My Trading Adventure

Contrarian Investment Strategy

CP TEH
Publish date: Sun, 02 Oct 2011, 08:33 AM
CP TEH
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All the writings in this weblog are mainly for PLEASURE reading purposes. I am in NO position to recommend a call(BUY/SELL). Please check with those know-hows before you make a decision. Yes, I am just a learner, with only five years experiences in KLSE. So, please BEAR with me.
Contrarian Investment Strategy is one of the important Investment Strategies. The Contrarian Investors do not follow the general market trends and don't follow the crowd - they do almost exactly opposite of other investors who may be following the general trend. A contrarian investor endevours to spot and identify depressed stocks and buy them and hold them until the time comes and the holdings appreciate in values. Being contrarian is really being bold and acting against the crowd and not following the herd mentality is really difficult! But, large amount of bucks await to you if you learn to be patient and calculating contrarians.

Contrarian Investment Rules

Rule 1: Do not use market-timing or technical analysis. These techniques can only cost you money.

TEH : Disagree. We should complement some TA in our buying-selling. That could give us the edge from those who dont know anything much about chartings.

Rule 2: Respect the difficulty of working with a mass of information. Few of us can use it successfully. In-depth information does not translate into in''-depth profits..

TEH : Agree. Try not to read too much of news, listen to too much of Bloomberg/CNBC noises, broker reports, remisiers/dealers recommendations, blogs, media, friends info etc etc. Reduce these noises, we could be more clear to do our own analysis, may it ve FA or TA or both.

Rule 3: Do not make an investment decision based on correlations. All correla''tions in the market, whether real or illusory, will shift and soon disappear.

TEH : Agree. DOW-HSI-KLCI correlation. Normally, DOW down, we expect KLCI to be down too. It doesnt work that way many of times, if you are observant enough. The correlation between USD-KLCI becoming more vague, if any.

Rule 4: Tread carefully with current investment methods. Our limitations in processing complex information correctly prevent their successful use by most of us.

TEH : Agreed. Most of the time, many THOUGHT that by knowing more indicators(FA or TA) will give us the edge. That is biased, in my opinion. Making investing and trading simplier is very IMPORTANT. Take the word - LESS is MORE.

Rule 5: There are no highly predictable industries in which you can count on an''alysts' forecasts. Relying on these estimates will lead to trouble.

TEH : Agreed. Normally, analysts forecasts are way-off and lagging. Hence, we should not rely on such reports to make our investments. If possible, getting an independent reports(a few to compare) will reduce our anxiety in the direction of the sector/industry.

Rule 6: Analysts' forecasts are usually optimistic. Make the appropriate down''ward adjustment to your earnings estimate.

TEH : Agreed. Those 'target prices' during bull-run is FAR too optimistic. It is written for retail-traders or investors to BUY into the stocks. well, they have to write what  we want to read, right?

Rule 7: Most current security analysis requires a precision in analysts' estimates that is impossible to provide. Avoid methods that demand this level of accuracy.

TEH : Agreed. DO NOT expect any accurate estimates from analysts. Be realistic and play the game in a smart way. THINK ... why the so-called educated analsts could be so-so wrong?

Rule 8: It is impossible, in a dynamic economy with constantly changing polit''ical, economic, industrial, and competitive conditions, to use the past accurately to estimate the future. The past gives some frame of reference but cannot be exact.

TEH : Neutral. Agreed on the term that we could use historical incidences as a guide and it is not exact. But, human always repeat their habits. So, it is shown in the charts, through historical data collected and displayed in charts.

Rule 9: Be realistic about the downside of an investment, recognizing our hu''man tendency to be both overly optimistic and overly confident. Expect the worst to be much more severe than your initial projection.

TEH : Agreed.

Rule 10: Take advantage of the high rate of analyst forecast error by simply in''vesting in out-of-favor stocks.

TEH :

Rule 11: Positive and negative surprises affect 'best' and 'worst' stocks in a di''ametrically opposite manner..

Rule 12: (A) Surprises, as a group, improve the performance of out-of-favor stocks, while impairing the performance of favorites.
(B) Positive surprises result in major appreciation for out-of-favor stocks, while having minimal impact on favorites.
(C) Negative surprises result in major drops in the price of favorites, while having virtually no impact on out-of-favor stocks.
(D) The effect of an earnings surprise continues for an extended pe''riod of time.

Rule 13: Favored stocks under-perform the market, while out-of-favor companies outperform the market, but the reappraisal often happens slowly, even glacially.

Rule 14: Buy solid companies currently cut of market favor, as measured by their low price-to-earnings, price-to-cash flow or price-to-book value ratios, or by their high yields.

