Sir John Templeton is one of the legendary investors due to that he was highly successful, he was a philanthropist and he was financially moving around all over the world. Went into the Japanese market when it was in the very bottom and generally said that there is always at least one market in the world that is currently selling below actual value. He usually then also went there. So from his point of view many of the markets in the south of Europe would be highly interesting today. Personally I have tried to dig through them a little but from what I have seen the healthy companies are still selling at a fair value and it was just the seriously bad ones that have dropped tremendously. Some of his advice are good and some I just tend to ignore.
The advice as given by Sir John Templeton:
- Invest for maximum total real return.
- Invest - Don´t trade or speculate.
- Remain flexible and open minded about types of investment.
- By low.
- When buying stocks, search for bargains among quality stocks.
- Buy value, not market trends or the economic outlook.
- Diversify. In stocks and bonds, as in much else, there is safety in numbers.
- Do your homework or hire wise experts to help you.
- Aggressively monitor your investments.
- Don´t panic.
- Learn from your mistakes.
- Begin with a prayer.
- Outperforming the market is a difficult task.
- An investor who has all the answers doesn´t even understand all the questions.
- There´s no free lunch.
- Do not be fearful or negative too often.
#1 Invest for maximum total return.
This means that the return on invested dollars after taxes and after inflation. this is the only rational objective for most long-term investors. Any investment strategy that fails to recognize the insidious effect of taxes and inflation fails to recognize the true nature of the investment environment and thus is severely handicapped.
It is vital that you protect purchasing power. One of the biggest mistakes people made is putting too much money into fixed-income securities.
Today´s dollar buys only what 35 cents bought in the mid 1970s, what 21 cents bought in 1960s, and what 15 cents bought after WWII. US consumer prices have risen every one of the last 38 years.
If inflation averages 4%, it will reduce the buying power of a $100,000 portfolio to $68,000 in just 10 years. in other words, to maintain the same buying power, that portfolio would have to grow to $147,000 - a 47% gain simply to remain even over a decade. And this doesn´t even count taxes.
#2 Invest - Don´t trade or speculate
The stock market is not a casino, but if you move in and out of stocks every time they move a point or two, or if continually sell short... or deal only in options... or trade in futures.. the market will be your casino. And, like most gambler, you may lose eventually - or frequently.
You may find your profits consumed by commissions. You may find a market you expected to turn down turning up - and up, and up - in defiance of all your careful calculations and short sales. Every time a Wall Street news announcer says, "This just in", your heart will stop.
Keep in mind the wise words of Lucien Hooper, a Wall Street legend: "What always impresses me", he wrote, "is how much better the relaxed, long-term owners of stock do with their portfolios than the traders do with their switching of inventory. The relaxed investor is usually better informed and more understanding of essential values; he does not incur unnecessary brokerage commissions; and he avoids behaving like Cassius by "thinking too much."
#3 Remain flexible and open minded about types of investment
There are times to buy blue chip stocks, cyclical stocks, corporate bonds, US treasury instruments, and so on. And there are times to sit on cash because sometimes cash enables you to take advantage of investment opportunities.
The fact is there is no one kind of investment that is always best. If a particular industry or type of security becomes popular with investors that popularity will always prove temporary and - when lost - may not return for many years.
Having said that, I should note that, for most of the time, most of our clients' money has been in common stocks. A look at history will show why. From Jan 1946 through Jun of 1991, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by 11.4% average annually - including reinvestment of dividends but not counting taxes - compared with an average annual inflation rate of 4.4%. Had the Dow merely kept pace with inflation, it would be around 1,400 right now instead of over 3,000, a figure that seemed extreme to some 10 years ago, when I calculated that it was a very realistic possibility on the horizon.
Look also at the Standard and Poor´s Index of 500 stocks. From the start of the 1950s through the end of the 1980s - four decades altogether - the S&P 500 rose at an average of 12.5%, compared with 4.3% for inflation, 4.8% for US treasury bonds, 5.2% for treasury bills, and 5.4% for high-grade corporate bonds.
In fact, the S&P 500 outperformed inflation, treasury bill, and corporate bonds in every decade except the 70s, and it outperformed treasury bonds - supposedly the safest of all investments - in all four decades. I repeat: There is no real safety without preserving purchasing power.
#4 Buy low
Of course, you say, that´s obvious. Well, it may be, but that isn´t the way the market works. When prices are high, a lot of investors are buying a lot of stocks. Prices are low when demand is low. Investors have pulled back, people are discouraged and pessimistic.
