Value-Stock-Plus

Informed Investing!

Investing is most intelligent when it is most businesslike - Benjamin Graham (1894-1976)

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Value-Stock-Plus stands at No. 50 in the list of Top 100 Finance Blogs  by ValueWiki

Recognised by The Economic Times as one of the most popular financial blog

Updated! Compilation on Warren Buffett, Rakesh Jhunjhunwala & Charlie Munger
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Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Union Budget 2007 & Analysis

Budget 2007

  • Union Budget 2007-2008
  • Finance Minister's Speech
  • Economic Survey 2006-2007
Budget Analysis 2007 by Magazines & Websites
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Business World
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Equitymaster
Budget Analysis 2007 by Brokerage Houses
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - MS
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Citigroup
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Goldman Sachs
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - UBS
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Macquaire
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Man Financial
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - CLSA
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Merill Lynch
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - JP Morgan
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - ABN
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - HSBC
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - EY
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - PWC
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Crisil
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Enam
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Motilal Oswal
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Kotak
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Kotak Institutional
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Batlivala & Karani
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Batlivala & Karani (Part2)
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - SSKI
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - ICICI Securities
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Capital Market
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Edelweiss Capital
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Reliance Mutual Fund
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Sundaram Mutual Fund
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - HDFC Mutual Fund
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - First Global
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - HDFC
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - SBICaps
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Way2Wealth
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Networth
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - IL&FS
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Cholamandalam
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - IDBI Capital
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Karvy
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - P-Sec
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Religare
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Emkay
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - BLB
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Sharekhan
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - SMC
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - SRS
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Anand Rathi
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - FinQ
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - India Infoline
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - KRC
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Ambit
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - Anagram
  • Budget Analysis 2007 - UTIsec
Impact on Individual Sectors
  • IT Services - JPM
  • IT Services - CSB
  • IT Services - ML
  • Engineering & Construction - ML
  • Engineering & Construction - CSB
  • Engineering & Construction - HSBC
  • Financial Services - MS

Labels: Market Overview, Market Strategy

Posted by toughiee at 8:59 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Monday, February 26, 2007

Random Readings

Random Readings:

  • Rail Budget promising, exciting: India Inc
  • Highlights of the Railway Budget
  • Sebi mulls pricing cap on listing day
  • A good speculator is a lonely man
  • 'Chinese growth path not the way for India'
  • Specialty retail may get 51% FDI
  • Brokers bullish on Ansal Housing, Balkrishna Ind, Tata Chem
  • Markets consolidating after 3-4 yrs of double-digit gains: Ramesh Damani
  • Capital gains tax, STT may rise
  • India, Inc. can beat it, you bet
  • Realty & Cement: Take heart, all's not lost
  • Sebi probes ‘dream debut’ of Ahluwalia Contracts
  • Reliance an outperformer: CLSA
  • Investment Nuggets by Michael Mauboussin
  • Inflation is only a short term worry: UOB Asset Management
  • The ingredients of India’s secret sauce revealed - Why do Indian companies report superior return on equity compared to companies in Asia and emerging markets?
  • This too, shall pass – All eyes are on the forthcoming Union Budget. And the market is getting jittery. Stretched valuations could be one reason, considering the Nifty is trading nearly 23 times one-year forward earnings. But then, the market has been stretched for nearly two-quarters now.

Random Thought:

  • This too, shall pass - Abraham Lincoln

Labels: Random Readings

Posted by toughiee at 7:46 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

A good speculator is a lonely man

What does it take to become a successful speculator? It is likely that everyone would have a different answer to this question. But, Victor Niederhoffer has a very interesting take on this. In the preface to his book, The Education of a Speculator, Niederhoffer writes, “Join me in seeing how humdrum everyday experiences, combined with the wisdom of immortals, can help you appreciate and maybe even learn the nitty-grity of buying low and selling high.”

