Sunday 25 November 2007

What is FRAs?

If you have flipped through the newspapers, you may have come across this acronym known as the FRAs. What is FRAs then? A forward rate agreement (FRA) can be viewed as a forward contract to borrow/lend money at a certain rate at some future date. In practice, these contracts settle in cash, but no actual loan is made at the settlement date.

This means that the credit worthiness of the parties to the contract need not be considered in the forward interest rate, so an essentially riskless rate, such as LIBOR, can be specified in the contract. The long position in an FRA is the party that would borrow the money (long the loan with the contract price being the interest rate on the loan). If the floating rate at contract expiration (LIBOR or Euribor) is above the rate specified in the forward agreement, the long position in the contract can be viewed as the right to borrow at below market rates and the long will receive a payment. If the reference rate at the expiration date is below the contract rate, the short will receive a cash payment from the long.

To calculate the cash payment at settlement for a forward rate agreement, we need to calculate the value as of the settlement date of making a loan at a rate that is either above or below the market rate. Since the interest savings would come at the end of the "loan" period, the cash payment at settlement of the forward is the present value of the interest "savings". We need to calculate the discounted value at the settlement date of the interest savings or excess interest at the end of the loan period.

For those who are not sure what is LIBOR? It is the lending rate on dollar-denominated loans between banks and is actually known as London Interbank Offered Rate or simply LIBOR.

LIBOR is published daily by the British Banker's Association and is compiled from quotes from a number of large banks; some are large multinational banks based in other countries that have London offices. There is also an equivalent Euro lending rate called Euribor, or Europe Interbank Offered Rate. Euribor, established in Frankfurt, is published by the European Central Bank.


The floating rates are for various periods and are quoted as such. For example, the terminology is 30-day LIBOR (or Euribor), 90-day LIBOR, and l80-day LIBOR, depending on the term of the loan. For longer-term floating rate loans, the interest rate is reset periodically based on the then-current LIBOR for the relevant period.

Thursday 22 November 2007

Dividends and Dividend Policy

If you have bought shares before, chances are, you may have received dividends. There is however companies which do not pay out dividends but simply reinvest their earning back to the companies. There are also companies which go to the market to repurchase back their own shares and there are companies which decided to perform stock splits. The question here is what will happen to the share price with each different decision made and each action taken? Let's try to understand the various ways a company can choose to exercise their decisions.

Cash dividends, as the name implies, are payments made to shareholders in cash. They come in three forms:
  1. Regular dividends occur when a company pays out a portion of profits on a consistent schedule (e.g., quarterly). A long-term record of stable or increasing dividends is widely viewed by investors as a sign of a company's financial stability.
  2. Special dividends are used when the company does not have a regular dividend schedule or if favorable circumstances allow the firm to make a one-time cash payment to shareholders. Many cyclical firms (e.g., automakers) will use a special dividend to share profits with shareholders when times are good, but maintain the flexibility to conserve cash when profits are down. Other names for special dividends include "extra dividends" and "irregular dividends."
  3. Liquidating dividends occur when a company goes out of business and distributes the proceeds to shareholders. For tax purposes, a liquidating dividend is treated as a return of capital and amounts over the investor's tax basis are taxed as capital gains.

No matter which form cash dividends take, their net effect is to transfer cash from the company to its shareholders. The payment of a cash dividend reduces a company's assets and the market value of its equity. This means that immediately after a dividend is paid, the price of the stock should drop by the amount of the dividend (theoretically).

Stock dividends are dividends paid out in new shares of stock rather than cash. In this case, there will be more shares outstanding, but each one will be worth less. Stock dividends are commonly expressed as a percentage. A 10% stock dividend means every shareholder gets 10% more stock.

Stock splits divide each existing share into multiple shares, thus creating more shares. There are now more shares, but the price of each share will drop correspondingly to the number of shares created, so there is no change in the owner's wealth. Splits are expressed as a ratio. In a 2-for-1 (US convention, Singapore convention would be 1-for-2) stock split, each old share is split into two new shares. Stock splits are more common today than stock dividends.

