Lessons of Warren Buffett

An understanding of the investing lessons of Warren Buffett.

1. Value investing works. Buy bargains which involve buying assets at a price below the asset’s intrinsic value. Value investing takes time, focus, discipline and patient, and is a hard process to implement and follow. It requires a lot of work to determine the fair value of a particular business. If investors could predict the future directions of the stock market, they would certainly not choose to be value investors. But no one can accurately forecast future prices. Value investing is a safe and successful strategy in all investing environments. The biggest obstacle for a value investor is to remain disciplined and patient in every circumstance the market and life might throw at him. Most people quit value investing and long- term investing for this exact reason: because they lack the discipline and cannot sit through periods of poor performance.

2. Quality matters, in businesses and in people. Better quality businesses are more likely to grow and compound cash flow; low quality businesses often erode and even superior managers, who are difficult to identify, attract, and retain, may not be enough to save them. Always partner with highly capable managers whose interests are aligned with yours.

3. There is no need to overly diversify. Invest like you have a single, lifetime “punch card” with only 20 punches, so make each one count. Look broadly for opportunity, which can be found globally and in unexpected industries and structures.

4. Consistency, discipline and patience are crucial. Most investors are their own worst enemies. Endurance and long-term perspective enables compounding.

5. Risk is not the same as volatility; risk results from overpaying or overestimating a company’s prospects. Prices fluctuate more than value; price volatility can drive opportunity. Sacrifice some upside as necessary to protect on the downside.

6. Unprecedented events (or Black Swan events) occur with some regularity, so be prepared.

7. You can make some investment mistakes and still thrive.

8. Holding cash in the absence of opportunity makes sense.

9. Favor substance over form. It doesn’t matter if an investment is public or private, fractional or full ownership, or in debt, preferred shares, or common equity.

10. Candor is essential. It’s important to acknowledge mistakes, act decisively, and learn from them. Good writing clarifies your own thinking and that of your fellow shareholders.

11. To the extent possible, find and retain like-minded shareholders (and for investment managers, investors) to liberate yourself from short-term performance pressures.

12. Do what you love, and you’ll never work a day in your life.

13. “The first rule of investing is to not lose money, the second rule is to never forget the first one,” states Warren Buffett. Loss avoidance must be the cornerstone of your investment philosophy. Investors should not stick to bonds or avoid risks at all, but rather that “an investment portfolio should not be exposed to losses of principal capital over five to ten years”, according to Klarman. This, concentrating on avoiding big losses is the safest way to ensure a profitable investing outcome.

14. Ignore Market Price Fluctuations which are completely unrelated to the value of the investment or asset. When the stock’s market price goes down, the investment may be seen as riskier regardless of its fundamentals. But that’s not risk. Investors should expect prices to fluctuate and should not invest in securities if they cannot tolerate market volatility.

15. Avoid Leverage At All Costs.


References:

  1. https://hollandadvisors.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/what-ive-learned-from-warren-buffett-seth-klarman.pdf
  2. https://medium.datadriveninvestor.com/how-seth-klarman-achieved-a-20-annual-return-for-30-years-8cd0f39da208

Margin of Safety

“A margin of safety is achieved when securities are purchased at prices sufficiently below underlying value to allow for human error, bad luck, or extreme volatility in a complex, unpredictable and rapidly changing world.” ~ Seth Klarman

Berkshire Hathaway CEO and Chairman, Warren Buffett, is known for his value investing approach, which involves finding companies that are undervalued by the market and investing in them for the long term. To invest like Warren Buffett, there are a few things you need to know.

  • First, you need to have a clear understanding of what value investing is and how it works.
  • Second, you need to be patient and be willing to hold onto your investments for the long term.
  • Third, you need to have the discipline to stick to your investing strategy even when the market is going against you.

When deciding on how to invest in a company, the first step is to determine its worth or intrinsic value. According to Warren Buffett, the best companies to buy are those that are inexpensive to buy. His investment strategy is based on a few simple principles:

  • Buy quality companies that have a competitive advantage (moat),
  • Buy them at a reasonable price with a margin of safety, and
  • Hold them for the long term.

These principles of margin of safety have helped Buffett generate incredible returns over his career. Margin of safety is a strategy that involves investing only in securities at a significantly lower intrinsic value than their market price.