Buying low and selling high only sounds simple. It is never simple to execute this strategy and most speculators know that. As Niederhoffer points out, “A corresponding desire to stay in the middle afflicts most speculators, myself included, in their order placement. I am too frightened to buy something in the market when it goes straight down, and too frightened to sell it when it goes straight up. But after it has retracted a good part of the move, I am all to ready.” It is comfortable to be with the herd in the middle. Niederhoffer quotes what Francis Galton wrote some centuries back: “The vast majority of persons have a natural tendency to shrink from the responsibility of standing and acting alone. They exalt the vox populi… even when they know it to be the utterance of a mob of nobodies.” More than anything else, a good speculator needs to be a lonely man.

Click here for the full story.

Posted by toughiee at 7:45 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Value, not momentum

by Chetan Parikh - CIO

In a brilliant book “Hedge Hogging”, the author, Barton Biggs, writes about buying on the basis of value and not momentum.

“Investing on the basis of value, not price momentum, is our religion.

Warren Buffett articulated this philosophy best with his manic-partner analogy. At a talk I attended, in one of his musings, he expressed it something like this:

Suppose you are an equal partner in a good business with a manic-depressive partner named Mr. Market. From time to time, Mr. Market will only see the favorable factors affecting your business and will then become so euphoric about the prospects of the business that he will come to you and offer to buy your half at a ridiculously high price. So, of course, you should sell it to him.

At other times, seeing only trouble ahead for your firm, he becomes deeply and in his despair offers to sell you his share at an outrageous discount to its intrinsic value. Then, you should buy it from him.

Buffett went on to say that it was irrational, the height of foolishness, to sell an asset you were confident was undervalued just because its price was falling. In other words, Mr. Market can be an old fool (or maybe a young fool) who, from time to time, becomes hysterical. Sometimes, in his madness, he sees ghosts. At others, he imagines the good fairy touching him with her long golden fingers.

You are perfectly free to ignore Mr. Market or to take advantage of him, but it will be disastrous if you fall under his influence. Suppose the price you could sell your home at was quoted every day. For several months the quotation steadily declined. Would you then sell your home, the home you were comfortable in and satisfied with, just because its price was declining? Of course not! In this sense, an attractive investment is similar to a home you are happy to inhabit.

Mr. Buffett’s value philosophizing sounds eminently sensible, but it doesn’t work when you are trafficking in commodities and you have short-term-performance sensitive clients.”

Posted by toughiee at 7:44 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Sunday, February 25, 2007

What money managers expect in 2007 (Updated)

Seven stock market experts discuss the prospects for Indian stocks in the annual roundtable organised by Capitalideasonline.com.

Ramesh Damani, Rakesh Jhunjhunwala, Sanjoy Bhattacharyya, Raamdeo Agarwal, Madhu Kela, Prashant Jain & Anoop Bhaskar give their respective views on various issues.

Click here for the whole transcript. (Source: CIO Website)

Click here for the edited transcript. (Source: Business-Standard)

Labels: Compilation, Market Overview, Market Strategy, Rakesh Jhunjhunwala, Value Investing

Posted by toughiee at 1:07 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Saturday, February 24, 2007

IT Sector: Chain Reactions

CLSA has an interesting new report, ‘Chain Reactions’, about the increasing importance of the IT sector to the Indian economy. The report says that, at current rates of growth, the sector will have the same impact on the economy in the next three years as it had in the past 20. IT exports will pay for all our oil imports from next year. IT will take care of a third of urban employment needs over the next three years, picking up four-fifths of employable engineering graduates. The sector will account for a fifth to a quarter of the rise in GDP during FY 07-FY10. It will contribute almost three quarters of housing demand and two-thirds of forecast commercial real estate demand in the country and it will support two-thirds of five-star hotel room additions.

The point is that a large chunk of incremental demand will come from this sector. Marketers will do well to find out more about the tastes and preferences of IT workers. Here are some of CLSA’s findings: IT professionals spend a cumulative $1 billion annually on eating out; can pay premiums for housing by reputable builders; are big users of the new banking channels; have telecom ARPUs 2.8 times the industry average; spend a lot on health care and professional training; and their objects of desire include the Nokia N-series and Apple I-phones.

Also, don’t forget the trickle-down effect — one IT job creates 1.4 other jobs. In short, IT is now large enough to become the growth-driver for the Indian economy.