The bottom line for stock splits and stock dividends is that they increase the total number of shares outstanding, but because the stock price and earnings per share are adjusted proportionally, a shareholder's total wealth is unchanged.

Reverse stock splits are the opposite of stock splits. After a reverse split there are fewer shares outstanding but higher stock prices. Since these factors offset one another, shareholder wealth is unchanged. The logic behind a reverse stock split is that the perceived optimal stock price range is $20 to $80 per share in the US, and most investors consider a stock with a price less than $5 per share less than investment grade. A company in financial distress whose stock has fallen dramatically may declare a reverse stock split to increase the stock price.

There are a few dates which we need to take note of. They are,

  1. Declaration date - The date the board of directors approves payment of the dividend.
  2. Ex-dividend date - The first day a share of stock trades without the dividend. The ex-dividend date is also the cut-off date for receiving the dividend and occurs two business days before the holder-of-record date. If you buy the share on or after the ex-dividend date, you will not receive the dividend.
  3. Holder-of-record date - The date on which the shareholders of record are designated to receive the dividend.
  4. Payment date - The date the dividend checks are mailed out, or when the payment is electronically transferred to shareholder accounts.

Stocks are traded ex-dividend on and after the ex-dividend date, so stock prices should fall by the amount of the dividend on the ex-dividend date. Because of taxes, however, the drop in price may be closer to the after-tax value of dividends.

A share repurchase is a transaction in which a company buys back shares of its own common stock. Since shares are bought using a company's own cash, a share repurchase can be considered an alternative to a cash dividend. If the tax treatment for both cash dividend and share repurchase is the same, then a share repurchase has the same impact on shareholder wealth as a cash dividend payment of an equal amount.

A share repurchase using borrowed funds will increase EPS if the after-tax cost of debt used to buy back shares is less than the earnings yield of the shares before the repurchase. It will decrease EPS if the cost of debt is greater than the earnings yield, and it will not change EPS if the two are equal.

There are three ways a company can perform share repurchase. They are,

  1. Buy in the open market
  2. Buy a fixed number of shares at a fixed price
  3. Repurchase by direct negotiation

A company's dividend payout policy is the approach a company follows in determining the amount and timing of dividend payments to shareholders. Six primary factors affect a company's dividend payout policy:

  1. Signaling effect - Unexpected changes in a company's dividend policy is often viewed by investors as a signal from management about projections of the firm's future performance. In other words, stockholders perceive changes in dividend policy as conveying important information about the firm.
  2. Taxation of dividends - Investors are concerned about after-tax returns. Investment income is taxed by most countries; however, the ways that dividends are taxed vary widely from country to country. The method and amount of tax applied to a dividend payment can have a significant impact on a firm's dividend policy.
  3. Clientele effect - This refers to the varying preferences for dividends of different groups of investors, such as individuals, institutions, and corporations.
  4. Restrictions on dividend payments - Companies may be restricted from paying dividends either by legal requirements or by implicit restrictions caused by cash needs of the business.
  5. Flotation costs on new issues versus cost of retained earnings
  6. Shareholder preference for current income versus capital gains

The information conveyed by dividend initiation is ambiguous. On one hand, a dividend initiation could mean that a company is sharing its wealth with shareholders - a positive signal. On the other hand, initiating a dividend could mean that a company has a lack of profitable reinvestment opportunities -a negative signal.

An unexpected dividend increase can signal to investors that a company's future business prospects are strong and that managers will share the success with shareholders.

Unexpected dividend decreases or omissions are typically negative signals that the business is in trouble and that management does not think the current dividend payment can be maintained. In rare instances, however, management can attempt to send a positive signal by cutting the dividend. Management may believe profitable investment opportunities are available and that shareholders would ultimately receive a greater benefit by having earnings reinvested in the company rather than being paid out as dividends.