The margin of safety (MOS) allows investors to avoid overpaying for an investment or asset, and it protects investors from the potential of loss if the market price of the asset falls. Buffett has said that the margin of safety is the key to his investing success.

The margin of safety is a measure of how much room there is between the price of the stock and its inherent value. The wider your margin of safety, the less likely it is that overly optimistic valuation inputs will harm your investment.

Value investing is the process of making investment decisions using margin of safety. It is critical for value investors to find a high-quality, easy-to-understand company with good management priced below its intrinsic value.

The purpose of using a margin of safety in buying is twofold.

  • If your investment does not grow as quickly as you originally anticipated, you may be forced to make more conservative investments in your portfolio. If your estimates are correct, you will be able to achieve a better rate of return over time due.
  • If you purchased the investment at an extremely low price.

Discounted cash flow (DCF) is a method of valuing a company or asset using the principles of time value of money.

The objective of DCF is to find the value of an investment today, given its expected cash flows in the future. One popular way to value a company is using the discounted cash flow (DCF) method. This approach discounts a company’s future expected cash flows back to the present day, using a required rate of return or “hurdle rate” as the discount rate. The idea is that a company is worth the sum of all its future cash flows, discounted back to the present.

The DCF formula is: Value of Investment = Sum of (Cash Flow in Year / (1 + Discount Rate)^Year)

The “discount rate” is the required rate of return that an investor demands for investing in a company. This rate is also known as the “hurdle rate.” There are two ways to calculate the discount rate.

There are two ways to calculate the discount rate.

The first is the weighted average cost of capital (WACC). This approach considers the cost of all the different types of capital that a company has, including debt and equity.

The second way to calculate the discount rate is the discount rate for equity. This approach only considers the cost of equity, which is the return that investors demand for investing in a company.

Once the discount rate is determined, the next step is to estimate the cash flows that a company is expected to generate in the future. These cash flows can come from a variety of sources, including operating income, investments, and financing activities. After the cash flows have been estimated, they need to be discounted back to the present using the discount rate.

The present value of the cash flows is then the sum of all the future cash flows, discounted back to the present.

“If you understood a business perfectly and the future of the business, you would need very little in the way of a margin of safety. So, the more vulnerable the business is, assuming you still want to invest in it, the larger margin of safety you’d need. If you’re driving a truck across a bridge that says it holds 10,000 pounds and you’ve got a 9,800 pound vehicle, if the bridge is 6 inches above the crevice it covers, you may feel okay, but if it’s over the Grand Canyon, you may want a little larger margin of safety.” ~ Warren Buffett


References:

  1. https://www.merchantshares.com/margin-of-safety-the-key-to-warren-buffetts-investing-success/
  2. https://www.merchantshares.com/the-dcf-method-of-valuing-a-company/
  3. https://www.merchantshares.com/how-to-win-warren-buffett-39/

Assessing Small Capital Companies

Historically, small-cap stocks have been shown to outperform the rest of the market because of greater growth opportunities. A massive company is limited by its existing size. ~ U.S. News and World Report

Small cap company pundits recommend that investors review several key financial metrics and ratios to properly evaluate small cap companies. Following these metrics and ratios, you will be well on your way to finding a few hidden gems in the small cap market.

Each small cap company should be evaluated on fundamental factors to identify which ones can exhibit durable long-term growth.

  • Growth measures include revenue growth rate;
  • Profitability measures include operating profit and earnings per-share; and
  • Capital efficiency measures include return on invested capital.

In short, investors should seek to invest in the top-tier of eligible small cap companies .

Here are seven key metrics that should be reviewed before buying any stock. These indicators should help you get most of the way in understanding a company, its operations, and its underlying business.

1. Institutional activity. Pension funds, mutual funds, hedge funds, insurance companies and corporations that buy and sell huge blocks of shares can create tremendous volatility in prices. To lessen this risk in your investments, try to buy shares in companies where institutions own less than 40% of their shares.

2. Analyst coverage . Another indication of future share volatility is the number of Wall Street analysts covering a stock. Analysts – like the big institutions – have a herd mentality. When one sells, so do the rest, resulting in great numbers of shares changing hands, and usually leading to price declines. It’s best to avoid companies with more than 10, or fewer than 2 analysts following them. (You need some analyst interest or you may be waiting a long time for price appreciation, even in the strongest and most undervalued company) .

