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From: | "hugh webber" <hugh.webber@clear.net.nz> |
Date: | Mon, 23 Oct 2000 19:03:43 +1300 |
Well I guess someone needs to say a few words of caution before everyone sings Pollyanna so I'll stick my neck out again. Point (1) if people are new to the game then they need to do some reading so they know what its about and how to best play it. The best two books are 'Buffetology' by Mary Buffett, and not so good but adapted to the NZ market 'Making Money on the New Zealand Sharemarket' by Frank Newman and Phil Briggs. When you've read and understood those two you're ready to play. Even the old hands and the names fall into traps - I note an NBR article that Eric Watson's fortune has halved...shades of Aquaria...and if you had bought Telecom IR's when launched and paid your instalment then you'd have about 60% of your money left. Point (2) don't mix it all up e.g. Buffetology with chartism (technical junk that's worthless in practical terms) with new issues and dewy eyed tech speculation and rumours about a horse and diversification. Stick to Buffetology its the only one that works. Point (3) expect to take several years to make an impact. Point (4) decide what your objective is. Most people make the mistake of assuming that its to make as much money as fast possible - that doesn't work and if it did IRD would destroy you. A better one is to go for good sustainable gross yields and to take the capital gains as a welcome incidental. You'll do better than chasing new issues and techs. Point (5) stay out of commodities - goods and services that compete completely or mostly on price - hotels, airlines, forests, & & see Buffetology. Point (6) Recall an amusing anecdote from a man who got rich who when asked how he did it replied 'I always sold too soon' - although Buffetology relies on carefully picking the best shares (not in a hurry) and holding for years. Funds don't work because they diversify like mad and achieve the lowest common denominator. Buffett sees diversification as a way of trying to hide your mistakes instead of not making any. Funds do worse than market indexes on upturns and slightly better than market indexes on downturns. You become a prisoner of the group instead of being able to do your own analysis, your own timing and jump when you decide its right. You're guaranteed, even starting with the best of intentions, to have blistering arguments, lose friends, make enemies. Hence my advice is to do your own thing rather than trying to start NZ Buffett Funds or Focus Investment Groups. cheers, hugh ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.sharechat.co.nz/ New Zealand's home for market investors http://www.netbroker.co.nz/ Trade on Credit, Low Brokerage. Join now. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/forum.shtml.
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