Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Common mistakes committed in the equity market

Throughout your investing career, it is likely that you will be guilty of committing a lot of mistakes. There is no one today who has not committed costly financial mistakes including the legendary Warren Buffet. However it is the ability to recognize and learn from your mistakes that will determine whether you are able to achieve your investment objectives. It is thus paramount to commit as few mistakes as possible. Failure is often the best teacher provided you allow yourself to be taught.
The last three months have exposed investors to several such mistakes. Here we highlight eight of the common ones.
Relying on tips and hearsay is the first and most common mistake committed by most investors.
Expecting Big Gains fast. Very few people have the mindset and patience required to invest in equity. A common expectation is to make big gains quickly. There is no focus on the risk the investment exposes your portfolio to. A classic example of recent times was the Power sector. Any stock that had the name ‘Power’ in it was considered sacrosanct. People did not even care about risk involved in taking exposure to such stocks. Instant gratification is injurious to your wealth.
Leverage in equity markets can have disastrous consequences not just on your financial health but on your physical health.
It’s not easy to always make money in equities and there could be periods of negative returns. Though over time, returns can even out, in the short run there could be sizeable downside. So don’t be surprised by it. Understand, expect corrections and be realistic.
Have reasonable expectations from equity. As an asset class equity should technically deliver returns in line with corporate earnings. However we do not invest in a utopian stock market but a market that drives on hope, greed and fear. Hence you are bound to see eras of excesses and exuberance and those of pessimism.
It’s all easy to know ‘Buy low and sell high’, but majority of people would end up doing exactly the opposite. Most investment banks, brokerages, hedge funds, FIIs, domestic investors, gurus and analysts are super confident in a bullish market when highs are torn apart every other day. Things suddenly change for them when the market corrects and no one is ready to put even their thumb in the market. Learn to embrace market sell offs. People who could not earlier invest had an excellent opportunity to invest at 14000 to 15000 levels but I do not know too many people who had the gut to really invest.
When the market corrects, do not put all your eggs immediately. Corrections that happen after very sharp rallies tend to extend themselves over a few months. One of the strategies that can be adopted is to invest in a staggered fashion. You should start investing if the market has corrected by more than 15-20% and go higher when it crosses 30-35%. There is no way to know what the bottom could be and I don’t know how people come up with their holy predictions on how lower can the index go. When the going is bad, all one hears is bad news and it’s very important to grow beyond these daily projections. Investing is certainly not a poker game and you would be harming your economic interests by following what a bunch of unknown people are doing.
Don’t keep looking at your portfolio because things are not going to change even if you see it many times. A quarterly or semi annual review should be good enough for most people. Looking daily is harmful to your overall thought process and can urge you to take emotional decisions whether on the way up or way down.
This is the time to take stock of what you actually have. The first step is to understand the various investments in your portfolio and how they fit within the overall scheme of things. Most people would like to see their investments grow right from day one. For a long term investor, it should not matter if prices do not rise right away. Infact if investment values indeed go down, you should be happy to see your buying happening at lower levels. Eventually when the market recovers, you are bound to get much higher returns because of these inefficiencies in a turbulent market. The only time your stock prices should be up is when you need to sell.
Currently one sees lower volumes in the market due to fear and several other factors. The increase in STT (securities transaction tax) and short term capital gains tax also has had some impact on volumes. There is a lack of clarity on the direction of the market. However just because this is the case, there is no need to change your investment strategy. Continue to buy in a staggered fashion and just stay put if you already have.

United strike gold in Moscow

United hit new heights

United hit new heights
Edwin van der Sar's penalty save wins Manchester United FC the European Cup.
Sir Alex Ferguson's team had prevailed 3-0 on penalties in the FA Community Shield on 5 August after a 1-1 draw but the prospect of a repeat looked distant when Cristiano Ronaldo headed them into a deserved 26th-minute lead. Chelsea equalised 19 minutes later through Frank Lampard, however, and they appeared more likely winners thereafter, Didier Drogba and Lampard both striking the woodwork.
DreamlandDespite Drogba's dismissal for slapping Nemanja Vidić deep into extra time, the ten men had the ultimate prize within reach after Petr Čech's save from Ronaldo's penalty but John Terry fired wide at 4-4 when his kick would have clinched victory. Three conversions later, Van der Sar outwitted Anelka and United were in dreamland. Ronaldo delightGiven this final featured the best two defences in the Premier League it was perhaps little surprise both sides began cautiously. Owen Hargreaves, making a lively start down United's right, gave an early test to Ashley Cole - fully recovered from an ankle injury suffered in training on Tuesday - by delivering two dangerous balls into the area and almost getting on the end of Ronaldo's left-wing centre. From the Portuguese international's second significant contribution, United were ahead. Wes Brown played a one-two with Paul Scholes on the right touchline and cut inside to deliver a deep cross to the far post, where Ronaldo peeled away from Michael Essien to nod his first goal against Chelsea, netting just inside Čech's right-hand post.
Tempo risingMichael Ballack drove over from the edge of the box as Chelsea sought an instant response, but at the half-hour Avram Grant's men had managed just 38 per cent of possession. For all that, United's lead might have disappeared but for the reflexes of the 37-year-old Van der Sar, the Dutchman making an instinctive save at point-blank range to keep out Rio Ferdinand's inadvertent header under pressure from Ballack. The tempo was rising and within seconds, Chelsea could have fallen two behind at the other end. Wayne Rooney's fabulous long pass launched a counterattack from which Čech made stops to deny first Carlos Tévez's header then Michael Carrick's follow-up shot. Lampard levellerTévez next passed up another presentable opening from Rooney's low right-wing centre and Chelsea took advantage of this profligacy on the stroke of half-time. Lampard reacted quickest to slip the ball beyond Van der Sar after Essien's speculative long-range effort had struck both Vidić and Ferdinand. Having got back into the game, Chelsea were eager to build on their equaliser and might have been in front within ten minutes of the restart. Florent Malouda sent Essien away down the right and the Ghanaian turned away from two defenders on the edge of the area, only to direct a left-foot attempt too high. Ballack then sliced wide as the United defence parted invitingly.
Drogba deniedBefore kick-off, the United end of the ground had displayed a series of cards spelling out one simple message: Believe. With Ballack and midfield partner Lampard growing in influence, however, that conviction now seemed exclusively Chelsea's and they came closer than ever to a second goal with 12 minutes left when Drogba, out of nothing, curled a shot from 25 metres beyond Van der Sar but off the goalkeeper's left-hand upright. Ryan Giggs came on after 87 minutes to make a record-breaking 759th United appearance, yet with tension setting in neither side were willing to risk defeat and commit men forward. Overtime tensionStill, Chelsea continued to look more enterprising and early in extra time they rattled the woodwork again as Ashley Cole and Ballack set up Lampard for an improvised shot that came back off the bar with Van der Sar beaten. Terry then blocked Giggs's goalbound strike after Patrice Evra's low centre had taken Čech out of the game. The ebb and flow of attacks continued, with the only advantage gained being United's after Drogba was dismissed for raising a hand to Vidić. That seemed not to matter when Ronaldo missed United's third kick of the shoot-out, but Chelsea's moment passed with Terry's slip and Van der Sar's subsequent glory-grabbing save.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

about me

hi this is Dr.Amey Potnis.i am MBBS.This is my blog and it is about the two things m interested sensex and sports.Would like to share my blog.