Individuals following this approach need to be more disciplined,
optimistic and need some serious luck.
Many studies indicate that believers tend to live longer and be
happier than atheists. This is because faith sustains optimism and
optimists tend to outlive pessimists. In equity investing as in life,
optimists tend to be bullish and being bullish pays.


Despite greater volatility, equity returns outscore other assets in
the long run. Certainly this is true for India even though Indian bear
markets often see over 50 per cent knocked off peak values. Since
liberalisation (June 1991), there have been three major bear markets
that have each knocked off over 50 per cent
However, the CAGR of the Nifty-Sensex is about 14.5 per cent across
those 19 years. That comfortably outscores other assets and beats
inflation, which ran at 7-8 per cent CAGR (consumer price index for
urban non-manual employees).
Very few investors actually got close to 14.5 per cent because there
was little scope for passive investment in the first 5-7 years. A
small minority of investors made far more. The vast majority made much
less.
The default vehicle of passive investors is the cheap, open-ended
index fund. Until the monopolistic UTI started coming apart post-1998,
Indian investors weren't offered that choice. They got closed-end,
opaque schemes instead.
Over the past decade as markets have matured, passive investment
vehicles have become available. Few Indian fund managers and
individual investors have consistently beaten the indices and this
gels with global experience. The 10-year CAGR of equity returns is
lower, at 13 per cent (April 2000-April 2010). Inflation also dropped
to about 6 per cent and nominal debt returns are lower as well.
Although it is against the odds and passive investing offers decent
returns, many Indian investors prefer trying to actively beat the
market. Their returns continue to vary wildly and bear little
relationship with market indices.
If an individual investor decides to try and beat the index, there's
logic to going the whole hog and chasing multi-baggers, rather than
trying to eke out an extra 1-2 per cent. India is an emerging market
with high growth rates and so, multi-baggers pop up often. Even one
Infosys or Suzlon can turbo-charge a portfolio. The downside to
chasing multi-baggers is low strike-rates (fewer winners) and big
capital losses when investment decisions are wrong.
Venture Capitalists and Private Equity players accept low strike rates
knowing that they will pick up an occasional big winner that
over-compensates. But VCs and PEs have quality information, working
closely with managements. They are also disciplined at managing money
and always keep exit options in mind. Eventually, a VC or PE will
exit, either through an IPO or via strategic stake sale.
Very few individual investors even consider exit options when they
adopt a high-risk strategy. Fewer still accept they will be wrong at
least as often as they are right and are therefore, psychologically
ready to roll with losses. As a result, individual investors often
fail to collect paper profits even when they pick the right stocks.
They also end up losing far more capital than necessary, by refusing
to exit when they've made wrong decisions.
A third common error is unevenly-weighted initial investment. The
logic behind equally weighted investment can be simply illustrated
with an exaggerated example. Suppose every fifth stock pick yields
1000 per cent return while the other four lose 100 per cent. If the
investments are evenly weighted, the net return is 120 per cent. If
the losers have higher initial weights, the winner may not generate
enough to compensate.
An active investor looking for big killing must be careful about
managing money and phlegmatic about potential losses. Keep initial
investments at equal weights. Always keep a mental stop loss or exit
option in mind, including cut-offs in terms of both time and money. If
an investment doesn't yield returns within a given time frame, review
it. If it loses more than a certain amount, review it.
Obviously levels must be decided on a case-by-case basis, considering
variables like the specific business and the individual risk-appetite.
The important thing is to think about it and be prepared for
contingencies.
There's nothing wrong with adopting the VC-PE mode of "extreme active
investing". But making it work for an individual requires the same
disciplined approach that successful PEs-VCs adopt. It requires plenty
of optimism, self-confidence, judgement and some luck. The injection
of deliberately pessimistic scenario-building helps as well. Optimism
must always be tempered with judgement in investing as in life.



--
Posted By FinPower to FinPower-"Gives You Financial Power" at
4/06/2010 06:56:00 AM


-- 
Thanks & Regards
FinPower

http://finpower.blogspot.com

Group:[email protected]

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