The information content in dividend policy changes is viewed differently across countries. In the US, investors infer that even small changes in a dividend send a major signal about a company's prospects. However, in Japan and other Asian countries, investors are less likely to assume that even a large change in dividend policy signals anything about a company's future. As a result, Asian companies are freer to raise and lower their dividends as circumstances change without being concerned about how investor reactions may affect the stock price.

Hope this post has provided better insight to the dividends and dividend policy used by companies. Take note that whatever discussed here is theoretical. What happen in real life when a company announced its earning and dividend payment or share repurchase can bring very different impacts to its share price based on investor sentiment. Cheers.

Wednesday 21 November 2007

Forex Trading

I have always heard of Forex Trading but I do not really understand how it works? The booster session last night by Conrad is another intriguing lesson. Before I forgot everything I learnt about Forex trading, I would like to share with the readers of this blog. I actually did more research once I reached home last night at around 1 am. I was too excited to go and sleep even though I am very tired. Here is what I found and learnt.

What is Forex Trading?

Forex or Foreign Exchange is the simultaneous buying of one currency and the selling of another. Currencies are traded in pairs.

The Forex market has more buyers and sellers and daily volume than any other market in the world and takes place in major financial institutions across the globe. The forex market is open 24 hours a day and five days a week.

In the Forex Market, currencies are always priced in pairs and all trades result in the simultaneous buying of one currency and the selling of another. The objective of currency trading is to buy the currency that increases in value relative to the one you sold. If you have bought a currency and the price appreciates in value, then you must sell the currency back to lock in the profit.

Currencies are quoted in pairs. The front or first currency is known as the base currency and the second is called the counter or quote currency. You always trade based on the front currency. For example, EUR/USD quote, you can only trade on the EUR currency by buying or selling. It is a norm to quote the stronger currency as the base currency. Currencies are quoted using five significant numbers, with the last placeholder called a point or a pip (percentage in price). For example, a EUR/USD quotes 1.1345/1.1350.

If you have studied Global Economic before, you may have come across quotes like American terms, European terms, Direct quote or Indirect quote. What do all these mean?
  • American terms means the quote is in the form of USD$ per unit of the foreign currency. There are generally four currencies that are quoted in American terms. They are Euro, Kiwi, Aussie and Sterling.
  • European terms means the quote is in the form of foreign currency per USD$. This is normally the case.
  • Direct quote means the quote is in the form of domestic currency per unit of foreign currency.
  • Indirect quote means the quote is in the form of foreign currency per unit of domestic currency. This is generally used in UK, Canada and US only.

Like all financial products, forex quotes include a "bid" and "ask" or a "sell" and a "buy" price. By quoting both the bid and ask in real time, brokers ensure that traders always receive a fair price on all transactions. As in any traded instrument, there is an immediate cost in establishing a position. This cost will vary between the different brokers and is sometimes called "spread". For example, USD/JPY may bid at 132.20 and ask at 131.25, this five-pip spread defines the trader's cost, which can be recovered with a favourable currency move in the market.

The Forex Market is a seamless 24 hours market and is open 5 days a week. At 5pm Sunday, New York time, trading begins as markets open in Sydney and Singapore. At 7pm the Tokyo market opens, followed by London at 2am, and finally New York at 8 am. (Time is based on New York time).

As a trader, this allows you to react to favourable and unfavourable news by trading immediately.

The trading of Forex takes place all over the world and is not located in any one central location. Deals are done between a variety of traders, from banks to managed funds to individual traders.

Forex trades approximately around US$1.85 trillion a day and is by far the most liquid market in the world. It takes the NYSE 3 months to trade the same USD value as the Forex trades each and every day making it the largest and most liquid market in the world. The Forex Market is always liquid, meaning positions can be liquidated and stop orders executed without slippage.

