I started serious Investing Journey in Jan 2000 to create wealth through long-term investing and short-term trading; but as from April 2013 my Journey in Investing has changed to create Retirement Income for Life till 85 years old in 2041 for two persons over market cycles of Bull and Bear.

Since 2017 after retiring from full-time job as employee; I am moving towards Investing Nirvana - Freehold Investment Income for Life investing strategy where 100% of investment income from portfolio investment is cashed out to support household expenses i.e. not a single cent of re-investing!

It is 57% (2017 to Aug 2022) to the Land of Investing Nirvana - Freehold Income for Life!


Click to email CW8888 or Email ID : jacobng1@gmail.com



Welcome to Ministry of Wealth!

This blog is authored by an old multi-bagger blue chips stock picker uncle from HDB heartland!

"The market is not your mother. It consists of tough men and women who look for ways to take money away from you instead of pouring milk into your mouth." - Dr. Alexander Elder

"For the things we have to learn before we can do them, we learn by doing them." - Aristotle

It is here where I share with you how I did it! FREE Education in stock market wisdom.

Think Investing as Tug of War - Read more? Click and scroll down



Important Notice and Attention: If you are looking for such ideas; here is the wrong blog to visit.

Value Investing
Dividend/Income Investing
Technical Analysis and Charting
Stock Tips

Thursday 30 April 2009

A newbie in the Market since Jul 2008

I have been watching a newbie in this Big Bear market and she is making monthly average of $xxx and that is more than just kopi money I think. She does not have complex TA and FA homework to do. She just have big pain threshold, and buys the big Blues on dip, and collects profit on the way up.





中国有句成语,叫做“八仙过海,各显其能”,

China has an idiom, the named “the eight immortals crossing the sea, each obviously its energy”,


She is indeed one of them. Using simple magic and successfully cross the Mara River. Cheers!

Wednesday 29 April 2009

Fundamental Analysis - working very hardwork on it?



Guess-the-balls test

Hal Spacejock delivers a shipment of antiques, breaking several pieces in the process. His robot, Clunk, skillfully reassembles the broken furniture, and the grateful customer gives them a jar of ancient marbles.

This jar is 60cm (2 feet) high, with a diameter of 36cm (approx 14 inches). It is completely filled with marbles, each of which is 2.5cm (1 inch) in diameter.

Using that information... how many balls does Clunk have

If you use fundamental analysis, can you really work the number of balls (i.e. intrinsic value)? You work very hard, calculating this and that and try to work out the reasonable number and you think that this is the intrinsic value as you trust that it is completely filled with marbles.

But, you will never know what the Management has hidden inside the marbles? could be anything hidden to give you the impression it is completely filled.

Working very hard work on fundamental analysis may not actually pay off; unlike working very hard work on your job, your boss may recognise your effort and reward you.

Fundamental analysis is more towards Hygiene Factor, doing more of it may not really improve much but you can't ignore it either. E.g you need to brush your teeth 1-3 times a day for good oral hygiene, but brushing your teeth 4-10 times a day doesn't really help to improve much on your oral hygiene but it may be actually harmful to your gum. You definitely need to do some fundamental analysis but may not be wise to spend hours of hard work in digging out details. You will never know what was hidden inside the marbles.

Back to Guess-the-balls test, you do rough calculation and guess the number of balls, and you look at other players giving their numbers, and based on statistics and you may make some adjustment and you then bet your number. How? Lots of easier now?

Tuesday 28 April 2009

The stock market is weird.

One buys, another one sells, someone waits and all three think that they are smart.

One analyst calls for buy, another analyst calls for sell, and both think that they are smart.

When support/resistance level is near, the brokers tell 50% of their clients to sell, the other 50% to buy, and 50% of their clients think that their brokers are smart.

Since all are smart, where do the Greater Fools come from? The stock market is weird?

Monday 27 April 2009

Eight immortals crossing the sea, each obviously its energy



中国有句成语,叫做“八仙过海,各显其能”,

China has an idiom, the named the eight immortals crossing the sea, each obviously its energy”,

No different from investing/trading, do whatever it takes for you to train and attain your magical skills to become any one of the 8 immortals, each obviously has its energy to cross the river.

Sunday 26 April 2009

Wife's secret investment and her hubby's biz

The young bride approached her awaiting husband on their wedding night and demanded $10 for their first love-making encounter. In his highly aroused state, he readily agreed. This scenario was repeated each time they made love for the next 30 years, him thinking it was a cute way for her to buy new clothes, etc.

Arriving home around noon one day, she found her husband in a very drunken state. Over the next few minutes she heard of the ravages of financial ruin caused by corporate down sizing and it's effects on a 50 year old executive.

Calmly, she handed him a bank book showing deposits and interest for 30 years totaling nearly million dollars. Pointing across the parking lot she gestured toward the local bank while handing him stock certificates worth nearly million dollars and informing him that he was the largest stockholder in the bank. She told him that for 30 years she had charged him each time they had sex, and this was the result of her investments.

By now he was distraught and beating his head against the side of the car. She asked him why the disappointment at such good news and he replied, "If I had known what you were doing, I would have given you all of my business!"

Management Letter to Staff

Posted by Kevin Scully


Here is the letter - enjoy

Dear Employees:

Due to the current financial situation caused by the slowdown in the economy, Management has decided to implement a scheme to put workers of 40 years and above on early retirement. This scheme will be known as RAPE (Retire Aged People Early).

Persons selected to be RAPED can apply to management to be considered for SHAFT scheme (Special Help After Forced Termination).

Persons who have been RAPED and SHAFTED will be reviewed under the SCREW program (Scheme Covering Retired-Early Workers).

A person may be RAPED once, SHAFTED twice and SCREWED as many times as Management deems appropriate. Persons who have been RAPED could get AIDS (Additional Income for Dependants & Spouse) or HERPES (Half Earnings for Retired Personnel Early Severance).

Obviously persons who have AIDS or HERPES will not be SHAFTED or SCREWED any further by Management.

Persons who are not RAPED and are staying on will receive as much SHIT (Special High Intensity Training) as possible. Management has always prided itself on the amount of SHIT it gives employees. Should you feel you do not receive enough SHIT, please bring this to the attention of your Supervisor, who has been trained to give you all the SHIT you can handle.

Sincerely,

Management

PS: Due to recent budget cuts and the rising cost of electricity, gas and oil, as well as current market conditions, the Light at the End of the Tunnel has been turned off.

Saturday 25 April 2009

Wise Words Series - Part 3

Wise Words Series - Part 2 Do you want to read Part 2 first?

Stock Market - What is the nature of this beast?