Click here to download the report

Posted by toughiee at 9:00 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Random Readings

Random Readings:

  • Raamdeo Agrawal sees largely positive Budget
  • Promoters to up RIL stake 5%
  • Inflation - Whose fault is it?
  • Use minor rallies as selling opportunities: LKP
  • Nifty has support at 3990-4000: Angel Broking
  • Markets now in a high-risk price zone: LKP
  • Brokers bullish on Chettinad Cement, GSPL, HPCL
  • Investments & what the FM may do
  • 'Equities to give high returns in long term'

Additional Reports:

  • Prime Focus - MO

Parting Thought:

  • For some reason people take their cues from price action rather than from values. Price is what you pay. Value is what you get. – Warren Buffett

Labels: Random Readings

Posted by toughiee at 8:05 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Sugar Sector: Paradise Lost by Edelweiss Capital

Edelweiss Research, in a report released this week, said nothing has changed for the sugar sector, but a lot has... for the worse!

The report said: "Our expectations of demand-supply dynamics have not changed over the past six months, but falling sugar realizations have started pushing profitability to near ‘zero-EBITDA’ levels. Lack of encouraging signs on the horizon (till the onset of monsoons in June 2007), however, keeps us watchful of the situation. However, if current sugar realizations continue for a prolonged period, unabated rise in supply is unlikely in SS08E, which could be a silver lining.

"We expect sugar companies to continue to underperform the broader market over the mid-term (6-12 months) due to lack of any immediate positive triggers. With high sensitivity of sugar realizations in sugar companies’ operations and no drivers to push them over medium term, we do not see any enthusiasm returning to sugar stocks."

Click here for the complete report

Posted by toughiee at 7:57 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Thursday, February 22, 2007

Budget Preview 2007 Reports

The following zipped file has Budget Preview 2007 Reports of various brokerage houses.

Click here for the file.

Labels: Market Overview, Market Strategy

Posted by toughiee at 2:15 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Random Readings

Random Readings:

  • IPOs hit 10-yr high in Feb
  • RIL crosses Rs 2 trillion market cap
  • Brokers bullish on Tata Motors, Birla Corp, India Cement
  • SSKI sees less margins in HLL, neutral on stock
  • Sharekhan sees hike in short-term capital gains tax
  • Men who shaped up India's economy
  • Vietnam is the new star in the global equity space
  • Financial gurus under Sebi scanner
  • Sudden spike or spurt, that’s six sigma for you
  • Growth Investing: Investing in a better tomorrow
  • Will 2007 be the year of FM radio?

Parting Thought:

  • I put heavy weight on certainty. It's not risky to buy securities at a fraction of what they're worth. – Warren Buffett

Posted by toughiee at 7:35 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Monday, February 19, 2007

Random Readings

Random Readings:

  • India's 8-9% growth good: Paul Volcker
  • Mid & small-cap stocks to lead the rally
  • Small, mid-cap funds - heading for big space?
  • Bulls to run for many more yrs: MF chiefs
  • What money managers expect in 2007
  • Markets get a new reforms agenda
  • Global sugar surplus may rise above earlier forecast, says ISO
  • Sebi plans panel on derivatives
  • Trader or investor? FM has to answer soon
  • Govt may bring in REIT
  • Market leadership getting narrower with each rally
  • Mkts to continue to be volatile, rangebound: Bhat
  • Inflation wont cool before April: Kotak Mah Cap
  • How the Budget is kept secret & men behind it

Additional Reports:

  • Smart Ideas - LKP
  • India Strategy - UBS
  • India Investment Strategy - AR

Parting Thought:

  • "History doesn't repeat..........It rhymes! - Mark Twain

Labels: Random Readings

Posted by toughiee at 7:46 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Saturday, February 17, 2007

New blog on Warren Buffett

I have created a new blog called "Warren Buffett - A Compilation" and can be accessed here (http://web.valuestockplus.net/).

The blog is more easy to navigate then the earlier post.

I hope you all enjoy it.

