Monday, October 26, 2009

Why Warren Buffet Makes Money and You Don’t

via Trakin' the india business buzz by Arun Prabhudesai on 10/25/09

Yes, You. For the matter it includes me too but the title seems catchy that way !

Jokes apart, what is it that out of so many people invested in the Stock Markets only a few make a real fortune out of it? As a matter of fact, barring Mr. Rakesh Jhunjhunwalla I don’t think there is any self-made millionaire in India who made his fortune via the Stock markets (probably very few unknown others).

Does it mean that the others are ill equipped or the luck isn’t in their stride. No, because there are those Ivy League experts who are adept at number crunching like anyone else, yet they don’t ride the Stock Markets. Luck can be a factor but then not matter how clichéd it sounds,

“Fortune favors the brave”

When we are talking about Stock Market Riches, the Oracle of Omaha – Mr. Warren Buffet’s name has to be taken in the same breath. The world’s richest man sits on the top of the world having made him a fortune investing in stock markets over a period of time. What’s more, he has done it for millions of his shareholders as well, invested in Berkshire Hathaway.

Did you know that a $10,000 investment in Berkshire Hathaway in 1965, the year Warren Buffett took control of it, would grow to be worth nearly $30 million by 2005

The marketplace is abuzz with Buffet’s investment principles with dozens of books and millions of citations on the Internet. But, then we haven’t seen anyone come remotely close to the fortunes that Mr. Buffet has made.

Technical and Fundamental Analysis apart, there are some very simple yet important principles which are highlighted in Mr. Buffet’s Investment rationale.

Never invest in a business you cannot understand

Sound simple. The philosophy is so profound yet how many of us tend to avoid it. One look at his portfolio and the statement makes all the more sense .Coca-Cola, Nike, Procter & Gamble, J&J. The business intricacies apart, the companies make products we can all relate to and probably use them too on a regular basis.

Risk can be greatly reduced by concentrating on only a few holdings

How many of us have heard, “Never put all eggs in one basket” or Diversification is the key to effective investment. But, then aren’t we culprits of over-diversification at times. I remember holding 17 stocks in my portfolio at one time. Over diversification leads to dilution of possible gains and it is difficult to track 17 companies at once.

Mr.Buffet’s portfolio has a list of 41 stocks. It may sound too much, but then he has accumulated them over years and has hundreds of people managing his investments now.

Patience

This single word is the game changer of sorts. This virtue alone separates the likes of Mr. Buffet, Peter Lynch from the average Joe. The explanation for this is best understood in terms of Mr. Buffet’s principles itself.

  1. Only buy something that you’d be perfectly happy to hold if the market shut down for 10 years
  2. Unless you can watch your stock holding decline by 50% without becoming panic-stricken, you should not be in the stock market
  3. The advice “you never go broke taking a profit” is foolish
  4. Buy a business, don’t rent stocks

The quotes speak for themselves; invest in Stock Markets to become a co-owner and not to make profits out of fluctuations.

It would be wrong to say that these 3 are the principles that made Mr. Buffet his riches. A lot of research and number crunching is responsible for Mr. Buffet buying stocks at a “Fair” price or on the basis of intrinsic value which the whole world is trying to figure out. But these are some no-nonsense jargon free fundamentals that can go a long way in ensuring a long term healthy investment portfolio.

I would like to know from Stock Market Enthusiasts out there – Do you think that if you stick to these 3 principals of Mr. Buffet, you will make money in Stock market?

[This post has been written by our regular contributor Ankit Agarwal, an ERP Consultant by profession, a wannabe entrepreneur and stock market stalker by passion]

 
 

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Buying Insurance over Other Investments: Opportunity Cost or Opportunity Lost

via Personal Finance 2.01 on 10/25/09

It’s March, the tax planning season is at its peak and Ajay (person earning 6Lakhs pa working in an MNC) has started his yearly ritual of scouting for investments for saving income tax. Ajay tells his financial planner Pankaj that he is looking for an insurance plan which is very low on risks and will give good returns. Pankaj is a smart financial planner and tosses a question to Ajay which puzzles him. Pankaj asks Ajay “Do you buy a general insurance product for your car which gives you car insurance plus returns at the end of the year?” Ajay says “Car insurance plans are meant for protection against risks like accidents and not for returns.” On hearing Ajay’s answer, Pankaj smiles and says “Bingo, you are absolutely right. Don’t you think the same applies to life insurance also? Returns should be best left to investment products and not insurance. Life insurance should be bought only to cover the risk of loss of life and remaining surplus money should be routed through investment products for superior returns. A person should not mix insurance and returns.”