3. Price-earnings ratio (P/E) . The price of one share of a company’s stock divided by four quarters of its earnings per share, the P/E ratio is of utmost importance in determining if a company’s shares are over- or under-valued. For the best perspective, go to Reuters , then select Ratios and compare the current P/E of the company to its average P/E for the last 3-5 years, to its estimated future P/E and to the average P/E of its industry or sector. One note: If a company’s P/E is more than 35, it might be too pricy. You may want to stick with companies that are trading at lower P/Es, particularly if you are fairly new to investing.

4. Cash flow. One of the most important parts of a financial report is its Statement of Cash Flows, which is a summary of how the company made and spent its money. The Total Cash Flow From Operating Activities represents the cash the company took in from its primary business operations.

It’s important that this number be positive, or at least trending positive over the course of a year. After all, if the business isn’t making money from its primary product – not from investing in real estate or the stock market – then you probably want to pass it by.

5. Debt/equity. This ratio is how much debt per dollar of ownership the business has incurred. Compare the firm’s historic debt/equity ratios, so you can find out if its debt level over the past few years has been rising too rapidly. Debt isn’t bad, as long as it is used as a springboard to grow sales and earnings. Next, contrast the company’s ratio with its competitors and its industry so you can further determine if your company’s debt position is reasonable.

6. Growing sales and income. One rule of thumb is to buy shares in companies whose sales and net income are growing at double-digit rates. I cannot emphasize this enough, as, appreciation in stock prices is generally precipitated by growth in earnings (which usually follows expansion of sales) . It’s certainly possible to buy stock in a company that has no earnings growth (a new business, or a tech company in the late 90’s, for example) and still make money on the shares – short-term – but it’s not a formula for serious, successful long-term investing.

7. Insider activity. Investors will also want to review the buying and selling activities of a company’s insiders – its top officers and directors. A sudden rush to sell large quantities of the firm’s shares may be a good indicator that the business is falling on rough times. Likewise, a large increase in purchases may mean good news is on the way.

No single financial metric or ratio will determine the validity or potential of your investment. It is of utmost importance that you take a complete look at a company’s financial strength and its future growth prospects, by conducting a thorough analysis – over time – usually a 3-5 year track-record.

Many small caps stay small because they have structural problems, management lacks the capability to grow the business, or their niche simply isn’t large enough to support a bigger enterprise.

In contrast, many small cap companies can graduate to greater things, earning shareholders tremendous returns along the way.


References:

  1. https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/seven-critical-factors-evaluating-small-cap-stocks-2011-06-28
  2. https://money.usnews.com/investing/slideshows/9-of-the-best-small-cap-stocks-to-buy-for-2023

Warren Buffett: Morgan Housel’s Viewpoint

“Compounding doesn’t rely on earning big returns. Merely good returns sustained uninterrupted for the longest period of time—especially in times of chaos and havoc—will always win.” ― Morgan Housel, The Psychology of Money: Timeless lessons on wealth, greed, and happiness

More than 2,000 books are dedicated to how Warren Buffett built his fortune. Many of them are wonderful. But few pay enough attention to the simplest fact:

Buffett’s fortune isn’t due to just being a good investor, but being a good investor since he was literally a child, writes Morgan Housel in his seminal book, The Psychology of Money: Timeless lessons on wealth, greed, and happiness.

Warren Buffett’s estimated net worth is $110 billion as of November 2022. Of that, $109.2 billion was accumulated after his 50th birthday. $107.5 billion came after he qualified for Social Security, in his mid-60s. Warren Buffett is a phenomenal investor.

But you miss a key point if you attach all of his success to investing acumen. The real key to his success is that he’s been a phenomenal investor for three quarters of a century.

Had he started investing in his 30s and retired in his 60s, few people would have ever heard of him. Consider a little thought experiment. Buffett began serious investing when he was 10 years old. By the time he was 30 he had a net worth of $1 million, or $9.3 million adjusted for inflation.16

What if he was a more normal person, spending his teens and 20s exploring the world and finding his passion, and by age 30 his net worth was, say, $25,000? And let’s say he still went on to earn the extraordinary annual investment returns he’s been able to generate (22% annually), but quit investing and retired at age 60 to play golf and spend time with his grandkids. What would a rough estimate of his net worth be today? Not $110 billion. $11.9 million. 99.9% less than his actual net worth.