Stock Market is one of those Complex adaptive systems

Complex adaptive systems are special cases of complex systems. They are complex in that they are diverse and made up of multiple interconnected elements and adaptive in that they have the capacity to change and learn from experience. Simply, it means the Stock Market has a mind of its own.



Stock picking is part science, part art, part luck, part intuition, and always uncertain - "not precisely knowing." (Who say it? Forgotten)


I will discuss the meaning:

Is stock picking an art or a science?

If stock picking is purely a science, then you are better off putting your money into SG bonds. Everything can be done through program trading. Microsoft will stop developing Operating System software and put all its resources to build the world most intelligent, most powerful, fastest trading system, and winning tons and tons of money from forex, commodities, and stocks. However, to be successful, to have that edge, not only you do need the science of stock picking, but you also need to develop the mental edge and the art of stock picking, which hardly any computerised trading systems can consistently do that.

The art of stock picking is the reason that one person can make money with a given system and another person cannot. It is implementing your own strategies, your trading system or methodology to suit your purpose, your risks, your account size, your personality and your time frame. Otherwise, why would great chartists and analysts still working as paid employees by selling reports and give advices?

If stock picking was purely a science, then Isaac Newton could not have lost a fortune during his time.

Do you ever wonder why great Gurus after developing successful Trading System, and in their later years do little trading (showcase??), but switch to teaching, providing market/stocks views and commentaries for a fee instead of quietly and faithfully using their Trading System to make tons of money for themselves and reserve their Trading System for their family members and their future generations.

No, it is not purely science of stock picking, but the art of convincing people that there is a sure way to make money from their trading system. The Gurus know the truth is that there is a risk free and fail-safe way to make even more money for themselves by selling Magic Stones to believers and worshippers.

What is intuition?

Intuition is the apparent ability to acquire knowledge without inference or the use of reason. “The word ‘intuition’ comes from the Latin word 'intueri', which is often roughly translated as meaning ‘to look inside’ or ‘to contemplate’." Intuition provides us with beliefs that we cannot necessarily justify.

When you develop your feel and intuition for the markets, you build your confidence. By doing that, you trust yourself more and you do not feel the urge to follow others including the gurus and naysayers. You are comfortable with your own conclusion even if it goes against the norm and even against the charts and analyst reports. You feel comfortable with the outcome even if it is unfavourable.

Knowing the difference between intuition and emotions is something that will come with experience. If you are making a trading decision and you find that your heart is beating fast or you have regretted after making the decision when the events turn unfavourable, you are probably making an emotional rather than an intuitive decision.

It is luck that you bought when someone happened to be there desperately selling to you and sold when someone eagerly wanting to buy. It is luck or bad luck that the stock suddenly caught your attention out of thousand of them out there.

Remember, stock market is an complex adaptive system and it is always uncertain and not precisely knowing when exactly the market will turn.

If market is certain and precisely knowing, then there will be no traders as nobody can really make money from the market, and there is no reason to trade!


This Simbol(Yin-Yang) represents the ancient Chinese understanding of how things work. The outer circle represents "everything", while the black and white shapes within the circle represent the interaction of two energies, called "yin" (black) and "yang" (white), which cause everything to happen. They are not completely black or white, just as things in life are not completely black or white, and they cannot exist without each other.

The energy, "yin" (black) is what was discussed: the outcome of stock picking is always uncertain and not precisely knowing.

So we need to balance up with the other energy, the "yang" (white).

Coming next ...Where is the kopi-O ah?

Paying off your housing loan earlier???

Singapore News // Weekend, April 25, 2009

... mature residents with tertiary qualifications were the most vulnerable group last year, “with above-average risk of retrenchment and below-average re-employment”, the report said..

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Surviving through several recessions, what I saw is the same story, different people, different Year XXXX. In past recessions, I have seen or heard of mature colleagues being let go and the reasons are pretty obvious regardless of whatever shit reasons coming out of the management's mouth (the ones above you)

As an employee, if you do not progress well up the corporate ladder every few other years, you will be perceived as dead wood and becoming too "expensive" to retain when recession hit the company, and you will become a cost cutting item to be removed.


As you grow older, you are becoming a depreciating asset so beware and take note. Get your Plan B ready as soon as possible.

Now, back to the question: Do you want to pay off your housing loan earlier? I remembered some debates among bloggers and over media.

Heard the wise words:

In each action we must look beyond the action at our past, present, and future state, and at others whom it affects, and see the relations of all those things. And then we shall be very cautious. - Blaise Pascal

A man is not a man; until there is a house that he may call his castle. A woman is not a woman; until she has a place she may call her home. And neither a man nor a woman can say anything about their house, until they are the masters of it, and own it outright and unencumbered - Albert Ying


Expect the Unimaginable. The book offers some erudite advice on living with deep unpredictability. The Good: Argues persuasively that people need to admit that life is deeply unpredictable.

Be sure that you understand what is your opportunity cost for not paying off your housing loan earlier as you think can get better return off your investment.

Every investment by nature is risky; but, most investors are over-confident that they will not lose their capital.

Every drinkers think that they can control and don't get drunk; but, we see drunkards frequently at drinking sessions.

Every speedsters think they can control their cars; but, some crashed very badly and some perished.

We are smarter than the broke; but, the broke could be the someones who were seen drinking finest wine and dining at 4-5 stars restaurants before they became broken.

and blah blah ....

With a fully paid home, you are definitely better prepared to face the future recessions when you are approaching the mature employee status and become the most vulnerable group “with above-average risk of retrenchment and below-average re-employment".

Remember the wise words from Pascal and Albert, these words are spoken not without good reasons.

Thursday 23 April 2009

Wise Words Series - Part 2

Wise Words Series - Part 1 <------- Read Part 1 first? "We become what we behold. We shape our tools and then our tools shape us." Larry Williams

Who is Larry Williams?

We become what we behold

You are a Value Investor? So you love eating eggs, don't you?



Value Investor can be thought of a Chicken Farmer. Rearing chicken for their eggs (collect dividends) instead of selling them for their meat.

You are a Trader? So you love shooting or archery?

Then you become a two-face Hunter. You either join the bull to hunt the bear or you join the bear to hunt the bull. But, at times, the bull or bear chases you until you drop your pants.







You are

OR


How is your portfolio doing?

Have you been building your wealth or depleting your wealth since you begin your journey into the world of investing/trading?

If you have been building your wealth successfully, then you already have good tools, and probably you may just need to once a while re-sharpen your tools.


If you have been depleting your wealth instead of building them, you may need to rethink what are you beholding? Your tools may not be right, quickly re-educate yourself to equip yourself with a new set of tools.


Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.
Albert Einstein, (attributed)
US (German-born) physicist (1879 - 1955)



We shape our tools and then our tools shape us.

Some tools from Larry Williams:

1) Your strategies



Rule 1. It's all about survival.

