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From: | "tennyson@caverock.net.nz" <tennyson@caverock.net.nz> |
Date: | Fri, 06 Feb 2004 12:30:12 +1300 |
Hi Phaedrus, > > Snoopy, >You say "It is actually a low risk strategy buying something > that you have figured out with your F/A is cheap no matter what > the trend is doing." > I fear you have learnt nothing from your experience with TLS! > > >http://www.sharechat.co.nz/archives/2001/06/msg00370.shtml >http://www.sharechat.co.nz/archives/2001/06/msg00406.shtml >http://www.sharechat.co.nz/archives/2001/06/msg00411.shtml > Ah Phaedrus! You have the memory of an elephant! I must say that I enjoyed rereading that little exchange from the archives. Congratulations on your two successful Telstra trades. I wonder what happened to our old mate Peter Maiden? His posts were usually good reading. I hope his reliance on charts did not turn him into a dot com victim! > >In 2001 >when TLS was still in a clear downtrend you were using the same >fundamentalist arguments to advocate it as a hold or buy, saying "3 >years down the track I would think potential shareholders would be >very well rewarded if they bought at these levels." Quite the >reverse, I am afraid. > Cut me some slack Phaedrus. My years have twelve months in them. Still four months to go ;-) ! But let's not leave half the story out either. I refer of course to the dividends! 26 Oct 2001: 11cps 29 Apr 2002: 11cps 28 Oct 2002: 11cps 30 Apr 2003: 15cps 31 Oct 2003: 12cps 30 Apr 2004: 12cps (hopefully?) Total 72cps > >Three years ago, on the basis of the fundamentals, > you couldn't see TLS "going as low as $5.60" (It fell > to $3.96) > Yes. I also didn't forsee the full impact of the folly of investing in Pacific Century Cyber Works in Hong Kong. This may come as a shock to you Phaedrus, but I do not foresee everything! I make the best calls I can at the time. That's all. The objective is not to stop making mistakes (as we all make them, both as investors and comnpany management). The objective is to make sure you learn from the experience. Telstra have learned from their mistake and are unwinding their growth investment strategy in Asia. The share price performance in the future will probably change because of that. However, I notice, Phaedrus, that your 2004 share chart for TLS goes back and includes the prevailing sentiment from the dot com era. How long before Telstra makes a bolt for the next resistance level of $A7.40? How useful is this 'historic' section of your chart? > >As I said back then "Your devotion to this stock (because >of its good fundamentals) has cost you nearly 40% in 18 months." > True, but since then I am only down another 10%. Or if I include dividends I am actually *up* on a cash basis. Just because a share plunges 40% in 18 months, that doesn't mean you should automatically sell it today. You have to evaluate the expected investment performance going *forward* to make that kind of investment decision. Now I freely admit I haven't been 'well rewarded' over the period from June 2001 up until now by holding TLS. But it hasn't been a disaster either. I am still wearing the same shirt as I was when I wrote that earlier post in 2001, while there are plenty of 'dot com' bare chested individuals around. I suppose I could 'sell' my TLS shares now, and stick the money in the bank. But then I would be earning less than I am currently receiving in dividends. And I think the forecast performance of Telstra going forward looks good. SNOOPY discl: hold TLS -- Message sent by Snoopy on Pegasus Mail version 4.02 ---------------------------------- "Q: If you call a dog tail a leg, how many legs does a dog have?" "A: Four. Calling a tail a leg doesn't make it a leg." ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/
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