Posts Tagged ‘Approach’


 Powered by Max Banner Ads 

Profit From Price- Innovative approach to stock market trading

Sunday, November 28th, 2010

Product Description
The simple premise of this book is that everybody knows something about something, but the market is the only one who knows everything about everything. The market is the sum total of all the players. For any stock, it knows at any point in time every piece of news- public or private, every expectation held by every individual as well as every trade executed in that stock. However, this enormous amount of information held by market is available in one simple number-… More >>

Profit From Price- Innovative approach to stock market trading

Stock Market Contagion: Empirical Evidence From The DotCom Bubble: A Conditional Correlation Approach

Saturday, September 11th, 2010

Product Description
The stock market contagion effect has become more pronounced in recent years because of the rapid global economic integration. It may also be observed that stock market contagion always comes for debate only when a major crisis hits the US market. Studies found that the long term correlation between US markets and the rest of the world wasn?t high enough to say that the global markets are fully interconnected. But, when looking at the contagion dynamics over the sho… More >>

Stock Market Contagion: Empirical Evidence From The DotCom Bubble: A Conditional Correlation Approach

How and When to Invest in the Stock Market: Unique Approach to Winning Market Trading Strategies

Sunday, August 1st, 2010

Product Description
A unique approach with supporting market data and case studies is presented by the author. The approach is simple and easy to use and follow. This book shows investors how and when to invest in stocks, mutual funds and index options. The trading strategies are based on market timing techniques, with emphasis on technical analysis. It will expose, to investors, an exciting new approach in timing the trades. It also discusses winning strategies for trading index op… More >>

How and When to Invest in the Stock Market: Unique Approach to Winning Market Trading Strategies

Basics of the Graham Value Investement Approach

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Benjamin Graham had a great investment philosophy. Find great companies determine their intrinsic value and then only buy them when they are cheap. Or as Graham puts it:
“apply a set of standards to each purchase, to make sure that he obtains (1) a minimum of quality in the past performance and current financial position of the company, and also (2) a minimum of quantity in terms of earnings and assets per dollar of price.” (The Intelligent Investor P347-348 Harper Collins Edition 2003)
Not a wildly different philosophy from many others, where he did differ was that he built in insurance. Investing is all about risk and return; you want to keep the risk low and the return high. What Graham’s formula was all about was saying no one is perfect at predicting the future of a return so build in stop gaps to lower the risk and give you the best chance possible. Let’s have a look at a very boiled down summary of the Graham insurance technique.

Insurance Technique 1 Buy on the Cheap:Buying a cheap company is about buying something that no one else wants. When they run away you run in- but not always. Most of the time when people run away from companies or sectors there are perfectly good reasons why they should run away from a company, but sometimes there are not. The history of investing is littered with these stories. A nuclear reactor melts down in Europe and every nuclear stock in the entire world gets hit hard. Is there really any reason for that overreaction? Time will answer that question.

Insurance Technique 2 Buy a company with a future:But what if you are wrong about the reasons the company is cheap, or what if people stay afraid of the industry in question? Using our nuclear reactor example, let’s say that reactor melt down once a month for the next year, or that that reason the reactor melted down is due to faulty components that are also installed in the reactors of the companies you buy. Everyone will run further away from this industry or company and then you are in a pickle aren’t you? So how do you mitigate the risk involved with this? Buy a company with a future. Buying one stock in a company is just like buying the company itself. You want a company that makes money, doesn’t have debt problems and looks positioned to have a future that will continue to be positive. To carry forward our nuclear reactor example you want a company that has enough money to pay its debts throughout the crisis that made it cheap, and a good solid source of reliable revenue that will continue to feed the company into the future.

Insurance Technique 3 Buy with a solid dividend:What if it takes a while for investors to wake up to the fact that a company is a cheap company, with a good future? We can’t have all our money wrapped up in a stock for years without returns no matter how cheap it may appear to be or how solid its future will be once the current crisis is over. That money has to work for us or else we would put it in a bank account or a bond where we could get a guaranteed return rate. This is where dividends come in. A dividend is a regular distribution of cash from the company and for us it is a tranquilizer to keep us calm as we wait for the market to realize that it has unfairly mistreated our company. I don’t mind holding a stock for a year to wait for it to rebound if I am getting a 9% dividend payment to do so, and neither did Graham. At my blog I have further analysis of the details of this break down, come have a look!

Value investing has a proven track record of success, my blog documents my learning and earnings using the value based approach as a basis.
http://www.buyvalue.blogspot.com

Total Management by Ratios: An Analytic Approach to Management Control and Stock Market Valuations

Saturday, June 19th, 2010

Product Description
This is a pioneering book that integrates functional analysis of a business enterprise with stock market valuation. It moves beyond the convention of financial statement analysis to first evaluate every function of management and then integrate this into the total corporate functioning of an enterprise, leading to its valuation in the stock market. Comprehensive sets of ratios are provided for broad managerial functions and their sub-divisions like, production, sale… More >>

Total Management by Ratios: An Analytic Approach to Management Control and Stock Market Valuations

How to Use the Three-point Reversal Method of Point & Figure Stock Market Trading: A Technical Approach to Stock Market Trading

Friday, June 18th, 2010

Product Description
The Front cover says “New . .. revised, sixth edition.” but the copyright page says “Seventh Revised Edition.” Copyright 1968, 1978, 1980 by Chartcraft, Inc. 128 pages. – A detailed book on point & figure chart interpretation…. More >>

How to Use the Three-point Reversal Method of Point & Figure Stock Market Trading: A Technical Approach to Stock Market Trading

Investment Clubs: A Team Approach to the Stock Market

Saturday, May 8th, 2010

Product Description
For the dedicated individual investor with limited access to capital, there is simply no better way to invest than through an investment club. This simple, step-by-step guide shows how to start and run a successful money-making investment club…. More >>

Investment Clubs: A Team Approach to the Stock Market