Traders can trade a variety of currency pairs, limited only by which pairs each broker provides. Major currency pairs are typically the USD pairs. For example,

  • EURUSD
  • GBPUSD
  • AUDUSD
  • USDJPY
  • USDCHF

Cross currency pairs are pairs which do not involve the USD for example

  • EURGBP
  • EURJPY
  • GBPJPY
  • EURCHF

Point/Pip values is the USD$ value for each point or Point/Pip. These are typical values and can vary between the different brokers and market makers.

You can sign up for a Forex account with InterbankFx. You can find more information at Forex Factory, Forex Capital Market, Daily Forex and also a good Forex Trading guide here. Trading is approximately 20% technical and fundamental and 80% psychological. With the psychological side of trading, it is important that you understand the sentiment of the market and have good money management skills.

Monday 19 November 2007

Types of Order in the Market and Time Limits with Trade Orders

If you have trade in the US market before, you will realise that the US market has so many features that you cannot find in Singapore market. Take for example, the types of order in the market. What is type of order in the market? In the US, we have orders such as Market Order, Limit Order and Stop Loss/Sell Stop etc. What do they mean?

Market Order
This is where you authorise your broker to buy or sell stock or options at the best price in the market.


Limit Order
This is where you:

  • only buy if share falls to a certain price or lower; or
  • only sell if share rises to certain price or higher.

Limits are recommended with options trading, particularly for spreads and combination trades. The reason for this is that the bid/ask spread prices can fluctuate dramatically and often not in your favour, so it is better to specify your prices.

Stop Loss/Sell Stop (Defensive)
This is where you:

  • Sell if stock falls below a certain price (sell stop is placed below the current price).

You can increase the stop loss if the share rises.

Buy Stops
This is where you will only buy once the stock has reached or exceeded a certain price. This is like the opposite of a limit order where you look to buy a stock when it has fallen to a certain price. A Buy Stop is appropriate where you expect a stock to rise beyond a resistance level or bounce up from a support level.

  • Buy Stop with limit - Only buy when stock is between two prices.
  • Buy Stop with limit and Stop Loss - Buy between two prices and sell if below another price.

There are however some time limits with different type of trade orders such as GTC, Day only, Week only etc. What do these mean then?

Good Till Cancelled (GTC)
This is where the order is valid unless and until you cancel it or until it is filled. For example, a limit order GTC means you authorise your broker to sell the stock at a particular price, today or any time in the future where the stock is selling at that particular amount, until you have sold the requisite number of shares.
Smith Barney Benefit Access uses this. Be careful with GTC orders because these orders generally do not go to the top of the list of floor traders’ priorities.

Day Only
The order will be cancelled if it is not filled by the end of the day. This is a good ploy because it encourages the floor traders to deal. If they don’t by the end of the day, then they won’t get their commission, so there is an incentive for floor traders to put this type of trade nearer to the top of their list.

Week Only
The order will be cancelled if it is not filled by the end of the week.

Fill or Kill
The order of maximum priority. If it is not filled immediately, the order is cancelled. A fill or kill order is bound to capture the attention of the floor trader, but if it is a limit order, then you need to make it realistic.

All or None
Either the entire order is filled or none of it. This is not generally a good idea given that many trades are not filled all at once anyway because there has to be a buyer or seller on the other side, and most of the time they won’t be specifically dealing in the same lot sizes as your order. So if you want to be sure to get filled, do not go for all or none!

Friday 16 November 2007

Weighted Average Cost of Capital

Students who graduated from the WA08 class, if you can still recall, Conrad showed us this site where you can key in the stock symbol and the site will automatically compute the intrinsic value of the stock for you. For those who cannot remember, you can click on this link Online Intrinsic Value Calculator. I have also added the link to heading under Investment Related Sites.