No platitudes here, speculating is very dangerous business. It is not about winning or losing, it is about surviving the lows and the highs. If you don't survive, you can't win.

The first requirement of survival is that you must have a premise to speculate upon. Rumors, tips, full moons and feelings are not a premise. A premise suggests there is an underlying truth to what you are taking action upon. A short-term trader's premise may be different from a long-term player's but they both need to have proven logic and tools. Most investors and traders spend more time figuring out which laptop to buy than they do before plunking down tens of thousands of dollars on a snap decision, or one based upon totally fallacious reasoning.

There is some rhyme and reason to how, why and when markets move - not enough - but it is there. The problem is that there are more techniques that don't work, than there are techniques that do. I suggest you spend an immense and inordinate amount of time and effort learning these critical elements before entering the foray of financial frolics.

So, you have money management under control, have a valid system, approach or premise to act upon - you still need control of yourself.

8. I believe the trade I'm in right now will be a loser.

This is my most powerful belief and asset as a trader. Most would be wannabes are certain they will make a killing on their next trade. These folks have been to some 'Pump 'em up, plastic coat their lives' motivational meeting where they were told to think positive thoughts. They took lessons in affirming their future would be great. They believe their next trade will be a winner.

Not me! I believe at the bottom of my core it will be a loser. I ask you this question - who will have their stops in and take right action, me or the fellow pumped up on an irrational belief he's figured out the market? Who will plunge, the positive affirm er or me?

If you have not figured that one out - I'll tell you; I will succeed simply because I am under no delusion that I will win. Accordingly, my action will be that of an impeccable warrior. I will protect myself in all fashion, at all times - I will not become run away with hope and unreality.

9. Your fortune will come from your focus - focus on one market or one technique.

A jack of all trades will never become a winning trader. Why? Because a trader must zero in on the markets, paying attention to the details of trading without allowing his emotions to intervene.

A moment of distraction is costly in this business. Lack of attention may mean you don't take the trade you should, or neglect a trade that leads to great cost.

Focus, to me, means not only focusing on the task at hand but also narrowing your scope of trading to either one or two markets or to the specific approach of a trading technique.

Have you ever tried juggling? It's pretty hard to learn to keep three balls in the area at one time. Most people can learn to watch those 'details' after about 3 hours or practice. Add one ball, one more detail to the mess, and few, very few, people can make it as a juggler. It's precisely that difficult to keep your eyes on just one more 'chunk' of data.

Looks at the great athletes - they focus on one sport. Artists work on one primary business, musicians don't sing country western and Opera and become stars. The better your focus, in whatever you do, the greater your success will become.

10. When in doubt, or all else fails - go back to Rule One.





Focus your attention on what you can control (The Egg's yolk) rather than on what you cannot control (The Egg's white)

What you can control is your Strategy, your Money Management, your Emotion, your Risks and what stock you want? You can control to go with stocks that are linked to Temasek that are either too big or too strategic to fail, and Superman will walk out of Temasek Tower to rescue them.

You have control to click or not : http://createwealth8888.blogspot.com/2009/04/safety-net-in-market.html

So before clicking the BUY button, you have control over the stock, but once bought, you have surrendered your control of the stock to the Market and leave it to the market forces to work it out for you. However, if you are feeling so painful in seeing your falling stocks, and keep losing your sleep at night, then it is better for you cut it off; otherwise, take a break and go fishing.

2) Your Money Management




5. Money management is the creation of wealth.

Sure, you can make money as a trader or investor, have a good time, and get some great stories to tell. But, the extrapolation of profits will not come as much from your trading and investing skills as how you manage your money.

I'm probably best known for winning the Robbins World Cup Trading Championship, turning $10,000 into $1,100,000.00 in 12 months. That was real money, real trades, and real time performance. For years people have asked for my trades to figure out how I did it. I gladly oblige them, they will learn little there - what created the gargantuan gain was not great trading ability nearly as much as the very aggressive form of money management I used. The approach was to buy more contracts when I had more equity in my account, cut back when I had less. That's what made the cool million smackers - not some great trading skill. Ten years later my 16-year-old daughter won the same trading contest taking $10,000 to $110,000.00 (The second best performance in the 20-year history of the championship). Did she have any trading secret, any magical chart, line, and formula? No. She simply followed a decent system of trading, backed with a superior form of money management.

6. Big money does not make big bets.

You have probably read the stories of what I call the swashbuckler traders, like Jesse Livermore, John 'bet a millions' Gates, Niederhoffer, Frankie Joe and the like. They all ultimately made big bets and lost big time.

Smart money never bets big. Why should it? You can win big on small bets, see #5 above, but eventually if you bet big you will lose - and you will lose big.

It's like Russian Roulette. You may well spin the chamber holding the bullet many times and never lose. But spin it often enough and there can be only one result: death. If you make big bets you are destined to be a big loser. Plunging is a loser's game; it can only set you up for failure. I never bet big (I used to - been there and done that and trust me, it is no way to live). I bet a small per cent of my account, bankroll if you will. that way I have controlled loss. There can be no survival without damage control.

In each action we must look beyond the action at our past, present, and future state, and at others whom it affects, and see the relations of all those things. And then we shall be very cautious. - Blaise Pascal

Investing can be very risky by nature as you may lose some if not most of your invested capital. You may not be able to retrieve the cash without significant losses from the Market if you happen to need them in the future. We always espouse the importance of thinking long term if you're a stock market investor. But if "long term" means five or even 10 years to you, it might not be long enough. In this great recession, the Long Haul May Be Longer Than You Think.

So you have to plan wisely what is the amount that is REALLY available for you to invest, and still have enough money for future and emergency needs of your family.

Be sure that you understand what is your opportunity cost if not staying invested; otherwise, you might be leaving too much free money on the table and missing an opportunity to build your wealth with little effort on your part when the Bull decided to charge ahead. Keep your eyes wide open in the Market and you may have to figure out who the winners of the next bull market will be and don't miss out owning them.


3) Your Emotion control

2. Ultimately this is an emotional game - always has been, always will be.

Anytime money is involved - your money - blood boils, sweaty hands prevail, and mental processes are short circuited by illogical emotions. Just when most traders buy, they should have sold! Or, fear, a major emotion, scares them away from a great trade/investment. Or, their bet is way too big. The money management decision becomes an emotional one, not one of logic















3. Greed prevails - proving you are more motivated by greed than fear and understanding the difference.

The mere fact you are a speculator means you have less fear than a 'normal' person does. You are more motivated by making money. Other people are more motivated by not losing.

Greed is the trader's Achilles' heel. Greed will keep hopes alive, encourage you to hold on to losing trades and nail down winners too soon. Hope is your worst enemy because it causes you to dream of great profits, to enter an unreal world. Trust me, the world of speculating is very real, people lose all they have, marriages are broken up, families tossed asunder by either enormous gains or losses.

