I would like to give some advice to new investors.
Don’t Be Greedy
I started with a small amount of money. Naturally, I wanted to grow
that money quickly. I thought I should earn 50% a year like Warren
Buffett said he could do with less than $1 million. I’m dazzled by Peter
Lynch’s idea of 10-baggers. That’s fine if you stick to their
teachings. But my greed led me to compromise on quality of business.
Statistical cheapness blinded me and persuaded me that the business is
fine.
So, I think for starters, no matter how small the amount of money you
have, the priority is always to protect principal, not to grow money
quickly.
I think a diversified portfolio of statistically cheap stocks can be
fine. But you can’t achieve adequate diversification with a small amount
of money. So you should focus on quality of business. Personally, I’m
comfortable with buying only one great company.
Invest Like You’re Saving for Retirement
My attitude toward stock investing is
like saving for my retirement. I don’t plan to use any money I put into
my portfolio in the next 30 years. That frees me from the concern about
volatility. I can totally ignore market price. Once I find the right
stock at the right price, I’ll buy. And I want the stock price to keep
going down. So I can buy the stock cheaper whenever I have more money or
the company can repurchase shares cheaply.
I think this is the advantage of
individual investors. Money managers with the wrong clients have to pay a
lot more attention to short-term performance. You don’t have that
restriction if you add money to your fund with no plan to use the money
soon. Think like you’re saving for your retirement.
Investing is a Learning Process
Buying inactivity is also a result of my research process. My process
was initially started with screening for statistically cheap
candidates.
The disadvantage of this approach is that I’m influenced by
fluctuations in the stock market. There can be the pressure to do
research quickly. I can be afraid that the stock price will go up and I
will miss an opportunity. But rushing a research always results in an
inadequate analysis.
Also, valuing a stock when we know the stock price isn’t a good idea.
We’ll be influenced by the anchoring idea. It’s like when you ask
people if a Big Mac provides more or less than 1,200 calories, most
people will say less. When you ask them how many, they would say “1021.”
If you instead ask if there are more or less than 500 calories in a Big
Mac, they’ll say more. And when you ask them how many, they’ll say
something like “715.” There’s a high chance that our stock valuation
would significantly differ when we know the stock price is $60 from when
we know the stock price is $15.
So, I think intelligent investors will do research without the
impulse to buy a stock. They learn about the business, expand their
circle of competence. They get ready to make a decision when the market
price is cheap relative to their idea about the value of the company.
Geoff often tells me that his greatest investments are those in
companies that he learned about before and then 5 years later, something
happened to the stock price.
Don’t Rush to Buy
I used to have a lot of ideas when I started. I always had new ideas
even when I was already fully invested. But it wasn’t that I was smarter
or those were good days. Those ideas were simply junk. Those were just
beliefs of an inexperienced investor. I was influenced by numerous human
misjudgment tendencies.
I started reading investment books in those days. I learned
techniques to value a stock and how to do research. I was overeager to
apply what I had just learned. Perhaps buying a stock meant becoming an
investor or mastering what I had learned. Therefore, most of my early
researches were inadequate. But I ignored those shortcomings and
believed that I had good ideas.
My advice here is to limit yourself to buying only one stock in the
first year. That will delay your buying decision and force you into
following your stocks longer and comparing investment candidates. That
will also save you the opportunity cost of buying the wrong company.
Don’t worry about having cash that is not working. Assuming you wait 2
years to buy a stock that would double in 3 years, you still earn 14%.
And 14% is an admirable rate of return for any investor.
Write Down All Your Thoughts about a Company
Finally, I used to have problems with following some stocks I did
research on. Many times I read my own research after a while, and I
realized how incomplete my reports were. Many questions arose while I
read the reports. But when I did some research to answer those
questions, I realized I already knew the answers before.I think that’s because I’m not a good writer. I couldn’t turn all my
thoughts into a concise, comprehensive report. My solution is that if I
can’t write a report, I’ll take notes. I have a checklist including
questions about a company to answer. And for each question, I just write
down every thesis and all the evidence and then organize them into a
draft. I also write down all questions that I can’t answer with my
current knowledge as well as hypotheses about the company. It’ll take
more time for me to read all my notes in the future, but at least, I can
record all my thoughts about a company and follow them in the future.
So, I think buying inactivity, focusing on business quality,
learning, taking notes, and investing like saving for retirement are the
ingredients for intelligent investing.
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