If you have used the calculator for your stock valuation, you will notice there is this entry known as the Company WACC (%). So what is this company's WACC? WACC is actually an acronym for Weighted Average Cost of Capital for that company. If you understand about the capital budgeting process of a company that involved the discounted cash flow analysis, this is actually the discount rate that company used to discount its future cash flow. This rate is also known as the marginal cost of capital.


On the right (liability) side of a firm's balance sheet, we have debt, preferred stock, and common equity. These are normally referred to as the capital components of the firm. Any increase in a firm's total assets will have to be financed through an increase in at least one of these capital accounts. The cost of each of these components is called the component cost of capital.

The WACC is given by:

WACC = (wd)(kd)(1 – t) + (wps)(kps) + (wce)(kce)

where:
  • wd = The percentage of debt in the capital structure
  • wps = The percentage of preferred stock in the capital structure
  • wce = The percentage of common stock in the capital structure
  • kd = The rate at which the firm can issue new debt. This is the yield to maturity on existing debt. This is also called the before-tax component cost of debt.
  • kd(l - t) = The after-tax cost of debt. Here , t is the firm's marginal tax rate. The after-tax component cost of debt, kd(l - t), is used to calculate the WACC.
  • kps = The cost of preferred stock.
  • kce = The cost of common equity. It is the required rate of return on common stock and is generally difficult to estimate.

How a company raises capital and how they budget or invest it is considered independently. Most companies have separate departments for the two tasks. The financing department is responsible for keeping costs low and using a balance of funding sources: common equity, preferred stock, and debt. Generally, it is necessary to raise each type of capital in large sums. The large sums may temporarily overweight the most recently issued capital, but in the long run, the firm will adhere to target weights. Because of these and other financing considerations, each investment decision must be made assuming a WACC which includes each of the different sources of capital and is based on the long-run target weights. A company creates value by producing a return on assets that is higher than the required rate return on the capital needed to fund those assets.

The WACC as we have described it is the cost of financing firm assets. We can view this cost as an opportunity cost. Consider how a company could reduce its costs if it found a way to produce its output using fewer assets, say less working capital. If we need less working capital, we can use the funds freed up to buy back our debt and equity securities in a mix that just matches our target capital structure. Our after-tax savings would be the WACC based on our target capital structure, times the total value of the securities that are no longer outstanding.

For these reasons , any time we are considering a project that requires expenditures, comparing the return on those expenditures to the WACC is the appropriate way to determine whether undertaking that project will increase the value of the firm. This is the essence of the capital budgeting decision. Since a firm's WACC reflects the average risk of the projects that make up the firm , it is not appropriate for evaluating all new projects. It should be adjusted upward for projects with greater-than-average risk and downward for projects with less-than average risk.

The weights in the calculation of WACC should be based on the firm’s target capital structure. In the absence of any explicit information about a firm’s target capital structure from the firm itself, an analyst may simply use the firm’s current capital structure as the best indication of its target capital structure. If there has been a noticeable trend in the firm’s capital structure, the analyst may want to incorporate this trend into his estimate of the firm’s target capital structure.

Alternatively, an analyst may wish to use the industry average capital structure as the target capital structure for a firm under analysis.

Wednesday 14 November 2007

What Kind of Trader or Investor are you?

Conrad mentioned this in the WA08 workshop and I thought it was kind of cute to classify traders and investors to the characteristics of the animals and hence I did a search on Investopedia to see what they really mean?
  1. The Turtle Trader or Investor
  2. The Pig Trader or Investor
  3. The Ostrich Trader or Investor
  4. The Lemming Trader or Investor
  5. The Sheep Trader or Investor
  6. The Barefoot Pilgrim Trader or Investor

Turtle - A nickname given to a group of traders who were a part of an 1983 experiment run by two famous commodity traders, Richard Dennis and Bill Eckhardt. The goal of the study was to prove whether being a great trader was a genetic predisposition or whether it could be taught. Dennis believed that a person could be trained while Eckhardt thought it was an innate skill.