My approach to this is to not take any of it very seriously; the winnings may be fleeting, always pursued by the taxman, lawyers and nefarious investment schemes.

How you handle greed is different than I do, so I cannot give an absolute maxim here, but I can tell you this, you must get it in control or you will not survive.

4. Fear inhibits risk taking - just when you should take risk.

Fear causes you to not do what you should do. You frighten yourself out of trades that are winners in deference to trades that lose or go nowhere. Succinctly stated, greed causes you to do what we should not do, fear causes us to not do what we should do.

Fear, psychologists say, causes you to freeze up. Speculators act like a deer caught in the headlights of a car. They can see the car - a losing trade, coming at them - at 120 miles per hour - but they fail to take the action they should.

Worse yet, they take a pass on the winning trades. Why, I do not know. But I do know this: the more frightened I am of taking a trade the greater the probabilities are it will be a winning trade. Most investors scare themselves out of greatness.


Who is next???? Hmmm........aiyo. Care to buy me kopi-O to think?

Wise Words Series - Part 1

Trading appears deceptively easy. When a beginner wins, he feels brilliant and invincible. Then he takes wild risks and loses everything" - Dr. Alexander Elder, from the book "Trading for a Living"

"The market is not your mother. It consists of tough men and women who look for ways to take money away from you instead of pouring milk into your mouth." - Dr. Alexander Elder


Who is Dr Alexander Elder?

Then what should I do?

First thing first, hang my EGO at the door as I need to be humble in the Market, put in lots of effort to learn, and ever learning, control risks, practise money management, and formulate my own strategies to sustain and measure my investment success across multiple years, and over bull and bear market conditions.

Who is next?



"If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants."
- Isaac Newton, letter to Robert Hooke, 1676

Who is Isaac Newton?


So I will keep searching for Giants, and then stood on their shoulders to see further.

Long ago, Sir Isaac Newton gave us three laws of motion, which were the work of genius. But Sir Isaac's talents didn't extend to investing: He lost a bundle in the South Sea Bubble, explaining later, 'I can calculate the movement of the stars, but not the madness of men.' If he had not been traumatized by this loss, Sir Isaac might well have gone on to discover the Fourth Law of Motion: For investors as a whole, returns decrease as motion increases.

~Warren Buffett




If genius like Newton cannot understand the madness of men in the Market, don't think I should waste my effort in trying to understand it. I have learnt to accept the madness of the men in the Market, accept the possible losses, and move on; but I don't want to land myself here in over-thinking. Don't think too much.

Sunday 19 April 2009

Work for money? Forget it.

invest, thesundaytimes April 19,2009

Mr Aaron Sim, founder of Wealth Mentors ..

Q: How did you get interested in investing?
After reading the book Rich Dad Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki over one weekend in Oct 1999, I decided I no longer wanted to "work for money".

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Createwealth8888:

Many years back, my female colleague told me about her hubby was so crazy about this book, reading it over and over again. She was damned pissed off. Out of sheer curiosity, I decided to check it out too. Oh my God, after reading the book Rich Dad Poor Dad, it changed me completely, I immediately realized that "work for money" may not be the best way going forward.


I believe many people have read this book. Not sure, how many people will believe it? You needn't believe in everything he said. He said this: "I am not your Dad!"


He is talking about wealth strategy. His wealth strategy on property may not be suitable for you. I too disagree and not going into Property as wealth building strategy (I have done my own research into ROC on Property, time and effort required. Being a lazy fisherman, I would rather click some buttons on Web Browser without ever leaving home to make some kopi money)


With this recession, many people in US following his wealth strategy of using property as wealth building could be cursing him now.


The critical learning point in Rich Dad Poor Dad that really strikes me is this one: Reduce the time and effort spent in "work for money".


As an Employee and Self-Employed: Make effort to reduce time spent in building wealth in these quadrants, and move into Investing and Business Owner quadrant as soon as possible.


Of course, the good thing about being Employee is that you aren't very much affected by Negative Cashflow, other than having worrying of job security once a while during recessions; but unlike those in the Investing and Business Owner quadrant, any wrong move may be destroying wealth instead of building wealth. The thought of it may really hold many people back and prevent them from going into these quadrants.

However, staying as an employee can be a false sense of job security too.

Read? false sense of financial security?

Being Self-employed mean that you are your own BOSS. But, you may or may not be better than employee, as you now may have more things to worry about. Employee is getting paid for conducting personal disposal task in the toilet, but not sure about self-employed, you are getting paid too?

Working in the corporate world is like climbing the Pyramid of Opportunity, as you move up this ladder, you are given more money, but come with more responsibilities and lesser opportunity to move up to the next level. There is only CEO post, and that few fellows below him/her may be eagerly waiting or plotting to grab his/her seat.

In investing, it is an Inverted Pyramid, you may start off with little opportunity or may even face negative equity if you get it wrong at first. But, when you are successful  in moving up the Inverted Pyramid of Investing, every successful move up the ladder will give you better opportunity.

For example, you have $50K capital and to make $5K from $50K capital, it requires you investing right to get the 10% ROC, certainly it is not an easy task. However, if you become better in your investing skills, and you manage to grow your account to $100K, then to make the same $5K out of a $100K account requires only 5% ROC, and definitely it is so much easier now.

So what you think? Do you get it???

Saturday 18 April 2009

The Fisherman and The Investment Banker



Anonymous, many versions of this story.

An American investment banker was having his holidays and decided to make a stopover at Singapore for a few days. He came upon a small jetty at Punggol Point, Singapore when he saw one fisherman lazily fishing with his 2 fishing rods. Besides him were fishes he has caught. (photo above)

The American complimented the fisherman on the quality of his fish and asked, "How long does it take to catch them?" The fisherman replied: "Only a little while."

The American then asked why didn't he stay out longer and catch more fish? The fisherman said he had enough to support his family's immediate needs. The American then asked, "But what do you do with the rest of your time?"

The fisherman said, "I sleep late, fish a little, play with my pets, look after my marine tank, help my wife with some chores, then I drink abit of kopi-O and spent the rest of time chatting at cbox with my superfriends, surfing the net and blogging articles, I have a full and busy life."

The American scoffed, "I am a Harvard MBA and could help you. You should spend more time fishing and with the proceeds, buy a bigger boat with the proceeds from the bigger boat you could buy several boats, eventually you would have a fleet of fishing boats.

Instead of selling your catch to a middleman you would sell directly to the processor, eventually opening your own cannery. You would control the product, processing and distribution.

You would need to leave this ulu Punggol and move to a CityLight Condo at the City, and eventually a big landed property at Bukit Timah near your own office where you will run your expanding enterprise."