Rule 15: Don't speculate on highly priced concept stocks to make above-average returns. The blue chip stocks that widows and orphans traditionally choose are equally valuable for the more aggressive businessman or woman.

Rule 16: Avoid unnecessary trading. The costs can significantly lower your re''turns over time. Low price-to-value strategies provide well above mar''ket returns for years, and are an excellent means of eliminating excessive transaction costs.

Rule 17: Buy only contrarian stocks because of their superior performance char''acteristics.

Rule 18: Invest equally in 20 to 30 stocks, diversified among 15 or more indus''tries (if your assets are of sufficient size).

Rule 19: Buy medium-or large-sized stocks listed on the New York Stock Ex''change, or only larger companies on Nasdaq or the American Stock Ex''change. (Obviously American centric here)

Rule 20: Buy the least expensive stocks within an industry, as determined by the four contrarian strategies, regardless of how high or low the general price of the industry group.

Rule 21: Sell a stock when its P/E ratio (or other contrarian indicator) approaches that of the overall market, regardless of how favorable prospects may appear. Replace it with another contrarian stock.

Rule 22: Look beyond obvious similarities between a current investment situa''tion and one that appears equivalent in the past. Consider other impor''tant factors that may result in a markedly different outcome.

Rule 23: Don't be influenced by the short-term (3 or five year) record of a money manager, bro''ker, analyst or advisor, no matter how impressive; don't accept cursory economic or investment news without significant substantiation.

Rule 24: Don't rely solely on the 'case rate.' Take into account the 'base rate''' ' the prior probabilities of profit or loss.

Rule 25: Don't be seduced by recent rates of return for individual stocks or the market when they deviate sharply from past norms (the 'case rate'). Long term returns of stocks (the 'base rate') are far more likely to be established again. If returns are particularly high or low, they are likely to be abnormal.

Rule 26: Don't expect the strategy you adopt will prove a quick success in the market; give it a reasonable time to work out.

Rule 27: The push toward an average rate of return is a fundamental principle of competitive markets.

Rule 28: It is far safer to project a continuation of the psychological reactions of investors than it is to project the visibility of the companies themselves.

Rule 29: Political and financial crises lead investors to sell stocks. This is pre''cisely the wrong reaction. Buy during a panic, don't sell.

Rule 30: In a crisis, carefully analyze the reasons put forward to support lower: stock prices-more often than not they will disintegrate under scrutiny

Rule 31: (A) Diversify extensively. No matter how cheap a group of stocks looks, you never know for sure that you aren't getting a clinker. (B) Use the value lifelines as explained. In a crisis, these criteria get dramatically better as prices plummet, markedly improving your chances of a big score.

Rule 32: Volatility is not risk. Avoid investment advice based on volatility.

Rule 33: Small-cap investing: Buy companies that are strong financially (nor''mally no more than 60% debt in the capital structure for a manufacturing firm).

Rule 34: Small-cap investing: Buy companies with increasing and well-protected dividends that also provide an above-market yield.

Rule 35: Small-cap investing: Pick companies with above-average earnings growth rates.

Rule 36: Small-cap investing: Diversify widely, particularly in small companies, because these issues have far less liquidity. A good portfolio should contain about twice as many stocks as an equivalent large-cap one.

Rule 37: Small-cap investing: Be patient. Nothing works every year, but when smaller caps click, returns are often tremendous.

Rule 38: Small-company trading (e.g., Nasdaq): Don't trade thin issues with large spreads unless you are almost certain you have a big winner.

Rule 39: When making a trade in small, illiquid stocks, consider not only com''missions, but also the bid /ask spread to see how large your total cost will be.

Rule 40: Avoid the small, fast-track mutual funds. The track often ends at the bottom of a cliff.

Taken from : http://www.oldschoolvalue.com/

The above is written by an American on his view about 'contrarian' investing. MANY of the rules I dis-agree. Some are not even contrarian rules ... so I will like to use it for SHARING purposes.

will comment later at night. Sunday is for family.

Happy Sunday.

3.00 pm : counter showing 250, 000 = 250k
example : Jiangxi Copper lost almost 3 percent after copper prices collapsed in a wide-ranging decline in global commodities prices. It has lost more than 40 percent this year, pushing multiples to its lowest since the 2008 financial crisis.

It is currently trading at 10.8 times forward 12-month earnings, compared to a historical median of 19 times, according to Thomson Reuters Starmine data.

Now, as I mentioned ... there are many HKSE's counters trading at new lows and some trading much lower than during the 2008-crisis level. Hence, using the contrarian approach, we could actually like to buy these under-valued stocks(with good fundamentals).

TEH
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