Regards,

Toughiee

Posted by toughiee at 12:11 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Friday, February 16, 2007

Random Readings

Random Readings:

  • Inflation at 2-year high of 6.73%
  • Private equity firms changing tack
  • India unveils $5 billion initiative for infrastructure
  • RBI move could dampen equity markets: JP Morgan
  • Over 15% EPS cut for Hindalco in FY08: CLSA
  • Brokers bullish on Cairn India, Satyam Comp
  • Is it time for a Realty check?
  • Brokers bullish on FAG Bearing, India Cement, Aegis Logistics
  • IT alone can’t do much: Narayan Murthy
  • I want my country to be self-sufficient: Tata

Additional Reports:

  • Punj Lloyd – CSB
  • Cement – MO
  • Cement Outlook – Fitch
  • India: History in making, but at what price? - MS
  • India Strategy - A Trigger for lower valuations? – MS
  • Indian Consumer Recipes (FMCG Midcaps) – CSB
  • Transformer - IIL
  • India's capital markets: Unlocking the door to future growth – DB
  • Nagarjuna Construction – CSB
  • Global shipbuilding: An overview

Parting Thought:

  • "The market is always wrong, you need to use the information the market has to offer...do not look to the market for direction, rather for information." - Warren Buffett

Labels: Random Readings

Posted by toughiee at 11:14 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Monday, February 12, 2007

Stock market history teaches us nothing

“Each age has its peculiar folly, some scheme, project or phantasy into which it is plunged, spurred on either by the love of gain, the necessity of excitement, or the mere force of imitation… Money has often been a cause of the delusion of multitudes. Sober nations have all at once become desperate gamblers and risked almost their existence upon the turn of a piece of paper… Men, it has been well said, think in herds; it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly and one by one,” wrote Charles Mackay in Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds, way back in 1852.

Every bull market that leads to a bubble finds its own set of buyers. So it happened in the US as well. Most of the investors had not seen a bear market. The US had been seeing a continuous bull run since 1982 (one or two hiccups not withstanding).

As Mahar writes “As for the old investors who suffered through the crash of 1973-74, by the time the next bull market began eight years later, the majority had retired from the field, so badly burned they would never touch a stock again. As a result, most of the investors, who buoyed the bull market of the nineties had never seen a bear. In 2002, fully 56 percent of those who owned stocks or stock funds had purchased their first shares sometime after 1990, while 30 percent of all equity investors had gotten their feet wet only after 1995”.

Click here for the full story.

Labels: Book Review

Posted by toughiee at 9:15 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Random Readings

Random Readings:

  • Dawn of a broad-based market
  • Eyeing Long-Term Gains
  • India shining is a reason to worry
  • Petrol: What are we paying for?
  • Don't Lose Your Shirt in Emerging Markets
  • Brokers bullish on Cairn India, HOV Services, TTK Prestige
  • Expect more global buy-ins: Enam
  • India’s no longer a Third World: Vodafone
  • 'Inflation will be at 5.5 pc by March 07'
  • Rock to heavy metal mania
  • Suzlon defends pricey bid for German rival
  • The art of making money at high market levels
  • Budget less important today than in past: Citigroup
  • India to perform well despite high valuations: MS
  • Economic growth warrants higher interest rates: ABN Amro
  • Bull run to continue for yr or two: DBS Chola MF
Additional Reports:
  • Inflation Rate Rising Above the Comfort Zone - MS

Parting Thought:

  • Most people get interested in stocks when everyone else is. The time to get interested is when no one else is. You can't buy what is popular and do well. – Warren Buffett

Labels: Random Readings

Posted by toughiee at 6:26 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Sunday, February 11, 2007

Random Readings

Random Readings:

  • Indian property-stock boom may come to an end amid loan curbs and higher rates – International Herald Tribune
  • India the Superpower? Think again - Fortune
  • It's a Low, Low, Low, Low-Rate World – Business Week
  • 'There'll only be global bourses'
  • Sensex vs Nifty: Swords drawn
  • World’s forex reserves to build our futurehttp://economictimes.indiatimes.com/images/spacer.gif
  • Investments: What's taxed
  • Value in beyond Sensex stocks: Quantum Advisors

Labels: Random Readings

Posted by toughiee at 7:33 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Saturday, February 10, 2007

Rakesh Jhunjhunwala Portfolio - December 2006

Rakesh Jhunjhunwala Portfolio - December 2006

  • Click here for the portfolio
  • Highlights: Geojit Financial Services, Viceroy Hotels, Praj Inds, Bilcare, Aptech are some of the large holdings (percentage-wise) of Mr. Jhunjhunwala Courtesy: Equityguru blog
  • For a compendium on Mr. Rakesh Jhunjhunwala, please click here.