The fisherman asked, "But, how long will this all take?" To which the American replied, "15-25 years."

"But what then?" The American laughed and said that's the best part. "When the time is right you would announce an IPO and sell your company stock to the public and become very rich, you would make millions."

"Millions ... Then what?" The American said, "Then you would retire. Then you would sleep late, fish a little, play with your pets, help your wife with some chores, stroll to the cyber cafe in the evenings where you could drink some Kopi-O and chatting with your friends."

The fisherman said, "Isn't that what I am doing right now?"

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"Then he said to them: 'Keep your eyes open and guard against every sort of covetousness, because even when a person has an abundance, his life does not result from the things he possesses'" - Jesus, the Christ, Luke 12:15
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So how much is enough? However, the question becomes, once you’ve made so much money? Now what? or like what The fisherman said, "Isn't that what I am doing right now?"

Larry Williams - Trading Rules

1. It's all about survival.

No platitudes here, speculating is very dangerous business. It is not about winning or losing, it is about surviving the lows and the highs. If you don't survive, you can't win.

The first requirement of survival is that you must have a premise to speculate upon. Rumors, tips, full moons and feelings are not a premise. A premise suggests there is an underlying truth to what you are taking action upon. A short-term trader's premise may be different from a long-term player's but they both need to have proven logic and tools. Most investors and traders spend more time figuring out which laptop to buy than they do before plunking down tens of thousands of dollars on a snap decision, or one based upon totally fallacious reasoning.

There is some rhyme and reason to how, why and when markets move - not enough - but it is there. The problem is that there are more techniques that don't work, than there are techniques that do. I suggest you spend an immense and inordinate amount of time and effort learning these critical elements before entering the foray of financial frolics.

So, you have money management under control, have a valid system, approach or premise to act upon - you still need control of yourself.

2. Ultimately this is an emotional game - always has been, always will be.

Anytime money is involved - your money - blood boils, sweaty hands prevail, and mental processes are shortcircuited by illogical emotions. Just when most traders buy, they should have sold! Or, fear, a major emotion, scares them away from a great trade/investment. Or, their bet is way too big. The money management decision becomes an emotional one, not one of logic

3. Greed prevails - proving you are more motivated by greed than fear and understanding the difference.

The mere fact you are a speculator means you have less fear than a 'normal' person does. You are more motivated by making money. Other people are more motivated by not losing.

Greed is the trader's Achilles' heel. Greed will keep hopes alive, encourage you to hold on to losing trades and nail down winners too soon. Hope is your worst enemy because it causes you to dream of great profits, to enter an unreal world. Trust me, the world of speculating is very real, people lose all they have, marriages are broken up, families tossed asunder by either enormous gains or losses.

My approach to this is to not take any of it very seriously; the winnings may be fleeting, always pursued by the taxman, lawyers and nefarious investment schemes.

How you handle greed is different than I do, so I cannot give an absolute maxim here, but I can tell you this, you must get it in control or you will not survive.

4. Fear inhibits risk taking - just when you should take risk.

Fear causes you to not do what you should do. You frighten yourself out of trades that are winners in deference to trades that lose or go nowhere. Succinctly stated, greed causes you to do what we should not do, fear causes us to not do what we should do.

Fear, psychologists say, causes you to freeze up. Speculators act like a deer caught in the headlights of a car. They can see the car - a losing trade, coming at them - at 120 miles per hour - but they fail to take the action they should.

Worse yet, they take a pass on the winning trades. Why, I do not know. But I do know this: the more frightened I am of taking a trade the greater the probabilities are it will be a winning trade. Most investors scare themselves out of greatness.

5. Money management is the creation of wealth.

Sure, you can make money as a trader or investor, have a good time, and get some great stories to tell. But, the extrapolation of profits will not come as much from your trading and investing skills as how you manage your money.

I'm probably best known for winning the Robbins World Cup Trading Championship, turning $10,000 into $1,100,000.00 in 12 months. That was real money, real trades, and real time performance. For years people have asked for my trades to figure out how I did it. I gladly oblige them, they will learn little there - what created the gargantuan gain was not great trading ability nearly as much as the very aggressive form of money management I used. The approach was to buy more contracts when I had more equity in my account, cut back when I had less. That's what made the cool million smackers - not some great trading skill. Ten years later my 16-year-old daughter won the same trading contest taking $10,000 to $110,000.00 (The second best performance in the 20-year history of the championship). Did she have any trading secret, any magical chart, line, and formula? No. She simply followed a decent system of trading, backed with a superior form of money management.

6. Big money does not make big bets.

You have probably read the stories of what I call the swashbuckler traders, like Jesse Livermore, John 'bet a millions' Gates, Niederhoffer, Frankie Joe and the like. They all ultimately made big bets and lost big time.

Smart money never bets big. Why should it? You can win big on small bets, see #5 above, but eventually if you bet big you will lose - and you will lose big.

It's like Russian Roulette. You may well spin the chamber holding the bullet many times and never lose. But spin it often enough and there can be only one result: death. If you make big bets you are destined to be a big loser. Plunging is a loser's game; it can only set you up for failure. I never bet big (I used to - been there and done that and trust me, it is no way to live). I bet a small per cent of my account, bankroll if you will. that way I have controlled loss. There can be no survival without damage control.

7. God may delay but God does not deny.

I never know when during a year I will make my money. It may be on the first trade of the year, or the last (though I hope not). Victory is out there to be grasped, but you must be prepared to do battle for a long period of time.

Additionally, while far from a religious person, I think the belief in a much higher power, God, is critical to success as a trader. It helps puts wins and losses into perspective, enables you to persevere through lots of pain and punishment when you know that ultimately all will be right or rewarded in some fashion. God and the markets is not a fashionable concept - I would never abuse what little connection I have with God to pray for profits. Yet that connection is what keeps people going in times of strife, in fox holes and commodity pits.

8. I believe the trade I'm in right now will be a loser.

This is my most powerful belief and asset as a trader. Most would be wannabes are certain they will make a killing on their next trade
. These folks have been to some 'Pump 'em up, plastic coat their lives' motivational meeting where they were told to think positive thoughts. They took lessons in affirming their future would be great. They believe their next trade will be a winner.

Not me! I believe at the bottom of my core it will be a loser. I ask you this question - who will have their stops in and take right action, me or the fellow pumped up on an irrational belief he's figured out the market? Who will plunge, the positive affirmer or me?

If you have not figured that one out - I'll tell you; I will succeed simply because I am under no delusion that I will win. Accordingly, my action will be that of an impeccable warrior. I will protect myself in all fashion, at all times - I will not become run away with hope and unreality.