Effectively all of Warren Buffett’s financial success can be tied to the financial base he built in his pubescent years and the longevity he maintained in his geriatric years. If you had invested $10,000 with Warren Buffett in 1966, today you would have over $160 million! That same $10,000 invested in the S&P would be $140,000.

Buffett’s skill is investing, but his secret is time. That’s how compounding works. Think of this another way. Buffett is considered by many to be the most famous and successful investor in history. But he’s not necessarily the greatest—at least not when measured by average annual returns.

“Doing well with money isn’t necessarily about what you know. It’s about how you behave. And behavior is hard to teach, even to really smart people.” ~ Morgan Housel


References:

  1. Morgan Housel, The Psychology of Money: Timeless lessons on wealth, greed, and happiness., Harriman House, September 8, 2020.
  2. https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/65374007-the-psychology-of-money
  3. https://www.celebritynetworth.com/richest-businessmen/richest-billionaires/warren-buffett-net-worth/

Small Cap Investing

A focus on finding small cap companies with great fundamentals and big growth prospects.

A small-cap stock is a stock of a publicly-traded company whose market capitalization ranges from $300 million to approximately $2 billion, explains Corporate Finance Institute. The word “cap” in this term refers to a company’s market capitalization.

Savvy investors cannot afford to overlook small-cap growth companies. Although, there are several pros and cons of investing in small-cap stocks that must be considered.

Small-cap companies, in general, tend not to get the same kind of publicity as their large-cap siblings. They aren’t going to lead a segment on CNBC or the home page of the Wall Street Journal on a daily basis.

With smaller market capitalizations, small-cap companies tend to fly under the radar.

The Rise of Small-Cap Stocks

Reasons that people may invest in small-cap companies are capital appreciation — they think the stock price will go up and dividends — where the company pays you to hold it.

But some of these are solid companies and excellent small-cap stocks to buy.

Small-cap equities are more sensitive to the economy (inflation, rising interest rates and dollar strength), so a robust economic rebound would favor them.

Small-cap stocks are popular among investors because of their potential for providing better returns in the long term relative to their large-cap peers.

The advantages of investing in small-cap stocks are:

1. Growth potential – Relative to bigger companies, small-cap companies show significantly higher growth potential. For small-cap companies, it is easier to grow significantly their operational and financial base than is the case for most large-cap stocks.

Picking the right small-cap stock can turn into a profitable investment.

2. High probability of inefficiencies in the market – Information about the small-cap stocks is harder to find compared to large and mid-cap companies. Analysts typically give little attention to these companies; thus, there is a high probability of improper pricing of small-cap stocks. This situation creates vast opportunities for investors to leverage the inefficiencies in market pricing and earn a great return on their investments.

3. Financial institutions do not push prices up – Financial institutions, including mutual and hedge funds, should comply with certain regulations that do not allow them to invest heavily in small-cap stocks. For this reason, it is unlikely that the stock price will be artificially pushed up because of large investments from major financial institutions.

Nevertheless, there are some disadvantages of investing in small-cap stocks:

1. High risk – Investing in small-cap stocks involves higher risk. First, small-cap companies may have an unreliable and faulty business model which can result in company’s management not being able to adjust the business model, and can result in poor operational and financial results. And, small-cap companies usually have less access to new capital and new sources of financing. Due to this reason, it is more likely that the company will not be able to bridge gaps in its cash flows or expand the business because of the inability to undertake the necessary investments.

2. Low liquidity – Small-cap stocks are less liquid than their large counterparts. Low liquidity results in the potential unavailability of the stock at a good price to purchase or it may be difficult to sell the stocks at a favorable price. Low liquidity also adds to the overall risk of the stock.

3. Time-consuming – Investing in small-cap stocks can be a time-consuming activity. Due to the under-coverage of small-cap stocks by financial media, institutions and analysts, the amount of available research on small-cap companies is usually limited.

Moreover, small cap technology and all small cap stocks are discounted to a great degree by investors in a rising interest rate environment, purely due to the fact that they have the bulk of potential earnings and cash flow far out into the future. The higher long-term rates are, the less those future earnings and cash flow are worth. This goes for virtually all unprofitable growth tech stocks.

Essentially, small-cap stocks may provide investors with an opportunity to earn a substantial return on their investments. However, this type of investing should be approached with caution as small-cap stocks are often risky and volatile.