Labels: Rakesh Jhunjhunwala

Posted by toughiee at 6:23 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Friday, February 09, 2007

India Strategy Reports

The following are the India Strategy Reports:
  • Asia ex Strategy – CSB
  • India Equity Strategy – CSB
  • India Macro View – LB
  • India Strategy – DB
  • India Strategy – MS
  • When all the boats floated - HS
  • Fundamental Check - PL
  • Valueline February 2007 - SK
  • India Economics (Overheating of Economy?) - MF
  • India Economics (GDP Re-rating) - BK
The following are the Sector Reports:
  • India Retail - MF
  • India Infrastructure Midcaps - BS
  • India IT Services - CSB

Labels: Market Overview, Market Strategy

Posted by toughiee at 9:30 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Random Readings

Random Readings:

  • Real Estate: Discovering Indian Realty
  • FIIs' forward rebooking linked to portfolio value
  • `This is the beginning of a big India story`
  • `Sensex may touch 50k in a decade`
  • India on the move: Roach
  • Inflation touches 6.58 pc
  • 'Economy to cross 1 trillion mark in '08'
  • Infosys likely to oust Reliance in Sensex weightage
  • Brokers bullish on BL Kashyap, Zee Entert, Punj Llyod
  • Brokers bullish on Ashapura Mine, Spanco Tele, LIC Housing
  • Cap goods, engg to gain this Budget: Man Financials
  • Budget: What India Inc expects
  • The India Hot-Funds Quandary – WSJ

Parting Thought:

  • I've often felt there might be more to be gained by studying business failures than business successes. – Warren Buffett

Labels: Random Readings

Posted by toughiee at 9:11 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Beating an Irrational Market

In a great book “Wall Street on Sale”, the author, Timothy P. Vick, discusses the essence of value investing.

“In investing, opportunities arise when you counter prevailing wisdom, no matter how deeply ingrained those opinions. Value investing, as a philosophy, occasionally relies on your ability to sell when the crowd wants to buy, to buy when they sell, or to cast a skep­tical eye when events appear rosy. No task is more difficult, even for a seasoned investor. It's like telling you not to bet at a slot machine that has paid out 10 times in the last hour or to avoid a stock that has raced up 100 percent in two months.

Value investing, in essence, is as much a character trait as a methodol­ogy—a mentality shaped by experience, knowledge, and the desire to excel at investing. A pure value investor is a pure value seeker, a person unwill­ing to spend more than absolutely necessary on any good, be it a dinner, a bar of soap, a new car, a house, or a new blouse.

…The stock market is a peculiar institution, the only one in the world where participants feel more secure buying an expensively priced item than one reasonably valued.

Click here for the full article.

Posted by toughiee at 9:09 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Investing: Price Vs Value

"Our favourite holding period is forever." - Warren Buffett This is the wisdom that has flowed from one of the greatest investors of our times. The man is talking, but who is listening? The bigger question to be asked of those few listening is - 'who is applying'? The richest man, second only to Bill Gates, has time and again proved that value buying always pays off in the long term. His mantra has been to invest in 'businesses' not 'stocks'. The rationale - "If a business does well, the stock follows". In this article, we delve a bit deeper into the principle of value buying and discuss the concept of 'circle of competence' as originally defined by Mr. Buffett.

For beginners, 'value investing' is about buying stocks that are selling 'cheap'. In a sense, a value buyer is a bargain hunter. This, however, does not mean that one should buy any stock that is selling cheap. Value buying is about buying stocks of companies that are trading lower to their intrinsic value (this is what we mean by the term - 'cheap'). Thus, it is not the price of the company's stock that determine weather it is a value buy, but the potential value that the company has. As such, value investing is about being able to invest in companies with a conviction of the value being realised or unlocked over a period of time.

