@Scott--great tips and Messrs. Graham, Dodd and Buffett would certainly agree.
The saying I learned early on that guides me is "Bulls make money and bears make money but pigs get slaughtered."
Re: Zombie investing
Phoenix
6/6/2012 9:40:00 AM
Thank you for the tips Scott. Emotions really do play a huge role on our lives. In many instances we act before we think clearly and rationally. I think if you are patient and deligent you can actually avoid unnecessary risks and do well.
Re: Zombie investing
AskAsa
6/6/2012 9:35:38 AM
That seems to be the case.
Re: Zombie investing
ProfR
6/6/2012 7:14:44 AM
So we are back to the best a small non-professional investor can do is buy an index fund and go along for the ride?
@Scott sometimes we all feel like breaking our keyboards.
Dear Churchill,
Go ahead - send money. Many crates of small bills preferred.
@Broadway @Value Hiker
Yes actually Apple was no get-rich quick scheme, it was included from the beginning in our Index because it met our criteria of reasonable low-PEG investments.
Broadway, I don't know why you wanted to break your keyboard because as VAlue Hiker said, it is extremely hard to do something like that (analytically and emotionally), and as he said movest investors would sell the stock after they were up $100,000.
WE ARE READY TO FUND YOUR PROJECT
churchill
6/5/2012 8:37:32 PM
Dear Entrepreneur,
CAMBRIDGE FINANCE & INVESTMENTS LIMITED is a venture capital firm specializing in growth capital investments. It seeks to invest in public and private securities in a broad range of areas including real estate, energy, oil and gas, emerging markets,high-technology etc. We wish to invest in any viable projects that your company requires funding on an equity investment capacity or Loan capacity, On review of your company's Business Plan we shall determine on the projects possible funding.
Kind Regards Mr. Churchill Bronx Investment Officer
"if you invested $20k in Apple stock 10 years ago, you'd be a millionaire today."
You called that a get-rich-quick??? No, it is not, at least according WSJ. A report on WSJ in 2009 did an interesting research. I do not remember the exact detail, but basically, you have one dollar to start at January 1, and for each trading day in 2009, you bought the stock that will rise most on that day, and sold it at the close. Just ignore the trading expense and assume a tax deferred account, at the end of the year, you would end up with more than a Trillion dollar.
I know people who buy Apple at exact bottoms, unfortunately most of them either bought too fewer shares, or sold too earlier. Assume you really bought Apple at the bottom with $20K, when the stock rise to 200K, will you sell ? how about 400K, 800K, the pressure will build up if you are not a multi-millionaire at the beginning.
The only thing I am sure is that the author did not invest that way.
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