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ranjanvarma@gmail.com sent you a link to content of interest

ranjanvarma@gmail.com sent you a link to the following content:

What’s the best investment you’ve ever made?
http://www.iwillteachyoutoberich.com/blog/best-investment-career-time-money/

The sender also included this note:

Interesting stuff!

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Sunday, October 25, 2009

About Page for My Blog

http://ranjanvarma.com

I am the captain of a personal finance team. I call it the IPFL Team (Indian Personal Finance Literacy Team). Each of my team members have a personality and I have a name for them too.

And the goal of this team is to change the way Indians manage their money.

Let’s take a look at the team. They are:

  1. This Blog, aka Sehwag. The blog has been there for the last three years. And from being an e-scratch pad to improve my own knowledge, it now has an opinion of it’s own. It’s a plain, simple commonsense approach without getiing into too much technicalities. Hitting the ball, aka Sehwag, is all that matters.

RupeeManager

  • RupeeManager,  aka Sachin. RupeeManager is a desktop software that helps you track and manage your money. It’s the software that powers my effort to change the way Indians manage their money. For me, it’s the star member!
  • RupeeCamp Workshops, aka Dhoni. RupeeCamps is a money management workshop which will help you to make better financial decisions. It is the Captain of my team. The workshops would be the lynch pin around which everything revolves.
  • RupeeManager Online Workshops, aka Yuvraj. This e-Workshop will be an online version of the RupeeCamp in-person workshop. The online workshop would be the cleanest hit, like Yuvraj, the cleanest hitter!
  • Personal Finance201, aka Raina. This website will offer updated articles, calculators and other resources on personal finance. Among the stars, this one is a cool performer.
  • Forum, aka Bhajji. The RupeeManager Forum is the place to discuss money management issues. A place where you can learn and share. Like Bhajji, I would like members to speak their mind here.
  • Zoho Tracket Application, aka Sourav. The online version of RupeeManager software. The app has earned me dollars from around the world and not just India. That’s why it’s named Sourav, who was the first not to fear the global players!
  • Slideshare Presentations, aka Zaheer. These are presentations on personal finance that I have uploaded on Slideshare. The presentations which make the largest impact. Like Zaheer with his opening bowling.
  • RupeeManager on Twitter, Praveen Kumar. The twitter channel for RupeeManager. The place with few words. Well 140 characters shouldn’t be hard for Praveen Kumar!
  • Facebook Page on RupeeManager, aka Ishant. Apparently, Ishant’s the sweetest face in the team.
  • Advisor’s Directory, aka Gary Kirsten, the Chief Advisor!!. This is the place where all advisors can register and make their webpresence felt.
  • Apart from the playing 11, I have a few things up my sleave. The future stars. They are:

    1. Financial Products Database,
    2. Satisfaction Surveys,
    3. Financial Freedom Yearbook

    So you can see that I am about to change the world! :) Atleast, change the way Indians manage their money.

    There’s a question that doesn’t leave me alone, “What can you offer the world that no one else can?”. It’s a pretty tough question. Maybe this blog will help me with finding the answer. In any case, I believe that I can be the medium which can change the way Indians manage their money!

    Thanks for stopping by. Comments and feedback is most welcome.

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    What Makes Businesses Fail Financially

    via Trizle by The Trizle Team on 10/25/09

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    • Why did companies fail during the 2008 financial crisis?

    It went like this:

    • Loan mofo: "We want our money!"
    • Leveraged mofo: "We don't have money!"
    • Loan mofo: "We will kill ya"
    • Leveraged mofo: "OH NOOOOOOOOOOOO!"

    When the economy tanked, companies that failed had loans that they couldn't repay.

    What Will Make You Fail

    Debt -- especially the long-term ones with variable interest rates -- will suck you down, and will be the main cause of your impending failure.

    • Google avoids long-term debt.
    • Microsoft avoids long-term debt.
    • Apple avoids long-term debt.
    • Walgreen's avoids long-term debt.
    • Any company with great financials = no long-term debt.

    Unless your main line of business is providing loans (i.e., you're a bank), leveraging your company = NO GOOD.

    (The banks that died over-levered themselves.)

    Instead, ask yourself this:

    "What if we could get money for free?"

    "BAM DANG SON HOW AN I DO THAT?!?!?!!" you're asking.

    Raise it.

    • "No! You shouldn't give away your equity! Boo!"
    • "You work so hard! Investors are sharks!"

    The points:

    • Equity financing (i.e., raising money from investors) is free money with no interest rates (i.e., helps you grow much quicker).
    • Avoiding interest costs puts money back into your business to reinvest, and grow exponentially stronger financially.
    • You can always buy back the sold equity.

    Solid businesses perform financially awesome to the awesome to the max avoid long-term debt.

    • When you: (1) avoid debt, and (2) keep raising money = YOU WILL NEVER FAIL HIGH FIVE

    No debt.

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