Valuing stocks The most common method used to find the intrinsic value of a company is the discounted cash flow method, where projections are made of a company's cash flows and a discount rate is applied to these to arrive at their present value. If the value arrived at is higher than what the share is presently trading at, it is a value buy else not. Many a times, to make comparative analysis between companies, the 'price to earnings' ratio (P/E) is used. An investor has a target P/E in mind and will buy a stock as long as it is trading below its target P/E. When share prices rise without a corresponding increase in earnings or when a company's earnings are declining without any corresponding changes (or small change) in stock price, it will automatically lead to a rise in the company's P/E, thus signaling the increased risk levels. This automatic mechanism, which is built into the P/E ratio, is what endears it to the investor community.

Information flow Value investing, although sound simple on paper, is not so simple to apply practically. This is on account of innumerable factors that affect the stock price movements. While on one hand we have news that apply to the broad market as a whole, on the other there are news that are sector or company specific. The markets are efficient enough to factor in the news flow into the stocks prices. As such, being in coherence with the 'right' kind of news is what is the basis for sound (and safe) value investing.

Circle of competence For a value investor, the most crucial thing is his ability to pick up value stocks. However, this is easier said the done. While the use of different rates to discount cash flows affect the perception on whether a stock is a value buy or not, it is the assumptions with regards to future earnings that are more likely to have a greater impact on valuations. To be able to forecast earnings correctly, one should be able to build the information flowing into the company's expected earnings forecasts.

In this light, it can be said that each individual will be in a position to understand a certain business better than others. This understanding will become his area of competence of which he will, over a period of time, be able to evolve a circle of competence. The concept, as is original defined by Warren Buffett, stands to mean: 'an area where an investor can know significantly more than the average investor (called the circle of competence), and focus his efforts on that area'. By developing this, an investor should successfully be able to weave the information flow into his financial model to arrive at a stock's intrinsic value. As is understood, the circle of competence is a process of evolution and cannot be developed overnight. Rather, it has to be built by gaining insight into the company's area(s) of operations, finance, management and the scope of future events that are likely to affect it.

Thus in conclusion, you, as an investor, need to compare intrinsic value of the company as a whole to its current market capitalisation. Success will, however, depend on your skill of accurately determining the intrinsic value. It can also be said that to be a good value investor, one needs to harness the qualities of a contrarian investor, a patient investor, a rational investor, an analytical investor, and above all, a long-term investor.

Source: EM

Posted by toughiee at 8:54 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

Globalisation has caught the developed world napping: Stephen Roach

Pro-labour Left is rising in many developed nations, listing dangerously towards protectionism, says Morgan Stanley chief economist

by Stephen Roach – DNA Money

There was a dramatic moment at this year’s World Economic Forum in Davos that I will long remember.

It came during one of the sessions on the global economic outlook, when concerns were being raised about the possibility of a Washington-led political backlash against globalisation - a conclusion that I have long warned of. Montek Singh Ahluwalia, Deputy Chairman of India’s Planning Commission, was quick to respond along the lines of, “Don’t blame us. For years, you in the developed world demanded we in the developing world get our act together, open up, and reform. And now that we have and the payback is at hand, you don’t like it.”

I have had the pleasure of getting to know Ahluwalia over the years and have found him to be deep thinking and most engaging, with a razor-sharp analytical mind. His point is a very important one - it challenges one of the great contradictions of the globalization debate. Yet it begs the question of why - why the developed world is pushing back so hard against the very process of global integration it has so long espoused. Granted, motives are always open to subjective interpretation. But I suspect that “Montek’s complaint” also touches on one of the most important, but overlooked issues in the current global debate - that the rich countries of the developed world are simply unprepared for the stunning successes of an IT-enabled globalisation.

Click here for the full story.

Posted by toughiee at 6:19 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

The uselessness of forecasts

In a great book Wall Street on Sale, the author, Timothy P. Vick, writes on the futility of forecasts.