References:

  1. https://investorplace.com/2022/11/7-excellent-small-cap-stocks-to-buy-before-this-year-ends/
  2. https://corporatefinanceinstitute.com/resources/wealth-management/small-cap-stock/
  3. https://news.yahoo.com/10-best-small-cap-stocks-140302020.html

Value Investing: The 4 Ms of Investing

“The one and only secret to stockpiling is to make sure the value of the business is substantially greater than the price you are paying for it. If you get this right, you cannot help but get rich.” ~ Phil Town

Value investing is a strategy that focuses on investing in individual assets, but not just any asset, assets in wonderful companies or real estate that are priced well below their value, explains Phil Town, founder and CEO of Rule 1 Investing.

Value investing aims to reduce risk by increasing understanding of what you’re investing in order to make wiser investment decisions, and purchasing it at a price that gives you a margin of safety.

  • Value investing is a focused, disciplined and patient strategy, it’s a buy-and-hold for the long-term strategy. You need to be disciplined, patient and keep your focus on long-term profits.
  • It’s about making investing decisions based on the intrinsic value of a company, or what it’s actually worth, which is not to be confused with its sticker or market price.
  • A key component of value investing is buying stocks at the right time, and the right time will present itself if you remain focused, disciplined and patient.
  • The value investor isn’t swayed by the general public’s reaction or market fear. Fear can make people sell too early or miss an excellent opportunity to buy. But, the value investor decides when to buy or sell based on a wonderful company’s intrinsic value, not based on the prevailing fear or greed in the stock market.

Growth at a Reasonable Price (GARP)

Value investors focuses on finding companies that were both undervalued and are what you might call “wonderful companies” with a high potential for growth. Thus, it wasn’t enough for a company to just be undervalued. Instead, the best companies to invest in were ones that were both undervalued and wonderful companies.

To spot undervalued companies, it’s also important to ensure that the companies you are investing in are high-quality and can retain their value throughout the time that you are holding them. Phil Town likes to evaluate whether or not a business is a quality company with what he calls the 4 Ms of Investing: Meaning, Management, Moat, and Margin of Safety.

If you can check off each of these 4 Ms for a company you are considering investing in, it will be well worth your while.

Meaning

The company should have meaning to you. This is important because if it has meaning to you, you understand what it does and how it works and makes money, and will be more likely to do the research necessary to understand all elements of the business that affect its value.

Management

The company needs to have solid management. Perform a background check on the leaders in charge of guiding the company, paying close attention to the integrity and success of their prior decisions to determine if they are good, solid leaders that will take the company in the right direction.

Moat

The company should have a moat. A moat is something that separates them from the competition and, thus, protects them. If a company has patented technology, control over the market, an impenetrable brand, or a product or service customers would never switch from, it has a moat.

Margin of Safety

In order to guarantee good returns, you must buy a company at a price that gives you a margin of safety. For Rule #1 investors, 50% is the margin of safety to look for, explains Town. This provides a buffer that makes it possible to still experience gains even if problems arise. This is arguably the most important.

These 4Ms draw heavily from the rules of value investing. Both sets of rules dictate that you must buy a company below its actual value in order to make a profit. That’s the bottom line.

Even if a company is in a great position today, it needs to have future potential to triple or 10x your investment. The market cap is a reflection of what you would pay today to own a piece of the company. But the market price is not the true value of the company.

You, as a value investor, should rely on the “intrinsic value” to determine whether a company is a worthy value investment. Then, you can use the market cap to help you determine if the company is on sale and if it has the growth potential.


References:

  1. https://wp.ruleoneinvesting.com/blog/how-to-invest/value-investing/
  2. https://www.ruleoneinvesting.com/blog/financial-control/market-capitalization/

Phil Town is an investment advisor, hedge fund manager, and 3x NY Times Best-Selling Author. Phil’s goal is to help you learn how to invest and achieve financial independence.

Wealth is what you don’t see

“Spending money to show people how much money you have is the fastest way to have less money.” ~ Morgan Housel, The Psychology of Money

The definition of wealth, in its simplest form, is the total value of assets that are owned by an individual. Wealth is also defined as a person’s Net Worth. This is calculated by adding up all the assets and subtracting all the liabilities.

Wealth means different things to different people. The first and most obvious definition of wealth is owning appreciable and income producing assets. On the other hand, wealth can mean to some people the ability to travel wherever you want, and to do things on your own schedule. But chances are, everybody has a completely different definition of wealth.

Wealth is what you don’t see.

