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Investing

This page contains our best articles on the subject of value investing and investment behaviour.


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Legacy of Benjamin Graham: A Video Tribute

I usually write on Safal Niveshak thrice a week, and on alternate days. So hearing from me two days back-to-back may seem odd to you.

But like a five-year old kid who wants to share with the world his new toy, I wanted to share with you a video I stumbled upon last night and could not wait to do that till Wednesday.

I couldn’t be patient like I try to be in my investing, so here I go! 🙂

[Read more…] about Legacy of Benjamin Graham: A Video Tribute

StockTalk 2.0: Let’s Do What Buffett Did

In an interview with Warren Buffett in 1993, Adam Smith, author of Supermoney, asked how the small investor can find good investment ideas.

Buffett said, “I’d tell him to do exactly what I did 40-odd years ago, which is to learn about every company in the United States that has publicly traded securities, and that bank of knowledge will do him or her terrific good over time.”

Smith asked, “But there are 27,000 public companies! Where should one start?”

Buffett replied, “Well, start with the A’s.”

Fifty years ago, when Buffett was starting out as a new investor, he was not the go-to guy if you wanted to sell your company or raise capital for your failing bank.

[Read more…] about StockTalk 2.0: Let’s Do What Buffett Did

Where Have All the Tribesmen Gone?

It has been quite some time since I have sparked opinions to my posts.

There used to be many comments and opinions on my posts till a few months back, and now, there’re just four or five here and there.

Either you have learned everything you wanted to learn here, or you find me out of good ideas worth reading.

Either you are busy with the holidays, or I am one boring writer.

You have to be busy with the holidays…because I know it’s not me! 😉

[Read more…] about Where Have All the Tribesmen Gone?

Investing, a Loser’s Game?

In fulfilling a dream I have seen ever since I saw Pete Sampras hitting those aces, graciously walking to the other side while bowing his head, and then hitting another ace, I started learning to play lawn tennis recently.

Then, while I was reading Howard Marks’ The Most Important Thing, I came across the three major influences on his thinking, which includes two books (one of them Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s Fooled By Randomness), and a 1975 article in The Financial Analysts Journal written by Charles D. Ellis.

I searched for this article, and found a masterpiece, not just for the insights but also because it instantly related to the kind of (terrible) tennis I am playing these days.

Titled “The Loser’s Game“, this article mostly concerns the game of tennis. It talks about how the approach taken by good and bad tennis players is also seen in investing.

In this article, Ellis cites a study done in a book called Extraordinary Tennis for the Ordinary Tennis Player written by Simon Ramo.

The study shows, and as Ellis had written in his article, that…

Professionals win points, amateurs lose points. Professional tennis players stroke the ball with strong, well-aimed shots, through long and often exciting rallies, until one player is able to drive the ball just beyond the reach of his opponent.

Amateur tennis is almost entirely different… the ball is fairly often hit into the net or out of bounds, and double faults at service are not uncommon. The amateur duffer seldom beats his opponent, but he beats himself all the time. The victor… gets a higher score because his opponent is losing even more points.

The part on amateur tennis sounds so similar to how small investors invest.

Most wealth destruction happens owing to those unforced errors – hitting into the net or out of bounds, and repeating double faults at service (while making buying decisions).

So, not anyone else but the small investor beats himself all the time!

Hey, you loser!
I imagine my tennis partner saying this every time I hit an easy ball into the net or out of the line.

But then, he needs to understand that I, being an amateur in amateur tennis, will mostly hit unforced errors till I learn to play better.

You don’t have such an excuse when it comes to investing your money.

You will purely lose the plot due to your own unforced errors – mistakes in stock picking – than due to your bad luck.

That’s exactly what Charlie Munger meant while saying, “All I want to know is where I’m going to die so I’ll never go there.”

That’s exactly what Ben Graham meant through his concept of “margin of safety”.

And that’s exactly what Seth Klarman meant when he wrote this in “Margin of Safety“…

Warren Buffett likes to say that the first rule of investing is “Don’t lose money,” and the second rule is, “Never forget the first rule.”

I too believe that avoiding loss should be the primary goal of every investor. This does not mean that investors should never incur the risk of any loss at all. Rather “don’t lose money” means that over several years an investment portfolio should not be exposed to appreciable loss of principal.

While no one wishes to incur losses, you couldn’t prove it from an examination of the behavior of most investors and speculators. The speculative urge that lies within most of us is strong; the prospect of a free lunch can be compelling, especially when others have already seemingly partaken.

It can be hard to concentrate on potential losses while others are greedily reaching for gains and your broker is on the phone offering shares in the latest “hot” initial public offering. Yet the avoidance of loss is the surest way to ensure a profitable outcome.