“Each year, the leading business schools graduate thou­sands of finance students taught the same arcane formulas, the same trading strategies, the same valuation principles, and the same forecasting models. It's no wonder that so few can see the broader context of their actions. No wonder, too, that so few beat the market over time; they futilely spend their days trying to beat each other. These graduates, who are today's market strategists, analysts, and fund managers, have become like Marshall McLuhan's fish that don't know they live in water. They swim in a tank separate from another fully functioning world, yet they believe the people on the outside of the glass need assistance. They, however, are the ones trapped.

When investing is buoyed by short-term earnings-which, in turn, swims on the current of predictions-it ceases to be investing, and becomes gambling.

Click here for the full story.

Posted by toughiee at 6:19 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Random Readings

Random Readings:

  • How to tackle inflation?
  • Sebi bars Gammon Infra IPO for a year
  • S&P buys Goldman's commodity index
  • Q3 earnings booster
  • Manufacturing is braced for another good run in December
  • India's GDP to grow over 9 per cent
  • India sees economy growing fastest in 18 years
  • 9% growth not sustainable for India: Morgan Stanley
  • 'China is open, India is closed'
  • 'India Inc still most optimistic'
  • The consumerisation of urban India
  • Mkts to trade 14200-14800 pre-Budget: Deven Choksey
  • Chip designing, solar energy have potential: JP Morgan
  • DSP ML's top ideas for 2007
  • PAN, MIN, UIN. . . what's next?
  • Investing in realty stocks? Careful!

Off-Topic Readings:

  • The longevity clause in PPF
  • Infosys:India’s biggest hospitality firm?
  • Calculate your income in 10 minutes!

Parting Thought:

  • Most people get interested in stocks when everyone else is. The time to get interested is when no one else is. You can't buy what is popular and do well. – Warren Buffett

Labels: Random Readings

Posted by toughiee at 6:10 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Monday, February 05, 2007

Random Readings

Random Readings:

  • I invite India’s comparison with China: P Chidambaram
  • Emerging-markets stock funds get cool reception from analyst
  • DSP ML's top ideas for 2007
  • India story is compelling: Roach
  • FM on India's biggest challenges
  • Busting the Small Investor Myth by Dhirendra Kumar
  • Don't be surprised if market corrects
  • EPF: Why investing in equity makes sense
  • Wait for Indian market to cool: Morgan Stanley
  • Don’t trust this Sensex, it’s just an index
  • China, India growth worth paying up for, says JP Morgan
  • Investor Alert: Sales to promoter-owned firm driving DLF profit
  • Buy for now, and forever - With FY07 set to be a blockbuster year for corporate profits, the market seems to have strong downside protection….. If the market tumbles a bit, don’t panic, you should perhaps buy more. New investors — start nibbling, the correction you are hoping for may not come for a long time.

Off-Topic Readings:

  • Now, you can trade shares on cellphones
  • McDonald's is loving it in Asia

Parting Thought:

  • With enough inside information and a million dollars you can go broke in a year. – Warren Buffett

Labels: Random Readings

Posted by toughiee at 6:29 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Investment Nuggets by Peter Bernstein

In the course of a remarkable professional career in investment management, Peter Bernstein has worn several hats. After starting his career as an economics professor, he became the Chief Executive of an investment counsel firm, managing billions of dollars for individual and institutional portfolios. In 1973, he resigned to launch Peter L Bernstein Inc. and in the following year became the first editor of The Journal of Portfolio Management, one of the most widely read investment journals. Author of Capital Ideas — The Improbable Origins of Modern Wall Street, Against the Gods — The Remarkable Story of Risk, and Power of Gold — The History of an obsession, his passion for the investment discipline remains undiminished.

"Financial markets are a kind of time machine that allows selling investors to compress the future into the present, and buying investors to stretch the present into the future."

"Investors refuse to believe that shock lies in wait... Investors do better where risk management is a conscious part of the process... survival is the only road to riches. You should try to maximise return only if losses would not threaten your survival...You don't want to blow it, because you don't get a second chance. When you invest, it's not your wealth today, but it's your future that you're really managing."

"The revolutionary idea that defines the boundary between modern times and the past is the mastery of risk: The notion that the future is more than a whim of the gods and that men and women are not passive before nature. Until human beings discovered a way across that boundary, the future was the mirror of the past or the murky domain of oracles and soothsayers who held a monopoly over knowledge of anticipated events."

