First thing, SAIL is outside my circle of competence, and I have already written on BHEL and Engineers India (EIL)…so I won’t talk about these businesses here.
Rather I have a few questions for you, in case you are competent to answer them.
Wit. Wisdom. Value Investing.
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First thing, SAIL is outside my circle of competence, and I have already written on BHEL and Engineers India (EIL)…so I won’t talk about these businesses here.
Rather I have a few questions for you, in case you are competent to answer them.
Imagine two scenarios.
Scenario 1: You are looking to watch that latest Hollywood action flick you’ve been waiting for the past six weeks. Going by the pre-release popularity of the movie, you’ve had to pay Rs 500 per ticket, which is almost 3 times the normal price.
However, you are excited for the movie so the cost doesn’t pinch you that much. Now, just a day before your show, a couple of your friends who’ve already watched the movie tell you that it’s not worth watching at all. The hero’s acting is poor, and the story is very predictable and boring.
What do you do? You’ve already spent Rs 1,000 for a couple of tickets for you and your wife.
[Read more…] about That Sinking Feeling Can Destroy Your Wealth
I met a long-time Safal Niveshak tribesman and a great friend Sanjeev Bhatia and his family yesterday. Sanjeev took out time from work to visit me in Chandigarh (where I am holidaying), travelling almost 100 km from his hometown, Ludhiana.
Being from a family that has several engineers – including Sanjeev and his wife – it’s obvious for the kids to head in that direction.
[Read more…] about The Most Important Portfolio of My Life…and Yours
It’s human nature to want to get a job done as quickly as possible. Like you cross the street between intersections instead of using the zebra crossing, or jump a fence instead of using the gate.
It isn’t your problem!
Many of us have grown up being told that it’s important to accomplish as much as we can. But what we often aren’t told is that rushing can result in accidents, errors, and more time spent in the long run.
“What is an article on losing weight doing on an investing blog?” you may wonder.
Now, you asked this despite that you opened this article expecting a real good way to lose weight in seven days. Isn’t it? 🙂
Anyways, you are not alone in this search for a quick fix to your weight issues, for this is what the world is searching on Google when it comes to losing weight…
The truth is that, and this is what I have realized, the faster you lose your weight, the faster you regain it.
A few readers have accused me in the past of being a sadist who wants them to do the dirty work of analyzing companies on their own, instead of simply recommending stocks like so many other blogs do.
But I’d rather give you a compass instead of a map, for you can confuse map with territory and lose your life’s savings walking that path!
In this pursuit of handing you another compass, here is an excel file (see below) that you can download on to your PC, and analyze not just the past performance of a company but also arrive at its intrinsic value in 30 minutes or less (only after you already have the annual reports with you).
[Read more…] about Analyze a Stock in 30 Minutes (Free Excel)
This post is authored by Puneet Khurana, a Safal Niveshak tribesman.
Imagine the following scenario. You are sitting at your work desk sipping your coffee when your boss comes and offers you the following deal.
He offers you a fixed bonus of Rs 1 crore for the year. Besides this, he offers you a variable bonus. For the variable bonus, he asks you to either take another fixed Rs 50 lac or flip a coin. If it’s heads, you get Rs 1 crore and if its tails, you get zero.
Which of the options will you chose?
Now consider this.
This time he offers you a fixed bonus of Rs 2 crore for the year. From this Rs 2 crore, you can either give him Rs 50 lac back, no questions asked, or you can flip a coin.
[Read more…] about Wit, Wisdom, Charlie: Elementary Worldly Wisdom from Charlie Munger (Issue #9)
My neighbors think I speak less. My friends think I speak very less. My wife thinks I don’t speak at all!
But when I tell people that I can speak for 30 hours in 3 days, they are astounded. And so was I by the end of day yesterday i.e., after finishing my fourth Art of Investing Workshop session in three days. 🙂
It was an amazing weekend retreat for me as I got chance to meet around 120 Safal Niveshak tribesmen in Bangalore and Chennai.
I recently had the privilege of meeting one of the highly regarded value investors in India, Mr. Chetan Parikh in his office in Mumbai.
Safal Niveshak: Do you think it’s important to do historical research looking back at companies in different circumstances and understanding or trying to draw conclusions about why they succeeded or failed in a particular decade or period of an economic cycle or change in leadership? Is historical research an important part of your investment methodology or not so much?
Mr. Parikh: In trying to answer the question, I’m reminded of George Bernard Shaw’s remark that when an historian had to rely on one document he was safe, but if there were two to be considered he was in difficulty, and if three were available his position was hopeless.
[Read more…] about Value Investing, the Chetan Parikh Way – Part 3
Ben Graham, the Father of Value Investing, writes the following at the start of Chapter 37 of Security Analysis…
In the last six chapters, our attention was devoted to a critical examination of the income account for the purpose of arriving at a fair and informing statement of the results for the period covered.
The second main question confronting the analyst is concerned with the utility of this past record as an indicator of future earnings.
This is at once the most important and the least satisfactory aspect of security analysis. It is the most important because the sole practical value of our laborious study of the past lies in the clue it may offer to the future; it is the least satisfactory because this clue is never thoroughly reliable and it frequently turns out to be quite valueless.
These shortcomings detract seriously from the value of the analyst’s work, but they do not destroy it. The past exhibit remains a sufficiently dependable guide, in a sufficient proportion of cases, to warrant its continued use as the chief point of departure in the valuation and selection of securities.
[Read more…] about Analyzing Crompton Greaves, the Ben Graham Way