XMD 1.17% 10,423 s&p/asx midcap 50

The Big Boys, page-308

  1. 16,345 Posts.
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    On your last point Heraclitus I can only emphasise to people how important that is .

    If you have a basic investment philosophy you don't have to be overly smart ,technically skilled or ,once you've got the hang of what to look for, need to seek any counsel . What you do need is some experience and a reasonable level of attention to your comparisons with the investment choices you have.

    These days I don't really care what the company does ,sooner or later all the sectors get their turn . In fact out of favor sectors can be a playground . If they're cheap ,based on capitalisation ,earnings and/or prospective earnings ,impressive management ,reasonably tightly held ,cash for whatever they might need to do or even better cashflow, and a believable story and/or a broker who'd be happy or is supporting , a history of prudent management with attention to cost containment , hate companies that go to the market every year or so ,if they meet the criteria I'm in. Then you just hold until you see them falling away in any of the key criteria with no rational explanation whereupon you reassess. If the SP is falling you pay a lot closer attention to the company and either ditch or buy more. If the SP is going up you give them a bit more leeway because there's always someone who knows a bit more than you do ,and maybe you just got it right in the first place . And it's all in the buying . You need to buy when they're cheap and you don't have any worries. Of course as you point out they can still be cheap when they're miles off their lows but it's always nice to be in first.

    That's it in a nutshell
 
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