9. Your fortune will come from your focus - focus on one market or one technique.

A jack of all trades will never become a winning tradee
. Why? Because a trader must zero in on the markets, paying attention to the details of trading without allowing his emotions to intervene.

A moment of distraction is costly in this business. Lack of attention may mean you don't take the trade you should, or neglect a trade that leads to great cost.

Focus, to me, means not only focusing on the task at hand but also narrowing your scope of trading to either one or two markets or to the specific approach of a trading technique.

Have you ever tried juggling? It's pretty hard to learn to keep three balls in the area at one time. Most people can learn to watch those 'details' after about 3 hours or practice. Add one ball, one more detail to the mess, and few, very few, people can make it as a juggler. It's precisely that difficult to keep your eyes on just one more 'chunk' of data.

(http://createwealth8888.blogspot.com/2009/04/indebtedness-more-to-add-on.html)

Looks at the great athletes - they focus on one sport. Artists work on one primary business, musicians don't sing country western and Opera and become stars. The better your focus, in whatever you do, the greater your success will become.

10. When in doubt, or all else fails - go back to Rule One.

http://www.ireallytrade.com/freetradingtools.htm <--- visit the Larry Williams here

How to Eat Like An Elephant?

by Janice Dorn, MD, PhD, The Trading DoctorSM | March 13, 2009

The legendary W. D. Gann spent a lot of time describing three emotions that drive most traders and investor—fear, greed and hope. You enter markets on the hope of gains, too often get greedy in expecting profits, and finally liquidate on fear. Your brain has not changed much from the time of the Neanderthal man who greedily hunted wild animals for food, and ran in fear from beasts and neighboring tribes that threatened his survival.

The Neanderthal “rat” brain is still within you--- as powerful as it was over 100,000 years ago. As society changes and evolves, the quality and quantity of threats to your survival change along with it. Yet, the primitive emotions of fear and greed remain the same. The history of panics and crashes in the financial markets since the inception of trade reflects this ever-changing cycle of fear, greed and hope.

This is a large part of your challenge and journey to master the art and science of trading. You must be prepared to wipe away any preconceived notions about what the markets will do or not do, and replace them with what you will do or not do. You must be able to “fade” your own emotions and be unafraid to go against prevailing opinion. You learn that you will almost always feel fearful when you should be feeling greedy and vice versa. To do this successfully and not recklessly requires discipline and practice. Don’t let anyone tell you it’s easy. It just plain isn’t. Simple? Yes. But not easy. It requires counterintuitive thinking and a good understanding of your own psychology and mass psychology. It takes great study of yourself, getting into and through your ego and really knowing who you are. The journey within is the most challenging and profitable trip you will make in your trading career.

Zebra crossing the river



Zebra crossing the Mara River: The path is fraught with dangers with hundreds of crocodiles in the water and lions and other predators lying in wait on the other side. Forced to search for new supplies of grass and water to nourish their growing herd, zebras have to cross the dangerous Mara River. It is a demanding cycle of life and death. Some of the zebras will certainly perish.

Is there any difference in the Market? No. We, retail investors are like the zebras, we need to cross the river (Market) to find better grass (Profit) to eat. The Big Boys (BB)are like hundreds of crocodiles in the water, lions and other predators lying in wait on the other side of the Market, and we may become their food (Losses).

Zebras crossing the Mara River are vulnerable to massive crocodiles. The zebras don't waste any time once they decide to take the plunge.

I am seeing the Zebras in me. ho ho!

Or some may prefer to be this Zebra Crossing.




Oh! This is much safer as there are no crocodiles, but the only problem is that you are letting other people cross over you.

Friday 17 April 2009

Sunset at the North Pole




This is the sunset at the North Pole with the moon at its closest point last week. A scene you will probably never get to see in person,so take a moment and enjoy God at work at the North Pole.


An amazing photo and not one easily duplicated. You may want To pass it on to others so they can enjoy it. The Chinese have a saying that goes something like this: 'When someone shares with you something of value, you have an obligation to share it with others!'

Copy from http://tankinlian.blogspot.com/

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As a fisherman, I love watching sunset; sometime, I got to see some amazing sunset.

True, probably I never get to see in person for this one. Gosh!!

Thursday 16 April 2009

Investing - Game of Snakes and Ladders????

When I was young, we used to play this board game called Snakes and Ladders. The heart pain part is that you are near towards the end of winning the game and you step onto a BIG SNAKE, and that there you go all the WAY DOWN. Heart so pain leh and has to start all over again.


Beginning ... ......2007: Total annualized ROC (realized and unrealized P&L)= 15.6%
Beginning ....15 Apr 2009: Total annualized ROC (realized and unrealized P&L)= 6.0%


Trading losses and falling portfolio value can really kill!

That is the reality of investing/trading, just one bad year of recklessness in 2008 has such a drastic impact and erasing years of effort like stepping on a BIG SNAKE and all the way down.

I am taking the advice seriously from the author of this book: Rocking Wall St. : four powerful strategies that will shake-up the way you invest, build your wealth and give you your life back / Gary Marks.

This is my Investment End Goal: All investment by nature is risky.

The Goal of the End Game - Financial Independence


The goal of the End Game is to accumulate enough wealth for you and your family to stop.

Stop putting your wealth at risk. Stop the gambling and risk taking with investments of any kind.

You would finally have enough money and personal power to walk away from the investing game and spend the rest of your life doing something else!

When exactly do you reach the End Game?

When you have enough principal invested safely for your after tax-income to match or exceed your annual expenses on an ongoing basis. This would include budgeting for the lifestyle you truly want.

Wednesday 15 April 2009

How does stock price move?

Here is the ANSWER!

Strength of Bear and Bull???

The Bear pushed the bulls down from STI Oct 07 peak to Mar 09 low, down by -62.4% in 515 days. The Bear Velocity down at rate of -4.7

However, the recent Bull pushed the bears back up by +30.8% in 37 days. The Bull Velocity up at the rate of +12.1

The math is like this:

When price is down -50%, it will need to climb up by 100% to get back to the same level. So we are now seeing the strength of the BULL overpowering the bears; but, will the BULL still have the reserve power to push on?

Rational investing in an irrational world

Correctly anticipating the impact of a news report, rather than the news itself, is one of the most useful skills of the accomplished investor

By MICHAEL PREISS


FROM fear to euphoria in one month? In the last couple of weeks, we had the steepest US stock market rally in 70 years.

As we contemplate the investment outlook post-sub-prime global stockmarket crash, it pays to look back and remember that financial markets have an incredible capacity for reacting to news and economic developments in a way that confounds market professionals and retail investors alike - the only difference being the latter will admit to being confused, while the former will quickly come up with a few dusty rationalisations.