Being wealthy means that you have assets that generate you income as well as a store of wealth. A wealthy person is typically invested in real estate, the stock market, and might own a business or two. These individuals have assets that can be passed down generation to generation and don’t waste time keeping up with the Joneses. They focus on amassing assets and wealth.

“Wealth is the nice cars not purchased. The diamonds not bought. The watches not worn, the clothes forgone and the first-class upgrade declined. Wealth is financial assets that haven’t yet been converted into the stuff you see,” explains Morgan Housel, author of The Psychology of Money.

“That’s not how we think about wealth, because you can’t contextualize what you can’t see.

When most people say they want to be a millionaire, what they might actually mean is ‘I’d like to spend a million dollars.’ And that is literally the opposite of being a millionaire.”

Wealth defined

In their groundbreaking book, The Millionaire Next Door, authors Thomas J. Stanley, Ph.D, and William D. Danko, Ph.D, do not define wealthy, affluent, or rich in terms of material possessions. They opined that many people who display a high-consumption lifestyle have little or no investments, appreciable assets, income-producing assets, common stocks, bonds, private businesses, oil/gas rights, or timber land.

Conversely, those people whom they define as being wealthy get much more pleasure from owning substantial amounts of appreciable assets than from displaying a high-consumption lifestyle.

Bottomline, the most important parts of wealth and personal finance are how you behave with it and your related habits.

Wealth gives you freedom

Wealth give you time to do what you want and give you Freedom. When you are wealthy, you don’t have to sell hours of your day working. You can instead choose to spend your day doing the things you love and enjoy it.

And, freedom is defined as “the power or right to act, speak, or think as one wants without hindrance or restraint.” When you have wealth, you have the freedom to do things that you have always wanted to do, with minimal hindrances.


References:

  1. https://retirementfieldguide.com/wealth-is-what-you-dont-see/
  2. https://themillionairenextdoor.com/publications/the-millionaire-next-door/
  3. https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/personalfinance/definition-of-wealth-what-does-being-wealthy-mean/ar-AAWpqRq

Discipline and Patience are two great personal superpowers.

Best Investing and Trading Advice

  1. “History repeats because of the weakness of human nature. The greed for quick fortunes has cost the public countless millions of dollars. Every experienced stock trader knows that overtrading is his greatest weakness, but he continues to allow this weakness to be his ruin. There must be a cure for this greatest weakness in trading, and that cure is STOP LOSS ORDERS. The weakest point must be overcome and the stop loss order is the cure for overtrading.” ~ WD Gann
  2. The only true test of whether a stock is “cheap” or “high” is not its current price in relation to some former price, no matter how accustomed we may have become to that former price, but whether the company’s fundamentals are significantly more or less favorable than the current financial-community appraisal of that stock.” ~ Philip Fisher
  3. “Trading is a waiting game. You sit, you wait, and you make a lot of money all at once. Profits come in bunches. The trick when going sideways between home runs is not to lose too much in between.” ~ Michael Covel
  4. “I learned to avoid trying to catch up or double up to recoup losses. I also learned that a certain amount of loss will affect your judgment, so you have to put some time between that loss and the next trade.” ~ Richard Dennis
  5. “Trading is a psychological game. Most people think they are playing against the market, but the market doesn´t care. You’re really playing against yourself.” ~ Martin Schwarz
  6. “Value investing requires a great deal of hard work, unusually strict discipline, and a long-term investment horizon. Few are willing and able to devote sufficient time and effort to become value investors, and only a fraction of those have the proper mind-set to succeed.” ~ Seth Klarman


References:

  1. https://www.t3live.com/blog/2017/12/01/best-trading-investing-quotes/

How to Invest for Beginners: Peter Lynch

Investing can be for anybody, but is certainly not for everybody.

Only a handful of professional investors can compare to the legendary Peter Lynch. He rose to investing stardom in 1977 when he was appointed the fund manager of Fidelity’s Magellan Fund.

When Lynch took over, the fund had around $18 million in assets under management. After 13 years at the helm, Lynch increased the fund’s size by almost a thousand-fold.

In 1990, the Magellan Fund, and its over $14 billion in assets under management, became the biggest mutual fund in the world. At times, the fund held over 1,000 different stocks in its portfolio. Also, there was a period when it had an average annual return of 29.9%.

It doesn’t matter if you don’t know anything about investing, since there are actions a beginning investor can take to learn how to invest and how to manage their money and finances. One of the most important actions for new investors is to get started early.

