostly it’s GIGO (Garbage in Garbage Out) and FISH (First In Still
Here)
- Regarding
somebody else’s gains as your own personal losses is not a productive
attitude for investing in stock market. It leads to try and play catch up by buying stocks they
shouldn’t buy. This generally leads
in real losses.
- Short term
gains or losses don’t tell much about the prospect. Most people keep the winner
and dump the loser. This
is further from the truth. It just tells you someone else is willing to
pay more /less for the same merchandise
- The
mindset has to change from - when I’m down 25%, I’m a seller to when I’m
down 25%, I’m a buyer
Ah! Got
it. Last question, I know how & when to buy, but when do I Sell?
- CHECK
FUNDAMENTALS!! Some
signs are as follows:
- Slow
grower
- losing market share for 2 consecutive years and it is hiring another
advertising agency
- Stalwart - growth is slowing
down and maintaining profits by cutting costs
- Cyclical - inventories go up and
company is increasing capital budget instead of modernising current
plants
- Fast
grower
- when p/e reached absurdly high levels and at least 3 national magazines
have fawned over the CEO, same store sales are decreasing
- Turnarounds
-
we’ll, when they’ve turned around and you’re able to reclassify them,
debt suddenly goes up
- Asset
play -
assets were marked down, institutional ownership goes up
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