[obrolan-bandar] The Wit and Wisdom of Peter Lynch

2006-05-16 Terurut Topik Cubit Aja





The Wit and Wisdom of Peter 
LynchJanuary-4-2006By Kaushal B. Majmudar, CFA We were 
fortunate to have an opportunity to hear Peter Lynch speak at an investment 
conference in New York about a year ago. Peter is, of course, the famed 
ex-manager of the Fidelity Magellan Fund. Under his stewardship, the Magellan 
Fund, which he ran from 1977 to 1990 grew from a small $20 million fund to $14 
billion in assets when he stepped down to focus on family and other interests. 
In 1983 (just 6 years after he took over), the fund had grown to $1 billion on 
the back of Peter's exceptional performance. More specifically, according to a 
secondary source quoting Valueline, Lynch achieved an average annual return of 
29% per year over his 13 years running the Magellan Fund.Besides his 
fame as an exceptional investor who helped thousands through the fund, Peter is 
also well know for writing two very good books on investing that became best 
sellers. Peter's fund continued to perform well even as the fund became the 
largest equity fund in the country. Peter Lynch was only 46 when he retired (no 
doubt to the consternation of his many investors) at the top of his game. 
According to Peter, the fund continued to outperform the market for the next 7 
years after he left! Also interesting to students of investing and value 
investors in particular is that Peter's approach featured wide diversification 
and opportunistic flexibility to buy any company for the Magellan Fund without 
arbitrary size or value versus growth limitations (in today's parlance the fund 
had a "core" approach).In sharing his comments, Peter was exceptionally 
funny and entertaining. Though he has probably delivered some version of this 
talk many times (indeed he had a handout with his main bullet points on it - 
summarized below), he also made some comments that were clearly off the cuff. 
For example, the host of the conference was an investment bank that was very 
proud of being the bank with the highest profits per employee and after Peter 
was introduced, he quipped that "It makes you wonder why they don't hire more 
people."In any event, the meat of Peter's comments were essentially 
straightforward and very common sense oriented. Peter shared his 
rules/observations on investing (8 of them) and proceeded to share some thoughts 
on each point and then talked about 10 wrong-headed and dangerous things that 
people say (often to themselves) about investing. It never hurts to review the 
fundamentals and glean insights from superstars like Peter so we took the time 
to share the essense of his message below. After each of Peter's 
fundamentals, we provide a brief synopsis of his key comments or message 
relating to that fundamental. The discussion below includes our own observations 
on the several parallels to Warren Buffett's wisdom on investing. At The 
Ridgewood Group, we find it encouraging that many long-term successful investors 
like Peter Lynch and Warren Buffett seem to share many of the same key 
fundamentals since it means that other investors also have a fighting chance to 
learn and learn to properly apply these same fundamentals in order to become 
better investors. Peter S. Lynch's Fundamental's of Investing 1.) 
Know What You Own - Most people don't really know the reasons why they own a 
stock - you should. Ed's Note: Similar to Ben Graham and Warren Buffet's 
Businesslike Investing in your Circle of Competence2.) It is Futile to 
Predict the Economy, Interest Rates and the Stock Market(So Don't Waste Time 
Trying) - "If You Spend 13 minutes per year trying to predict the economy, you 
have wasted 10 minutes" Focus on the "facts" now at hand rather than predictions 
about the future3.) You Have Plenty of Time - to identify and recognize 
exceptional companies. If you bought WalMart AFTER it rose 10x in its first 10 
years, you got another 60x return over the next 30 years. Bottom line: Don't be 
in a rush - look at plenty of stocks, but be patient. Note: Buffett's "Wait for 
the Perfect Pitch"4.) Avoid Long Shots - his record was ZERO out of 25 
investing in companies with no revenues but a "bright future" to sell. His 
advice if you run across a company that falls into this category but still 
excites you - do nothing and write down the name. Look at it again in 6 to 12 
months and see if you still think it is good. If it is one of the good ones and 
went from 5 to 15 while you waited, per point #3 above, you probably still have 
plenty of time. Note: Following this rule could keep you out of trouble. 
Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett talked about avoiding Speculations and 
focusing on Investments instead5.) Good Management is Very Important and 
Buy Great Businesses - good management is very important - maybe even the most 
important consideration. It may also be the most difficult item on this list to 
get right. His advice: look for good companies because a good management in a 
bad business will probably fail. "Buy 

