Nothing matters not me, not the investment, not the results, because if I dont feel like Im going for it all the time I feel exasperated, asphyxiated, as if Im moving in slow-motion, underwater, too calculating I want to experience the unexpected and find that its even better than I could have ever expected. There is always some risk, and I want to experience huge rewards; however, since gain and loss are linked in our minds, heavily weighted, I must take one to get the other, and find a way to love them both. If there is no big game to hunt, I cant hear the music of life, so while it may not be practical to trade large, if Im not working up to it, I dont want to be practical. Losers fear almost everything, I just want to play the game better and better, to beat time, my false self, and false concerns, to do whatever it takes to lead to excessive profit. Maybe thats trading like its the last week, month, year of inventory of fresh air to breathe theres nothing wrong with all the eggs in one basket if you are able to protect them from point A to B. Id rather make less trips, I dont want to think back later on and remember that I didnt go beyond myself and heed my gut. Patience winning and losing doesnt exist, we carve out a limited experience of it looking for results, what matters are the decisions and we have only ourselves to fool.
Trade like its the last week of your life
July 29th, 2008The inner game of investing
July 26th, 2008Only a finite number of mistakes you can make:1. We can sell too early2. We can buy too late3. We can hold too long4. We can buy too soonResearch is not enough. We are human beings first and investors second. It goes against human nature to find some titillating information and do nothing. Theres room for all of us as long as we forge a strategy thats consistent with whom we are. Acknowledge our limitations and make the most of what comes naturally.Bargain hunter value investorThe Visionary growth stocksContrarian turnaroundsSentimentalist enduring franchisesSkeptic short-salesThe Trader (keep any short-term trades/short-term opportunities separate from long-term investments)The Adventurist speculationsThe author stated that you can get surprisingly far simply by mastering the basics. What that says, in a roundabout way, is that you dont need to know a whole lot about investments because your method of operation will determine the results, or heavily weight the results. His trading/investment record is missing, so I dont think the author mastered the basics like a lot of people that love to talk about stocks and investments but they cant get their investments to provide for them. Ill narrow down the field to what the author missed, your results are almost exclusively determined by how long you hold the stock, so that, if your objective is to buy and then sell at a higher price in the market, when you sell is of far greater importance than when you buy.
The 7 deadly sins of investing
July 26th, 2008How to conquer your worst impulses and save your financial future? You probably wont find any life-changing answers in a book that promises something substantial. But at least you dont have to waste time reading the book. Here we go:Envy: To judge your success by the investments of others and try to keep pace, then resent when your investment falters.Vanity/Pride: You refuse to accept help because you know best.Lust: Overpowering attraction to some investments despite the facts.Avarice/Greed: Holding too long, convinced the investment will go up.Anger/Wrath: Sacrificing long-term growth for a quick hit.Gluttony: Filling up on stock with little regard for overall financial health.Sloth: Ignoring your financial future by putting off saving.Its not particularly interesting. There is one example about a young lady in either the greed or gluttony section that keeps buying the same stock as it goes up. The stock continues to perform well over the years and she buys more, but the author warns that she shouldnt and then mentions that even though the stock is still up as of the writing of the book hes convinced the young lady is making a mistake. I think the author is making a mistake buying the stock as it continually moves up means that it is showing a profit in the ladys account, and while no one would say with a guarantee that holding it forever would be prudent the important thing is that shes profiting (all she has to do is protect her profit), so why should she waste time with buying stocks that are doing anything but going up?
The education of a speculator
July 24th, 2008The one characteristic most important for success in speculation is self-esteem. Perhaps the most important rule for speculators: Dont get in over your head. Lesson: Information that seems to be completely fresh is often very stale. The book is filled with interesting bits of wisdom and told in a way that expresses an interesting life experience. According to the author: I quickly ran a $40,000 initial stake into $22 million. My technique was simple I pyramided and added to my holdings with my profits. To give the goddess of losses her due, however, she managed to take back an additional 45 percent of my winnings, leaving me with just 5 percent of my previous high to continue on my discovery.
Way of the turtle
July 23rd, 2008I wanted to find something to like about this book but there isnt much of anything to grab on to. At the end of the book there are five pages that discuss turtle trading, none of it is particularly interesting, and the big reveal the turtle traders were using 20 day and 55 day moving averages to identify entry and exit points for trades. While the author does have an odd life story, none of it seems to be told in way that will add value after the book is closed.