Our sell-side friends at many Wall Street banks now preach that it is time to buy cyclical stocks as the worst is over. The more independent-minded, however, such as George Soros or Marc Farber, warned that the market got ahead of itself and that a correction of at least 10 per cent is highly likely.

Economist John Maynard Keynes put it best when he remarked: 'Nothing is more suicidal than a rational investment policy in an irrational world.'

In the long-run, true value is always revealed but in the short-term, the market and individual stocks and bonds get pushed and pulled by a variety of forces - portfolio re-balancing, rumours, news, investment fads, seasonal tendencies - that have nothing to do with fundamentals. Lord Keynes also said: 'In the long-run, we are all dead and, in the short-run, you get a margin call.'

In the long-run, true value is always revealed but in the short-term, the market and individual stocks and bonds get pushed and pulled by a variety of forces that have nothing to do with fundamentals.

Monitoring economic reports is a very important but overlooked area of trading and investing. Nowhere are the advantages and drawbacks of a Blackberry world of instantaneous electronic communications more evident than in the financial markets. A long-term price trend might seem obvious or inevitable in retrospect, but in the short-term, markets are pulled and pushed by a never-ending stream of news-like economic reports, statistics and earnings.

As the speed and range of market news has increased, so has the challenge of interpreting it - or more accurately, managing the market's reaction to it. When deciphering economic indicators and market news, it is important to understand that in an Alice-in-Wonderland world of global financial markets, bad news can be good news and good news can be bad news. The economic context in which a news report is released is the key to resolving these paradoxes.

Correctly anticipating the impact of such news, rather than the news itself, is one of the most useful skills of the accomplished investor. In financial markets, the impact of the data is not always what it should be (or what we think it should be). What initially appears to be a 'bad number' is sometimes followed by a rally of steady buying.

Similarly, a report that seemingly underscores economic strength may be met by frantic selling. Investors who have learnt to survive and prosper in the markets use this flow of information to form intelligent expectations about the market's chances/probabilities of trading up, down or sideways. The macroeconomic flow also plays a key role in determining individual sector trends: Is it time to rotate out of telecoms stocks into banking stocks ?

Having said that, when it comes to macroeconomic news reports that rock the market, the most important thing is to understand that it is not the number itself that counts but rather what expectation has been built into the number and how the market reacts to it. When contemplating how an economic report may affect the market, there are three crucial points to keep in mind. First, all indicators are not created equal. Second, the news is not always what it seems; and third, context is king.

To better understand the often confusing reactions to economic data, remember three points:

- Sometimes bad news can be very good news.

- First impressions do not always last.

- Only deviations from expectations truly move the market.

Investment management is an art, more than a science. The broader point is that assessing the market's reaction is much more a complicated game of chess than simple checkers. The picture is always changing. It comes into play when expectations about the future have a bearing on present behaviour - which is the case in financial markets.

Some mechanism must be triggered for the participant's bias to affect not only market prices but the so-called fundamentals which are supposed to determine market prices. The fundamentals that you read about in newspaper or research reports are usually useless as the market has already discounted the price. However, if you caught them on early before others, then you might have valuable 'surprise-a-mentals'.

When it comes to investing, Albert Einstein's immortal 'imagination is 10 times more powerful than knowledge' holds very true. A good investor cannot be rigid. If you can find someone who is really open to seeing anything, then you have found the raw ingredients of a good investor and/or investment adviser.

When news comes out, the market should act in a way that reflects the right psychological 'tone'. Technical analysis gives an investor valuable information, fundamentals give an investor valuable news. Fundamental analysis creates what might be called a 'reality gap' between what should be and what is. So am I bullish or bearish right now? I do not know. My goal is not to be either, it is to pick up good risk/reward situations. I remain open-minded and flexible.

The past is fixed and easy to analyse. The future is fluid and uncertain. You have to base your decisions on probabilities in an atmosphere of uncertainty.

The writer is a chartered wealth manager and can be reached at: michael@michaelpreiss.net

Tuesday 14 April 2009

Fear of missing out?? Fear of losses??

STI closing at 1897. It has recovered +30.2% from its low. 544 days into the crisis. Are we expecting a big correction soon? or have we miss the boat?

My portfolio value also recovered +61.4% from its low. Hopefully, the worst is over for me. Cheers!

Dividends are tax exempt

I didn't really follow the changes in One-Tier Corporate Tax System (Applies to all companies) until today when one blogger mentioned it.

Dividend paid out of "after tax profit" will be exempt from tax in the hands of shareholders (exempt one-tier dividends).

Payment of dividends on or after 1 Jan 2008

Effective from 1 Jan 2008, all companies remaining on the imputation system will be moved to the one-tier corporate system.

All dividends paid on or after 1 Jan 2008 will be exempt one-tier dividends. Companies cannot pay franked dividend on or after 1 Jan 2008 even if there is any Section 44A balance remaining as at 31 Dec 2007.


With the new tax development, Dividends as passive income has becoming more attractive over rental as alternate source of passive income as it is tax exempted.


http://createwealth8888.blogspot.com/2009/04/passive-income-after-retirement.html <-- previous post

Monday 13 April 2009

Indebtedness - more to add on


Personal Finance Part 12 - Indebtedness <--- From http://sgmusicwhiz.blogspot.com/

Everyday, we are like a Juggler juggling the balls into the mid air and catching them with our hands, and hopefully NOT to drop any ball. To some, dropping of ball might be disastrous, and to others may be even game over. Everybody must do whatever it takes to keep juggling the balls.

The left hand is the Income Hand (active and passive income) and the right hand is the Assets Hand (including saving). Some have 2 bigger hands; some have two smaller hands, and others have only one hand. The bigger the hands, the easier to juggle the balls into the mid air.

One Ball Jugglers

They only juggle one ball called EXPENSES. These jugglers usually have little difficulty in juggling the ball. Some with big hands don't even drop any sweat. They just have fun. They are loving it.

Two Balls Jugglers

They add a second ball called LIVING DEBTS (e.g. housing, car, education, etc). Life is getting exciting in juggling two balls and keep them in the air. They may have to sweat more, and may have to put in more effort. But, they believe life is fun with more balls. They think that they have the necessary skills and don't drop any ball.

Three Balls Jugglers

They add a third ball called INVESTMENT DEBTS (e.g. leveraging to get more returns from borrowed money). Life is getting even exciting in juggling three balls and keep them in the air. They may have to sweat more, and may have to put in more effort. But, they believe life is even far better with more balls. They have the highest skills of all, and hopefully there is no strong wind blowing against them and causing them to drop the balls.


You decide what type of Juggler you want to be. I definitely want to be One Ball Juggler and closing my eyes without having worry about dropping the ball.

http://createwealth8888.blogspot.com/2009/03/debt-free-and-that-to-me-is-richness.html <--- further reading

There are two ways of making money from money:

1) Save money and use some for investment. This is a slow and less risky way of growing money.