When almost everyone is pessimistic at the same time, the entire market collapses. More often, just stocks in particular fields fall. Industries such as auto making and casualty insurance go through regular cycles. Sometimes stocks of companies like the thrift institutions or money-centre banks fall out of favour all at once.
Whatever the reason, investors are on the side-lines, sitting on their wallets. Yes, they tell you: "Buy low, sell high" But all too many of them bought high and sold low. Then you ask: "When will you buy the stock?" The usual answer: "Why, after analysts agree on a favourable outlook."
This is foolish, but it is human nature. It is extremely difficult to go against the crowd - to buy when everyone else is selling or has sold, to buy when things look darkest, to buy when so many experts are telling you that stocks in general, or in this particular industry, or even in this particular company, are risky right now.
But, if you buy the same securities everyone else is buying, you will have the same results as everyone else. By definition, you can´t outperform the market if you buy the market. And chances are if you buy what everyone is buying you will do so only after it is already overpriced.
Heed the words of the great pioneer of stock analysis Benjamin Graham: "Buy when most people... including experts... are pessimistic, and sell when they are actively optimistic."
Bernard Baruch, advisor to presidents, was even more succinct: "Never follow the crowd".
So simple in concept. So difficult in execution.
#5 When buying stocks, search for bargains among quality stocks
Quality is a company strongly entrenched as the sales leader in a growing market. Quality is a company that´s the technological leader in a field that depends on technical innovation. Quality is a strong management team with a proven track record. Quality is a well - capitalized company that is among the first into a new market. Quality is a well known trusted brand for a high-profit-margin consumer product.
Naturally, you cannot consider these attributes of quality in isolation. A company may be the low-cost producer, for example, but it is not a quality stock if its product line is falling out of favor with customers. likewise, being the technological leader in a technological field means little without adequate capitalization for expansion and marketing.
Determining quality in a stock is like reviewing a restaurant. You don´t expect it to be 100% perfect, but before it gets three or four stars you want it to be superior.
#6 Buy value, not market trends or the economic outlook
A wise investor knows that the stock market is really a
market of stocks. While individual stocks may be pulled along momentarily by a
strong bull market, ultimately it is the individual stocks that determine the
market, not vice versa. All too many investors focus on the market trend or
economic outlook. But individual stocks can rise in a bear market and fall in a
bull market.
The stock market and the economy do not always march in
lock step. Bear markets do not always coincide with recessions, and an overall
decline in corporate earnings does not always cause a simultaneous decline in
stock prices. So buy individual stocks, not the market trend or economic
outlook.
#7 Diversify. in stocks and bonds, as in much else, there is safety in numbers
No matter how careful you are, you can neither predict
nor control the future. A hurricane or earthquake, a strike at a supplier, an
unexpected technological advance by a competitor, or a government-ordered
product recall—any one of these can cost a company millions of dollars. Then,
too, what looked like such a well-managed company may turn out to have serious
internal problems that weren’t apparent when you bought the stock.
So you diversify—by industry, by risk, and by country.
For example, if you search worldwide, you will find more bargains— and possibly
better bargains—than in any single nation.
#8 Do your homework or hire a wise expert to help you
People will tell you: Investigate before you invest.
Listen to them. Study companies to learn what makes them successful.
Remember, in most instances, you are buying either
earnings or assets. In free-enterprise nations, earnings and assets together
are major influences on the price of most stocks. The earnings on stock market
indexes—the fabled Dow Jones Industrials, for example—fluctuate around the
replacement book value of the shares of the index. (That’s the money it would
take to replace the assets of the companies making up the index at today’s
costs.)
If you expect a company to grow and prosper, you are
buying future earnings. You expect that earnings will go up, and because most
stocks are valued on future earnings, you can expect the stock price may rise
also.
If you expect a company to be acquired or dissolved at a
premium over its market price, you may be buying assets. Years ago Forbes
regularly published lists of these so-called “loaded laggards.” But remember,
there are far fewer of these companies today. Raiders have swept through the
marketplace over the past 10 to 15 years: Be very suspicious of what they left
behind.
#9 Aggressively monitor your investments
Expect and react to change. No bull market is permanent.
No bear market is permanent. And there are no stocks that you can buy and
forget. The pace of change is too great. Being relaxed, as Hooper advised,
doesn’t mean being complacent.