Pig - An investor who is often seen as greedy, having forgotten his or her original investment strategy to focus on securing unrealistic future gains. After experiencing a gain, these investors often have very high expectations about the future prospects of the investment and, therefore, do not sell their position to realize the gain.

Ostrich - A slang term given to investors or other market participants who ignore important pieces of information or situations, which have the ability to impact them or the market in which they operate. The reasons behind type of action can include risk aversion and bias.

Lemming - The act of following the crowd into an investment that will inevitably head for disaster.

Sheep - An investor who lacks a focused trading strategy and trades on emotion and the suggestions of others, including friends, family and financial gurus. This type of investor often makes rash investments without reviewing their financial viability. The behavior of sheep contrasts with that of bulls and bears, who have focused views about the market.

Barefoot Pilgrim - Slang for an unsophisticated investor who loses all of his or her wealth by trading equities in the stock market.

Which kind are you?

Yield Curve for Bonds

For those students who graduated from WA07 class, if you still remember Conrad mentioned about the Inverted Yield Curves for year 2006 and 2007 and their implication to the economy, you may be wondering what Conrad is trying to get across to us. I'll try to explain what causes the shape of the yield curve in this post.

There are three theories to describe the term structure of interest rates that affect the shape of the yield curve. They are

  1. Pure Expectation Theory
  2. Liquidity Preference Theory
  3. Market Segmentation Theory

So what does each theory say? The pure expectations theory states that the yield for a particular maturity is an average (not a simple average) of the short term rates that are expected in the future. If short term rates are expected to rise in the future, interest rate yields on longer maturities will be higher than those on shorter maturities, and the yield curve will be upward sloping. If short term rates are expected to fall over time, longer maturity bonds will be offered at lower yields.

Proponents of the liquidity preference theory believe that, in addition to expectations about future short term rates, investors require a risk premium for holding longer term bonds. This is consistent with the fact that interest rate risk is greater for longer maturity bonds.

Under this theory, the size of the liquidity premium will depend on how much additional compensation investors require to induce them to take on the greater risk of longer maturity bonds or, alternatively, how strong their preference for the greater liquidity of shorter term debt is.

The market segmentation theory is based on the idea that investors and borrowers have preferences for different maturity ranges. Under this theory, the supply of bonds (desire to borrow) and the demand for bonds (desire to lend) determine equilibrium yields for the various maturity ranges. Institutional investors may have strong preferences for maturity ranges that closely match their liabilities. Life insurers and pension funds may prefer long maturities due to the long-term nature of the liabilities they must fund. A commercial bank that has liabilities of a relatively short maturity may prefer to invest in shorter-term debt securities. Another argument for the market segmentation theory is that there are legal or institutional policy restrictions that prevent investors from purchasing securities with maturities outside a particular maturity range.

A somewhat weaker version of the market segmentation theory is the preferred habitat theory. Under this theory, yields also depend on supply and demand for various maturity ranges, but investors can be induced to move from their preferred maturity ranges when yields are sufficiently higher in other (non-preferred) maturity ranges.

The pure expectations theory by itself has no implications for the shape of the yield curve. The various expectations and the shapes that are consistent with them are:

  1. Short-term rates expected to rise in the future -> upward sloping yield curve
  2. Short-term rates are expected fall in the future -> downward sloping yield curve
  3. Short-term rates expected to rise then fall -> humped yield curve
  4. Short-term rates expected to remain constant -> flat yield curve

The shape of the yield curve, under the pure expectations theory, provides us with information about investor expectations about future short-term rates.

Under the liquidity preference theory, the yield curve may take on any of the shapes we have identified. If rates are expected to fall a great deal in the future, even adding a liquidity premium to the resulting negatively sloped yield curve can result in a downward sloping yield curve. A humped yield curve could still be humped even with a liquidity premium added to all the yields. Also note that , under the liquidity preference theory, an upward sloping yield curve can be consistent with expectations of declining short term rates in the future.