2) Becoming a little greedy to take some risks to accelerate more money by borrowing more money to make money. Hopefully, Mr Black Swan doesn't pay them a visit and they will be fine.

http://createwealth8888.blogspot.com/2009/01/understanding-debt-risk-and-leverage.html <--- further reading

Sunday 12 April 2009

Living your life not others

april 12, 2009 thesundaytimes on Mr Chia.

Quote: Asked if he hankers to re-enter politics, Mr Chia said he has always been fond of politics but will not pursue a political career. "Life is so much better now; I can just wear my shorts and slippers and walk to the food court".

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Many peoples aspiring to live up and thinking that life is much better up there and will try to do whatever it takes to go up there. However, sometime bad things do happen; setback and downfall bought these people back to earth and finally they realized that life at the lower level is not too bad after all.

BTW, I just wear my shorts and slippers and walk to the food courts including taking bus and MRT to the farther food outlets elsewhere. Life has never been better!

Safety Net in the Market?

Once upon a time, in the Land of Unknown, there was a hut. Inside the hut, it was total darkness except for some dim light shining upon a wooden beam which was placed in the middle of the hut from one end to the other. The beam was wide enough with the help of the dim light shinning upon it for someone to see the beam and walked on the beam towards the other end.

One day, Mr. Not Knowing called me for a challenge. He said: "Paid me a fee, and if you could cross the beam to the other end and you would be rewarded". The reward could be handsome depending on how fast I could cross it, but once I stepped on it; there was no refund and no turning back.

I took the challenge from Mr. Not Knowing. Paid him a fee. I had little difficulty to see the beam under the dim light shinning on the beam and quickly walked across the beam to the end other of the room and collected my rewards afterwards. The reward was pretty good for such a quick walk.

Mr Not Knowing asked: "Do you want to play again?". Surely, for such an easy gain, I would be silly not to play. I paid him more fees, and set my feet on the beam again. But, after walking a few steps, suddenly, the hut was brightly lit for a while and went off. To my horrible, I suddenly saw under the beam there were plenty of crocodiles with mouth open wide showing off their razor-sharp teeth and staring at me. Darkness filled the room once again leaving behind the same dim light shinning upon the beam.

I was terribly frighten, but I couldn't turn back. I nervously and slowly walked across the beam. But, I was so scare of falling into the mouth of crocodiles, that I went crawling on the beam instead of walking. Half-way through the beam, I totally lost the courage of crawling, and I sat frozen on the beam. I prayed to the Lord for help.

Suddenly, the light came back, and I saw a safety net cross the the room separating the crocodiles below from the beam. If I slipped, I would fall into the safety net but not into the mouth of crocodiles. The light went off again.

I quickly took the courage, got up but, I walked very slowly and carefully towards the end of the beam as I was still very worry whether the safety net was secured and strong enough to hold me back if fell into it.


So is there safety net in the Market? Were you be brave enough to get up and walk across the beam?

1) STI Greater Bear - Asian Financial Crisis. The Market was dumping the SG companies like there was no tomorrow. STI from the high of 2,504 on 6 Feb 1996 to the low of 800 on 4 Sep 1998 in 941 days, down -68% from its high.

This bear, will it be STI Greatest Bear or one of the Greater Bears?

STI from the high of 3,876 on 11 Oct 2007 to the recent low of 1,457 on 9 Mar 2009 in 515 days, down -63% from its high.

You could see the magnitude of fall in a shorter time. So scary!

However, it has somewhat recover more than 20% of its recent low. So has STI bottom out or more to go?

2) Spare money. Do you have spare money that is NOT needed for at least 3.9 years?

From the high of 2,504 on 6 Feb 1996 to the next higher of 2,583 on 3 Jan 2000, it took 3.9 years.

3) Dividend Yield. What is your opportunity cost of not staying with stocks? Are you putting into FD for less than 1%? The trade off is probably you would be sleeping well at night for next 1-2 years. That is your opportunity cost for sleeping well. The dividend yield of more than 2% is still possible for some strong companies under current market if you could live with some nightmares without the need of visiting IMH.

4) GLC companies. We know that the Govt is the greatest nanny in SG market. GLC companies are very unlikely to go bankrupt. Mgmt and board could be replaced to get the company back on feet again.

Do you believe the strength of the safety net of the Market? Or you still fear the crocodiles with mouth open wide with their razor-sharp teeth staring at you if you ever take a step forward onto the beam?

Passive Income after retirement?


Possible sources of passive income:

1) Dividends from stocks
2) Interests from CPF-OA balance (Assuming one does not withdraw after 55 years old)
3) Rental (Assuming one has some property that can be rented out)

Let me do a case study for myself based on past 3 years data to consider the most likely scenario to have passive income coming from stock dividends and interests on CPF-OA balance.

Now, where and how to find the remaining shortfall of 40%, and also fight the inflation?

Some options as follows:

1) Win more in stocks
2) Save more
3) work harder
4) reduce life style
5) Withdraw some/full CPF for better return
6) periodic drawdown

any more other options? any ideas??

Friday 10 April 2009

When Market moves, were you be ready?

Remember this in your heart:

"The market is not your mother. It consists of tough men and women who look for ways to take money away from you instead of pouring milk into your mouth." - Dr. Alexander Elder

How do successful Investor/Trader differ from Amateur?

Some important factors to note:

1) Hard work - They spent their time studying the market, companies, industries, and sectors. They understand their businesses. And, the traders will pay more attention to financial news, and market movement. The traders had a keen eye for how their market might be moving, and how the pricing might be changed and try to take advantage of the occasions when it moved from their benchmark.


2) Strategy - They have their own strategy, money management, and risk control skills. They could enunciate his or her specific edge in their marketplace and, in some way could quantify that too.

4) Adaptation - They knew the details of his or her P/L, but also detailed investing/trading statistics. When the stats veered off course, they were quick to make adjustments or re-capitalize their account.

5) Complexity - They understand the nature of adaptive complexity of the Market but the idea of buying/selling is a simple thing, and many expect to come to the Market to make easy money, but they don't.

6) Passion - They view their investing/trading not only as way of making money but they have great passion. They are in this for the long haul, and through years of experience, they always want to advance their education (could be just self learning) in finance or related fields and to understand the ever-changing adaptive complexity of the market. They also know that they must be able to sustain and measure their success across multiple years and market conditions - bulls and bears.

7) Risk and reward - They know how to quantify risk and reward that match their emotions, their current and future financial obligation and not putting their family livelihood at risks.


Yap. For some cyber friends/super friends here starting off or in their mid of their journey in the world of investing/trading, are you ready for the next new bull and the bear?
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