Consider, for example, just the 30 issues that comprise
the Dow Jones Industrials. From 1978 through 1990, one of every three issues
changed—because the company was in decline, or was acquired, or went private,
or went bankrupt. Look at the 100 largest industrials on Fortune magazine’s
list. In just seven years, 1983 through 1990, 30 dropped off the list. They
merged with another giant company, or became too small for the top 100, or were
acquired by a foreign company, or went private, or went out of business.
Remember, no investment is forever.
#10 Don´t panic
Sometimes you won’t have sold when everyone else is
buying, and you’ll be caught in a market crash such as we had in 1987. There
you are, facing a 15% loss in a single day. Maybe more.
Don’t rush to sell the next day. The time to sell is
before the crash, not after. Instead, study your portfolio. If you didn’t own
these stocks now, would you buy them after the market crash? Chances are you
would. So the only reason to sell them now is to buy other, more attractive
stocks. If you can’t find more attractive stocks, hold on to what you have.
#11 Learn from your mistakes
The only way to avoid mistakes is not to invest—which is
the biggest mistake of all. So forgive yourself for your errors. Don’t become
discouraged, and certainly don’t try to recoup your losses by taking bigger
risks. Instead, turn each mistake into a learning experience. Determine exactly
what went wrong and how you can avoid the same mistake in the future.
The investor who says, “This time is different,” when in
fact it’s virtually a repeat of an earlier situation, has uttered among the
four most costly words in the annals of investing.
The big difference between those who are successful and
those who are not is that successful people learn from their mistakes and the
mistakes of others.
#12 Begin with a prayer
If you begin with a prayer, you can think more clearly
and make fewer mistakes.
#13 Outperforming the market is a difficult task
The challenge is not simply making better investment
decisions than the average investor. The real challenge is making investment
decisions that are better than those of the professionals who manage the big
institutions.
Remember, the unmanaged market indexes such as the
S&P 500 don’t pay commissions to buy and sell stock. They don’t pay
salaries to securities analysts or portfolio managers. And, unlike the
unmanaged indexes, investment companies are never 100% invested, because they
need to have cash on hand to redeem shares.
So any investment company that consistently outperforms
the market is actually doing a much better job than you might think. And if it
not only consistently outperforms the market, but does so by a significant
degree, it is doing a superb job.
#14 An investor who has all the answers doesn´t even understand all the questions
A cocksure approach to investing will lead, probably
sooner than later, to disappointment if not outright disaster. Even if we can
identify an unchanging handful of investing principles, we cannot apply these
rules to an unchanging universe of investments—or an unchanging economic and
political environment. Everything is in a constant state of change, and the
wise investor recognizes that success is a process of continually seeking answers
to new questions.
This principle covers an endless list of admonitions.
Never invest on sentiment. The company that gave you your first job, or built
the first car you ever owned, or sponsored a favourite television show of long
ago may be a fine company. But that doesn’t mean its stock is a fine
investment. Even if the corporation is truly excellent, prices of its shares
may be too high.
Never invest in an initial public offering (IPO) to
“save” the commission. That commission is built into the price of the stock—a
reason why most new stocks decline in value after the offering. This does not
mean you should never buy an IPO.
Never invest solely on a tip. Why, that’s obvious, you
might say. It is. But you would be surprised how many investors, people who are
well-educated and successful, do exactly this. Unfortunately, there is
something psychologically compelling about a tip. Its very nature suggests
inside information, a way to turn a fast profit.
#16 Do not be fearful or negative too often
And now the last principle. Do not be fearful or negative
too often. For 100 years optimists have carried the day in U.S. stocks. Even in
the dark ’70s, many professional money managers—and many individual investors
too—made money in stocks, especially those of smaller companies.
There will, of course, be corrections, perhaps even
crashes. But, over time, our studies indicate stocks do go up…and up… and up.
With the fall of communism and the sharply reduced threat
of nuclear war, it appears that the U.S. and some form of an economically
united Europe may be about to enter the most glorious period in their history.
As national economies become more integrated and
interdependent, as communication becomes easier and cheaper, business is likely
to boom. Trade and travel will grow. Wealth will increase. And stock prices
should rise accordingly.
By the time the 21st century begins—it’s just around the
corner, you know—I think there is at least an even chance that the Dow Jones
Industrials may have reached 6,000, perhaps more.
Chances are that certain other indexes will have grown
even more. Despite all the current gloom about the economy, and about the
future, more people will have more money than ever before in history. And much
of it will be invested in stocks.
And throughout this wonderful time, the basic rules of
building wealth by investing in stocks will hold true. In this century or the
next it’s still “Buy low, sell high.”
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