"Games of chance must be distinguished from games in which skill makes a difference. The principles that work in roulette, dice, and slot machines are identical, but they explain only part of what is involved in poker, betting on the horses, and backgammon. With one group of games the outcome is determined by fate; with the other group, choice comes into play. The odds — the probability of winning — are all you need to know for betting in a game of chance, but you need far more information to predict who will win and who will lose when the outcome depends on skill as well as luck. There are cardplayers and racetrack bettors who are genuine professionals, but no one makes a successful profession out of Craps. Many observers consider the stock market itself little more than a gambling casino... Cards, coins, dice, and roulette wheels have no memory."

Labels: Peter Bernstein

Posted by toughiee at 6:27 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Book Review: Fooled by Randomness

What looks like a talented performance could be sheer luck. As Nassim Nicholas Taleb writes in Fooled by Randomness: The Hidden Role of Chance in Life and in Markets, “ If one puts an infinite number of monkeys in front of (strongly built) typewriters, and lets them clap away, there is a certainty that one of them would come out with an exact version of the Iliad. Upon examination, this may be less interesting a concept than it appears at first: Such probability is ridiculously low. But let us carry the reasoning one step beyond. Now that we have found that hero among monkeys, would any reader invest his life’s savings on a bet that the monkey would write the Odyssey next?”

… and as far as the media is concerned, writes Taleb, “People do not realise that the media is paid to get your attention. For a journalist, silence surpasses any word.” But will we ever see a day when a journalist views the matter like a historian and says, “Today the market went up, but this information is not too relevant as it emanates mostly from noise.”

Click here for the full story.

Labels: Book Review

Posted by toughiee at 6:26 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Saturday, February 03, 2007

Why India's Growth Story is Different

by Manas Chakravarty – BWI

India is on a growth path very different from the ‘flying geese’ economies of East and South-East Asia. That could be a big risk.

The Indian economy has recently been notching up some of the highest growth rates in the world. But India’s economic growth is truly a miracle, simply because its economy has followed a completely new path to development, one that has not been followed by any of the late developing economies. As Gurcharan Das, author and former CEO of Procter & Gamble India, puts it, “The Indian growth path is unique. That is really scary because we are not following a proven model.”

Click here for the full article.

Click here to download the article

Labels: Market Strategy

Posted by toughiee at 12:18 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Random Readings:

Random Readings:

  • Sensex 50,000 may be just 10 years away
  • Welter of GDP estimates is foxing
  • Rising inflation due to growth
  • RCoM joins Rs 1 trillion m-cap club
  • Feb is back: Book profits or stay invested?
  • Corus price was within our limits: Ratan Tata
  • India's 2007 IPO party: BusinessWeek
  • Most of fund money likely to go into equity
  • Investors rush for Z ‘security’
  • All bull: These fund managers yet to spot a bear
  • Fed may tighten policy by '07 end: JP Morgan Chase

Off-Topic Readings:

  • Which is the best city in India?
  • 8 Indians among world's top VCs

Parting Thought:

  • Occasional outbreaks of those two super-contagious diseases, fear and greed, will forever occur in the investment community. The timing of these epidemics is equally unpredictable, both as to duration and degree. Therefore we never try to anticipate the arrival or departure of either. We simply attempt to be fearful when others are greedy and to be greedy only when others are fearful. – Warren Buffett

Labels: Random Readings

Posted by toughiee at 12:03 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

Friday, February 02, 2007

What Value Investing Isn't

by Stephen Bland – Motley Fool UK

A dumb title? Perhaps, but lately on the value board some newcomers have been questioning exactly what defines the strategy. I've written extensively on this in the past but perhaps some may find it useful for me to reprise the approach as we use it here on The Fool.

Inevitably what I'll say will be my personal view because I'm not trying to write an investors' dictionary definition or give some sort of balanced opinion. Just my own view.

I can see the difficulty some newcomers have because value, although talked about a lot all over the place, can suffer from very different definitions which can be confusing.

Click here for the full story.

Labels: Value Investing

Posted by toughiee at 10:13 PM | Permalink | Comments | links to this post

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