Investing doesn’t have to be hard. Yet, it’s important to learn the basics of investing and what type of investments are the best depending on your financial situation and the amount of money you want to make. 

When you make it a point to save money, you are protecting yourself against life’s unforeseen difficulties. And when you invest, if you choose to do so, you will have a chance to earn much more than you would have expected to, growing your money exponentially.

Time Period

Long-term investing is one of the key concepts in Lynch’s and many of the most successful investor’s investment philosophy. Lynch argued that the value of stocks was rather easy to predict over a 10 to 20-year period, while short term predictions were pretty much useless and effectively impossible to make accurately due to market volatility.

Source: Brian Feroldi

Therefore, he strongly urged investors to always select stocks of companies that they understand, believe in and be patient to wait for them to go up over a long period of time rather than selling for profits.

According to research, if you invest a $1,000 every year on the highest day for a period of 30 years, you can expect a 10.6% annualized return. On the other hand, if you invest the same sum on the lowest day of the year, you can expect an 11.7% compounded return over the same period.

Peter Lynch also encouraged the reader to look for the tenbagger stocks.

A tenbagger is a stock that rises in value 10-fold or 1,000%. He advises against selling when the stock goes up 40% or even 100%. Instead, he urges investors to hold onto them for the long-term, despite the common trend of many investors to take profits by selling appreciated stocks.


References:

  1. https://finmasters.com/one-up-on-wall-street-review/
  2. https://www.benzinga.com/money/peter-lynch-books

Index Fund and Stock Investing

“I’m extremely sceptical that anyone can do stockpicking well. The evidence is clear that simple low-cost index funds have outperformed 90 per cent actively managed funds over 10 years. A precious few stockpickers do outperform but there is no way to know in advance who they might be.” ~ Dr. Burton Malkiel

Burton Malkiel’s mission has been a multi-decades long advocate of index-based investing. In his book, A Random Walk Down Wall Street, published in 1973, he championed the premise that short run changes in stock market prices are unpredictable and that trying to beat the market is a fool’s game

Currently, index-tracking strategies account for about 40 per cent of U.S. mutual fund assets. Mr Malkiel’s advice is to ignore swings in short-term sentiment and to follow the ideas that he has supported over half a century–invest in low cost index funds. “What you shouldn’t do is panic and sell out. It is invariably a mistake, contends Malkiel. “Rather than trying to find undervalued US stocks, maybe the best solution would be to buy and hold an index comprising all the securities available for investment globally.”

Invest in index-funds (low cost), and get international exposure. The US is only one third of the world economy, and other areas are growing quickly.

Investors cannot consistently beat the market or achieve outsized returns, so invest in low-cost, tax-efficient, broad-based index funds. Not only is it simple, but it’s likely to give you the best outcome as an individual investor.

Rules to stock investing

  1. Confine stock purchases to companies that appear able to sustain above-average earnings and cash flow growth for at least five years. Growth increases, earnings, dividends, and likely the multiple the market will pay for those earnings.
  2. Never pay more for a stock than can reasonably justified by a company’s intrinsic value. Not a perfect measure, but look at how stock trades relative to earnings and cash flow growth potential. Avoid stocks with many years of high growth priced in.
  3. It helps to buy stocks with the anticipated growth. Try to be where other investors will be a few months from now. Look for companies that have strong balance sheet and strong financial growth.
  4. Trade as little as possible. Ride the winners and sell the losers. Sell before end of each calendar year any stocks on which you have a loss. Don’t have patience for losing stocks whose fundamentals have changed. Losses can help less tax burden through tax loss harvesting.

According to Dr. Malkiel, you aren’t likely to win even with these sensible rules. That said, those with a penchant for investing in individual stocks of companies, may still enjoy the game and not want to give it up.


References:

  1. https://www.ft.com/content/c67c06ba-b19c-3341-9665-eb985e3f8d02
  2. https://calvinrosser.com/notes/random-walk-down-wall-street-burton-malkiel/

Dr. Burton Gordon Malkiel, Ph.D, the Chemical Bank Chairman’s Professor of Economics at Princeton University, is responsible for a revolution in the field of investment management. His book, A Random Walk Down Wall Street, first published in 1973, used new research on asset returns and the performance of asset managers to recommend that all investors use passively managed “index” funds as the core of their investment portfolios.