The market segmentation theory of the term structure is consistent with any yield curve shape. Under this theory, it is supply and demand for debt securities at each maturity range that determines the yield for that maturity range. There is no specific linkage among the yields at different maturities, although, under the preferred habitat theory, higher rates at an adjacent maturity range can induce investors to purchase bonds with maturities outside their preferred range of maturities.

Conrad showed us to this site where you can learn more about bonds. You can click on the link here.

Monday 12 November 2007

Sam Stovall

I first heard about Sam Stovall, who is the Chief Investment Strategist at Standard & Poor's, from Conrad Alvin Lim when I attended the Wealth Academy workshop. Sam Stovall wrote a book on Sector Investing. Conrad had used his model and showed us a demonstration on how this model works till today even though Sam Stovall wrote the book back in 1996. What Conrad had shown really impressed me a lot. I have always been a stock centric person and never really take the times to understand how the money flows from the one sector to the other. Hence after learning what Conrad had taught me, I decided to find more information regarding sector rotation, sector investing etc.

I found this very good article in Investopedia which you may be interested to take a look. I also found a research written by Sam Stovall. I have provided the links of the article and the research here. You can simply click on the links.
  1. Article about Sector Rotation
  2. Demystifying Stock Research

Tuesday 6 November 2007

Nineteen Common Mistakes Most Investors Make

This is a continuation of my yesterday post on the CAN SLIM acronym by William J. O’Neil book, "How to Make Money in Stocks A Winning System in Good Times or Bad - Third Edition". One of the chapters in the book mentioned about the nineteen common mistakes most investors make. I have consolidated and posted them here.

Even the most experienced investors often make the same classic mistakes that limit their profits or cause steep losses. Here are the 19 mistakes you must avoid:
  1. Stubbornly holding on to losses when they are very small and reasonable. Instead of getting out cheaply, many investors hold on until the loss gets so large it costs them dearly. Without exception, cut every loss at 7 to 8 percent.
  2. Buying on the way down in price, thereby ensuring miserable results. A declining stock seems to be a real bargain. But remember: With few exceptions a stock’s price is high or low for good reasons.
  3. Averaging down in price rather than up when buying. If you buy a stock at $40 and then buy more at $30, and average your cost at $35, you are following your losers and putting good money after bad.
  4. Buying large amounts of low-priced stocks rather than smaller amounts of higher priced stocks. When you invest, buy the best merchandise available, not the cheapest. Low-priced stocks cost more in commissions and are more volatile, usually to the downside.
  5. Wanting to make a quick and easy buck. Wanting too much, too fast, without the proper preparation, can lead to big losses.
  6. Buying on tips, rumors, split announcements, and other news events, stories, advisory service recommendations, or opinions you hear from supposed market experts on TV. Trust what you have learned through hard work, not rumors and tips, which usually aren’t true.
  7. Selecting second-rate stocks because of dividends or low price earnings ratios. Dividends and P/E ratios aren’t as important as earnings per share growth. In many cases, the more a company pays in dividends, the weaker it may be.
  8. Never getting out of the starting gate properly due to poor selection criteria. Many people buy highly speculative, risky stocks that have questionable earnings and sales growth; inevitably, they get what they deserve.
  9. Buying old names you are familiar with. Many of the best investments will be newer companies that, with a little research, you could discover and profit from before they become household names.
  10. Not being able to recognize and follow good information and advice. Friends and relatives can give bad advice. So can some stockbrokers and advisory services, because every profession includes a small minority who are top performers, many who are mediocre, and some who are truly awful.
  11. Being afraid to buy stocks that are going into new high ground in price. A stock that reaches a new high may be on its way to much greater highs.
  12. Cashing in small easy to-take profits, while holding the losers. You should do the opposite: Cut your losses short, and let your profits grow.
  13. Worrying too much about taxes and commissions. The money to be made by selecting the right stocks is enormous in comparison to the cost of taxes and commissions.
  14. Focusing on what to buy, and not understanding when the stock must be sold. Timing your exit is as important as planning your entrance.
  15. Failing to understand the importance of buying quality companies with good institutional sponsorship.
  16. Speculating too heavily in options and futures because they’re thought to be a way to get rich quick.
  17. Rarely transacting "at the market" and preferring to put price limits on buy and sell orders. By quibbling on an eighth of a point, they miss the stock's larger and more important movement.
  18. Not being able to make up your mind when a decision needs to be made. This invariably points to lack of a plan.
  19. Not looking at stocks objectively. Relying on your emotions or only on your opinion is a recipe for failure.