Re: [obrolan-bandar] The Wit and Wisdom of Peter Lynch

2006-05-16 Terurut Topik Sjaiful Bahri



short term dan gak pernah melakukan cut loss dan masuk
dengan prosentase sedikit demi sedikit juga
diversifikasi maksimum 12 saham itu juga alternatif yg
menguntungkan... 

cheers
iful


--- Cubit Aja [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 
 Peter S. Lynch's Fundamental's of Investing 
 1.) Know What You Own - Most people don't really
 know the reasons why they own a stock - you should.
 Ed's Note: Similar to Ben Graham and Warren Buffet's
 Businesslike Investing in your Circle of Competence
 
 2.) It is Futile to Predict the Economy, Interest
 Rates and the Stock Market(So Don't Waste Time
 Trying) - If You Spend 13 minutes per year trying
 to predict the economy, you have wasted 10 minutes
 Focus on the facts now at hand rather than
 predictions about the future
 
 3.) You Have Plenty of Time - to identify and
 recognize exceptional companies. If you bought
 WalMart AFTER it rose 10x in its first 10 years, you
 got another 60x return over the next 30 years.
 Bottom line: Don't be in a rush - look at plenty of
 stocks, but be patient. Note: Buffett's Wait for
 the Perfect Pitch
 
 4.) Avoid Long Shots - his record was ZERO out of 25
 investing in companies with no revenues but a
 bright future to sell. His advice if you run
 across a company that falls into this category but
 still excites you - do nothing and write down the
 name. Look at it again in 6 to 12 months and see if
 you still think it is good. If it is one of the good
 ones and went from 5 to 15 while you waited, per
 point #3 above, you probably still have plenty of
 time. Note: Following this rule could keep you out
 of trouble. Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett
 talked about avoiding Speculations and focusing on
 Investments instead
 
 5.) Good Management is Very Important and Buy Great
 Businesses - good management is very important -
 maybe even the most important consideration. It may
 also be the most difficult item on this list to get
 right. His advice: look for good companies because a
 good management in a bad business will probably
 fail. Buy a business any fool can manage because
 eventually one will Buffett has also observed that
 when a good management meets a bad business, it is
 the reputation of the business that generally
 prevails.
 
 6.) Be Flexible - lots of unexpected things happen,
 some good and some bad. Many of his best nvestments
 happened for the wrong reasons, i.e. his original
 thesis was off, but the investment still worked out.
 Sometimes he was absolutely right about the growth
 but the investment was still lousy and he did not
 make any money. So be flexible and humble
 
 7.) Knowing When to Sell is Hard - before you make a
 purchase, you should be able to explain why you are
 buying/own it in terms that an 11 year old could
 understand - three sentences at most. Remember this
 reason and sell the holding when the reason no
 longer continues to hold. Investing well does not
 take a genius - only need 5th grade math - so math
 has nothing to do with being a great investor
 
 8.) There is Always Something to Worry About - and
 this makes things interesting. The 1950s were one of
 the best decades to own stocks, but from a
 geopolitical basis everyone was scared of nuclear
 war. In the early 1990s, everyone was scared about
 the Japanese taking over the world and beating
 America. Not coincidentally, more all-time worst
 market days occur on Mondays because people have the
 whole weekend to WORRY. His advice is to forget
 about all the global bad stuff because the key to
 good investing is not the brain/intellect, its
 having the stomach.
 
 In addition to the above points, Peter also shared
 his Ten Most Dangerous Things People Say About Stock
 Prices reproduced below. Even more than the points
 above, Peter's good sense of humor came through when
 he discussed these old saws:
 
 1.) If it's gone down this much already, how much
 lower can it go? (answer: Zero) 
 
 2.) If it's gone this high already, how can it
 possibly go higher? (some of the best companies
 grow for decades)
 
 3.) Eventually they always come back. (no they
 don't - there are lots of counterexamples)
 
 4.) It's only $3 a share, what can I lose? ($3 for
 every share you buy)
 
 5.) It's always darkest before the dawn. (Its also
 always darkest before it goes absolutely pitch
 black. Don't buy a business just because price
 dropped and it is cheaper now)
 
 6.) When it rebounds to my cost, I'll sell. (The
 stock does not know you own it! Don't take it so
 personally Note: this comment is explained by the
 well documented psychological tendencies called loss
 aversion and anchoring bias which are talked about
 in Behavioral Finance. If you liked it at ten, you
 should love it at 6 so either buy more or sell)
 
 7.) What me worry? Conservative stocks don't
 fluctuate much. (There is no such thing as a
 conservative stock - the average stock fluctuates
 between 50% to 70% from its high to its low price
 every year. There is a graveyard where all the