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From: | "tennyson@caverock.net.nz" <tennyson@caverock.net.nz> |
Date: | Sat, 06 Sep 2003 22:36:45 +1200 |
Hi Macdunk, > > I have come to the conclusion that to make real money an Investor > must stick to what Is trending. This I would apply to shares, > property, farming, and most other business Investments. This leaves > the question of when to time your entry. Most trends only last long > enough for the smart people to sell to the dummies who get caught at > the top of the market. The Idea Is to be first In and out before > the herd realize Its on Its way down. I always think of It as the hand > of a clock, climb aboard at half past and out at five to the hour. > Sell near the top, but never try to time the top perfectly. After all the fact that your strategy requires you to sell means that you must have a pool of willing buyers to take 'whatever it is' off you. Selling out a 'five to the hour' is probably not a bad way to achieve that. > > What comes next? Is my > question to the forum. In asking the question I would like to think I > can reinforce my Ideas of what I think with what Input other Investors > have of the situation. The question Is what Is going to trend next? > I have a somewhat different take on this to you Macdunk. I don't think you have to out guess Mr Market (in the whole investment spectrum) sense of the word. You just have to be there to take adavntage of what Mr Market has *already done* (a reactive strategy). For example, the retail sector has taken quite a hammering this year. This is not total foolishness. With the prospect of interest rates rising in the medium term, that will mean less disposable income for home owners and less discretionary spending among the retailers. However, the retail sector is one that comes and goes. Just because you think Mr Retail might be about to get a knockout punch does not mean that he won't be rising from the canvas afterwards. He always does, eventually. But there are some 'Mr Retail's who can take the punches better than others. And some who can get up off the mat faster than others. I see my task as finding the best Mr Retail I can, then get in behind him after he has been cut down to size a bit with a few broad punches. In other words I get behind my 'Mr Retail' when all the Mr Retails are facing a (short term) uncertain future, and have unfairly dragged down the reputation of 'my Mr Retail' with them. In other words I get to back my Mr Retail (the best of the bunch) at a cheap price. In the end buying on an uptrend doesn't really matter to be. As long as I can buy in cheaply that is the most important thing. And a trend line can't tell me if I am buying in cheaply (in absolute terms) or not. SNOOPY discl: Relatively new WHS shareholder -- Message sent by Snoopy on Pegasus Mail version 4.02 ---------------------------------- "Sometimes to see the wood from the trees, you have to cut down all the trees." ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/
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