You can win
Investing can become a winner’s game for you only if you work towards reducing those unforced errors – errors in picking up stocks, and misbehaving.

Of course that will come only after you start playing the game, learn to play the right shots, and keep playing them for some time.

Remember that your opponent Mr. Market can get you to be overly optimistic by showering you with good news and promises, and then scare you with bad news and threats – all leading you to making those unforced errors!

But you can learn to win, as Ellis write in his follow-up article in 2003, this time called “The Winner’s Game”.

One way to do that is to learn to hit the first shot (making the first investment decision) so nicely that it makes the next shot easy.

The other is to avoid those unforced errors.

What do you say? Is your investment philosophy and checklist geared to reduce those unforced errors?

Reinvent the Way You Invest, Work, and Live (Special Course)

After writing almost 400 posts on Safal Niveshak over the past two years, and after receiving hundreds of emails from readers seeking ideas on becoming better investors, I realized one thing.

It’s that a proper structure was needed to make the learning on value investing more effective and lifelong.

What is more, a lot of people have also written to me to understand how I have created my own financial life, and how in the world I am living an extraordinary life…free of all bondages, following my passion, and still thriving in complete financial security. 🙂

You see, it is not necessary to do extraordinary things to get extraordinary results in life.

What you need are simple ideas, and the discipline and patience to follow them.

[Read more…] about Reinvent the Way You Invest, Work, and Live (Special Course)

The Most Dangerous Software for Investors

A consultant died and went to heaven. There were thousands of people ahead of him in line to see God.

To his surprise, God left his desk at the gate and came down the long line to where the consultant was, and greeted him warmly. God took the consultant up to the front of the line, and into a comfortable chair by his desk.

The consultant said, “I like all this attention, but what makes me so special?”

God replied, “Well, I’ve added up all the hours for which you billed your clients, and by my calculation you’re 193 years old!” 🙂

Laughing at God’s response?

Well, that’s the way consultants really bill their clients.

[Read more…] about The Most Dangerous Software for Investors

What Value Investing Is, and Isn’t

Charlie Munger stated it quite clearly. “All intelligent investing is value investing — acquiring more than you are paying for.”

So, value investing equals intelligent investing.

Ask anyone who has a faintest idea about value investing, and the general view is that it is same as bottom fishing, or buying cheap stocks – those that are trading at low price to earnings (P/E) or low price to book value (P/BV).

But this is far from truth.

Value investing is much more than buying cheap stocks.

[Read more…] about What Value Investing Is, and Isn’t

IL&FS Investment Managers: A Business on a Treadmill

I first heard about IL&FS Investment Managers (IIML) when Prof. Sanjay Bakshi mentioned it in his interview with Safal Niveshak.

Since then, I have wanted to analyze the business, but could not do so until March this year, when a “back-of the envelope” analysis led me to buy a few units of the stock at almost the current price.

But then, I lost that envelope 🙂 and decided to do a re-analysis of the company, which I present here.

Before I begin, please know that this analysis is just to cheer you up on a hot Friday afternoon and remind you that the weekend is here. 🙂

My mind generally goes off to sleep as the weekend approaches (though my entire week is like a weekend), so be very careful of whatever conclusions you draw from what you read below.

[Read more…] about IL&FS Investment Managers: A Business on a Treadmill

How to Read

As a reader, two questions may have come on top of your mind right now.

One, “Why is a site that should tell me ‘how to invest’ telling me ‘how to read’?”

And two, “Who needs to learn how to read?”

The answer to your first question is – Before you invest, you must read. What to read? First, read my outline of a 2-year course in investing.

The answer to your second question is – Before you read, you must learn how to read.

But then, as you rightly asked, who needs to learn how to read?

[Read more…] about How to Read

Your House is Your Best Investment. Really?

This post has been written by Nishanth Muralidhar, a Safal Niveshak tribesman.

One of the great enduring myths of the Indian middle class is that an investment in real estate can never go wrong, and that buying or constructing a house is the best investment that you can make.

I believe Vishal himself wrote a post on Safal Niveshak stating that his house was the best investment for him.

———————–Safal Niveshak Value Investing Unconference 2013——————

Announcing “The 2013 Safal Niveshak Value Investing Unconference”, a 2-day meetup of Safal Niveshak tribesmen where we discuss and debate unique and profitable investment ideas and get to know other members of this tribe better. Click here to Register
—————————————————————————————————————–

Well, we are here to see if that statement holds true regardless of age, life situation, and individual circumstances for all investors. But first…

[Read more…] about Your House is Your Best Investment. Really?

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