I'll share more information of the book again. Cheers.

Monday 5 November 2007

How to Make Money in Stocks - A Winning System in Good Times or Bad

I guess some of you may have come across this book, "How to Make Money in Stocks - A Winning System in Good Times or Bad". This book is written by William J. O’Neil. For those who have heard of the acronym CAN SLIM, it actually came from this book. I have briefly summarise what does the acronym CAN SLIM means? Remember the simple acronym CAN SLIM. Each letter stands for one of the seven basic fundamentals of selecting outstanding stocks.

Most successful stocks share these seven common characteristics at emerging growth stages, so they are worth committing to memory.
  1. C equals Current Quarterly Earnings per Share: They must be up at least 18 or 20 percent. The higher, the better. Also, quarterly sales must be accelerating or up 25 percent.

  2. A equals Annual Earnings Increases: Require significant growth for each of the last three years and a return on equity of 17 percent or more.

  3. N equals New Products, New Management, New Highs: Look for new products or services, a new senior management team, or significant changes in industry conditions. Buy stocks as they begin to make new highs in price.

  4. S equals Supply and Demand: It doesn't matter whether a company has a large capitalization or a small cap, as long as it fits all of the other CAN SLIM rules. Look for big volume increases.

  5. L equals Leader or Laggard: Buy market leaders and avoid laggards. Buy the No. 1 company in its field. Most leaders' Relative Price Strength Rating will be 80 or 90 or higher.

  6. I equals Institutional Sponsorship: Buy stocks with increasing institutional ownership and at least a few sponsors with top-notch recent performance records.

  7. M equals Market Direction: Learn to determine overall market direction by accurately interpreting daily market indices' price and volume movements, and the action of individual market leaders. This can determine whether you will win or lose. By using this simple, proven, and extremely powerful method, you can make money in stocks in any type of economy.

The reason that CAN SLIM continues to work, cycle after cycle, is because it is based solely on the reality of how the stock market actually works, rather than personal opinions, including those of the experts on Wall Street. Further, human nature at work in the market simply doesn't change. So CAN SLIM does not get outmoded as fads, fashions, and economic cycles come and go.

I would seriously recommend investors to borrow or buy the book if you wish to know more about how CAN SLIM can work for you. The 3rd edition also includes a chapter on "Nineteen Common Mistakes Most Investors Make".

Thursday 1 November 2007

What are futures?

I guess many of us might have come across this term, "Futures". You may have heard of "Forwards" before as well. Simply put it, futures are simply forwards but they are regulated and are backed by clearing house.

A futures contract is a legally binding agreement between a buyer and seller to receive (in the case of a "long" position) or deliver (in the case of a "short" position) a commodity or financial instrument sometime in the future, but at a price that's agreed upon today. These contracts mature at a particular point in the future and are identified by reference to that date - for instance, a Nov 2007 Wheat futures contract or a December 2005 S&P 500 stock index futures contract. The ability to make or take delivery of the underlying commodity at expiration creates a strong tendency for cash and futures prices to move in the same direction by roughly equal amounts. It will take two options to replicate a future contract.

For those who wish to know more, Wikipedia provides very good information about futures and its difference between forwards. Click here for more information.