10 Simple Rules to Make You Serious Money in the Sharemarket and
Keep it!
Don't Fall in Love with You're Stocks(Collect a Free EBOOK - see
website)
It appears that I have a dislike for admitting that I could ever
get it wrong and this explains why I sometimes can't take a
loss. On the other side of the equation: if I was wrong and XYZ
was not going to make me a fortune - then what could I do?
Okay I spotted one of my stocks in the "Shares" magazine - I
confess! I was just reading about all the up-and-coming stars
and there was this little snippet asking a question like: "Could
this be a new Microsoft?". Now they may not have said that
exactly, but it was enough to make me think XYZ was a good news
story as its price will testify - at the time(in the 70's ). I
mean it was there - it had to have some merit!
It was a miner and had a technology company in its portfolio and
a percentage of another tech company and was doing very little
in the resources area because there was more hype in tech shares
at the time. It was a time when many miners were turning into
tech companies. Can you visualize the miners making their way to
the goldfields?
Well I was right into that - so I bought heaps and the crazy
part was that I was not going to sell something that had such a
great future. Nearly $60 000 went into this company and I've
still got it. Not because I am still in love, but because it's
nearly worthless. It will be a reminder to me never to do that
again!
How much is this RULE really worth to me? That's simple -
without counting any other stock in my tech-wrecked portfolio,
this RULE is worth $59 494.45 saved.
If I just add one more, an online retailer, which cost me $69
928.20, my total saving would be $129 422.65. So if someone had
given me the above rule to live by, I could have sold out early
and kept most of $129 000.
The unloved by the market, which included many of my startups
have plummeted since the tech boom - some went up like shooting
starts, only to be blasted to pieces and fall back to Earth. You
won't get directors coming out to say that the market has put an
outrageous price on this company or that one, and that really,
there is no substance to back up the price. However someone will
notice that the king is really naked and when they do there is
no mercy from the crowd.
I have heard say, "The market is always right", and maybe it's
not a bad one to remember. Those that didn't participate in the
tech boom will have lost considerable money and those that fell
in love with the naked royalty will have lost their shirts.
Does it hurt? You bet it does! It hurts every day, but it will
get better one day - I hope! It was a great experience, even
though it was a painful one. Now it is you, the reader, who
stands to benefit from my mistakes; which increases the value of
such insights and will make this book probably the most
treasured book about the market's affect on individuals'
psychology and an awesome reminder of the pitfalls of
sharemarket speculation.
Do I think that I'm the worst case? NO WAY!! You only have to
look back in time to see what companies, underwriters and
well-established financial houses paid for software companies
and internet security companies - even our beloved Telstra(using
the taxpayer's wealth) suffered its billion dollar nightmares,
not to mention News Corp's businesses going bust. The bigger
they are the harder they have fallen: Enron, Vivendi, Worldcom
and others handing over billions as if there was no tomorrow.
Well now the penny has well and truly dropped as these huge
gorillas fight for their survival under a pile of debt and
scandal. Nope...I'm in good company. The scandals and falls
since June 2002 have certainly been enough to scare me. We live
in hope that we don't end up with a depression and that the
losses of up to $US8 trillion at the time of writing, are
finally stemmed without bringing the whole financial system to
its knees.
How many lucky devils bought News Corp at $26 and how many have
watched the decent to $8.46? Losing $12 billion in one year only
makes people want to own it, pushing the price from below $9.50
back up to above $10.50.
The market lurches from drunken stupor to bottomless pit of
despair - it's easy to get it wrong on any day!
In sharemarket trading you live and die by your trading plan -
so experiment by all means but at some stage you will need
trading rules to live by. The market can leave you behind. It
has a way of changing faster than you can. It does its time as a
bull and then becomes a bear and in the same breath will do an
about face and scream to a high, leaving your position in the
red, when everything you know tells you that the market for that
stock should not behave that way. You keep screaming ...BUT IT'S
A LOSER!!!!!! Stock punters just ignore you, pushing the dog of
a stock higher, after losses counted in billions of Australian
dollars and a weaker quarterly profit. Who really cares? Emotion
carries the market higher until once again the profit takers
come in and sell the highs.
If you have enjoyed this discussion...there's more....and the
content is not specific to any one country. You can apply these
ideas.
Please visit: http://www.tutorhelp.com.au/sharemarket.html
Get interactive with our Ezine "Request":
10simplerules@tutorhelp.com.au
Happy Investing, Joseph Sgro The Author