The 100 best stocks you can buy 2008
July 19th, 2008The book doesnt offer much in terms of useful information. A lot of pages are filler, such as basic investment guidelines and the authors reminder to diversify. But thats exactly whats wrong with the premise of the book there arent 100 best stocks to invest in for 2008. There arent 100 best stocks because there is only one best stock or a few best stocks. When you buy 100 stocks what you are saying is I dont believe in any one of them strongly enough and I dont believe in my research. The point of research is to narrow the field to spot the one or handful of compelling companies that will have superior performance in the marketplace. The only good point the book offers is not to invest in mutual funds due to losing 1.5 percent a year in fees. I say, the value of a good stock is limited to how much more someone else will pay so ultimately it doesnt matter if it is real gold or fools gold as long as you can sell it for more than you paid. What matters is how good your information is, and your timing, in order to focus on one outstanding investment, not 100 with mixed results of 99 that arent outstanding.Here is a partial listing of what the book offered:Abbott LaboratoriesAir ProductsAlcoaApache CorporationBard, C.R.Becton, DickinsonBemis CorporationBlack and DeckerBoeing CompanyBrinker InternationalCampbell SoupCanadian NationalCarnival CorpCash America InternationalCaterpillar, Inc.Chevron CorporationCintasCloroxCoachColgate-PalmoliveConocoPhillipsCostco WholesaleCVS Corporation
Becoming your own China stock guru
July 18th, 2008Theres nothing compelling about books like this. The book spends a lot of time discussing the history of China, then attempts to get the reader interested in the wonders of potential profits in Chinese stocks, but most of the book is filled with non-essential general information. I looked in the back and there is only one direct comment about how to invest by using ETFs, FXI and EWH. Wow, so thats all it takes to be a guru on this topic? FXI and EWH peaked in October 2007. While FXI had experienced a steady rise since January 2006, EWH has mostly floundered for eleven years under $15. I say, for those that can directly buy Hong Kong stocks, perhaps TVB would be interesting except that its heading down, closing at $41.35 with the 52 week low at $40.10. I dont want to own it if it drops, but if you limit your risk to a point and a half or less youll lose a point and change. If you want to be an exceptional China investor, go there, otherwise youre not going to effectively observe anything meaningful or manage your investments from abroad. Invest in moving overseas there are great investments in Asia that will arise, but youre not going to find them at home. Thats like attempting to be a part of the gold rush while staying in your living room or wildcatting for oil in your backyard. As Asia is perceived to be the next gold rush the money to be made is selling the picks and shovels to the eager gold seekers, fools, and less initiated.
Creating ripples
July 17th, 2008Taken from an article on a 40 year-old Olympic champion swimmer: Heres why she can and how you can improve in your sport as well.
Assemble a compelling team
Focus on form
Perfect your technique
Build 3-D strength and an ability to generate sudden power
Learn to recover faster
It seems like it matches up with high-performance trading as well.
Rich dad cashflow quadrant
July 8th, 2008Rich dads guide to financial freedom. Every book is preaching financial freedom. When will we be free from it? This book tries to hook you but doesnt deliver on anything compelling or out of the ordinary. The author takes a limited view of economic advancement by introducing a concept of quadrants, such as employee, self-employed, business owner, or investor which is the best quadrant for you? Dont waste your time with the book; there is very little worthwhile information. But if you are curious, here you are:
Part one: Differences among people in the quadrants.
Part two: About personal change. It is more about who you have to be instead of what you have to do.
Part three: Seven steps you can take on your path to the right side of the quadrant. One interesting thought presented is maybe you can cook a better burger than McDonalds but can you build a better business system than McDonalds?
The author cant do it either but thats not important, the important thing to consider is that when Ray Kroc got McDonalds going he didnt need any guru business advice from crummy books like this or spend his time going to business seminars on creating wealth.
The book, like lots of other books will mention OPT and OPM, other peoples time and other peoples money as a key business component.
And there are those seven steps:Its time to mind your own business
Take control of your cash flow
Know the difference between risk and risky
Decide what kind of investor you want to beSeek mentors
Make disappointment your strength
The power of faith
The flaws of the laws of money, the lessons of life
July 6th, 2008Keep what you have and create what you deserve? Its not Suze Orman bashing day, it isnt it really isnt but the five laws of money that she promotes arent much of anything. You might call them focus points, or reminders, but not laws of money. She makes it sound so formal. Heres what the book offers:Truth creates money, lies destroy itLook at what you have, not at what you hadDo what it is right for you before you do what is right for your money (People first, then money.)Invest in the known before the unknownAlways remember: money has no power of its ownThere are relatively few authors that really grasp the concept of laws of money and Suze Orman isnt one of them. She doesnt understand or develop a thorough long-term view of money matters or economic development. The problems of today arent necessarily the problems of tomorrow and the solutions of today arent necessarily the solutions to future problems.