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Start the year off right with advice from 4 investing masters

Tan KW
Publish date: Sun, 07 Jan 2018, 04:47 PM
Tan KW
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Good.

Ever stepped up to the plate and pointed out to the (imaginary) bleachers like Babe Ruth before you swung? Or dribbled down the court with your tongue hanging out like Michael Jordan? Never mind you were just playing in your company’s softball league or in a neighborhood pickup game. At every level of sport, you’ll find players imitating the greats.

As it turns out, mimicking the pros is a pretty great idea when it comes to investing, too. (And there’s less risk of looking silly.) Check out the styles of these four investing masters. You may not end up quite as wealthy, but following their lead can help you grow your own modest fortune.

John Bogle: Keep it simple

Vanguard Group (the world’s largest mutual-fund company) founder John Bogle’s style couldn’t be simpler: Stick with index funds, avoid expensive fees and diversify with a suitable mix of stocks and bonds.

The beauty of his strategy is that it limits the effects of inevitable human behavior. Tracking indexes lets you sit back and enjoy the slow but steady march up that markets have historically followed—without veering off course because of fear, greed or other natural emotions that can lead investors astray. “People believe there’s a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow,” Bogle told us last year. “There’s no pot of gold. And there’s no rainbow. If you can just avoid stupid mistakes, you’ll do very well.”

Warren Buffett: Buy and hold
Bloomberg
Warren Buffett: commit to a well-planned strategy.

You don’t become one of the wealthiest people in the world by being wishy-washy. Like Bogle, Warren Buffett knows the best investing move is to make none at all. Committing to a well-planned strategy for the long term helps you ride the market upward, no matter what bumps you encounter along the way.

That’s why Buffett’s style is to buy and hold. “Our favorite holding period is forever,” he wrote in a Chairman’s Letter in 1988—the point being that your investing strategy, and everything in your portfolio, should be solid enough to endure the market’s natural fluctuations. That way, you’ll only feel compelled to sell when the time is right for you.

 
 
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Sallie Krawcheck: Stick with it

Sallie Krawcheck hasn’t just endured the Boys Club of Wall Street (through C-suite positions at Smith Barney, Citigroup and Bank of America), she’s mastered it. So what sage advice can she offer from her breadth of experience? “Investing is not a goal in and of itself,” Krawcheck said. “It is instead a means to an end. And that end is to build full, interesting, awesome lives for ourselves.”

Basically, don’t focus on trying to beat the market. (That’s often a losing proposition.) Remember the reason to invest isn’t just to make money, but to achieve financial goals, whether that’s paying for college, buying a home or retiring. So don’t get distracted by daily market fluctuations. Just focus on your goals and your plan for reaching them—and stick with it.

 
Benjamin Graham: Be a bargain hunter

Warren Buffett counts Benjamin Graham as one of his greatest teachers and credits him with his success. Do you need any other reason to heed his advice?

If you want a deeper dive into Graham’s investing style, read his book, “The Intelligent Investor.” Cliff’s notes version: Buy low. Dubbed the “father of value investing,” Graham is the champion of finding investments that are selling well below fair market value.

How does that apply to the majority of us, who should stick with investing in well-diversified funds over individual stocks? Remember, the market can be sensitive, and anything from underwhelming earnings reports to political news can cause a short-term dip. But we can come out ahead if we think of these events as opportunities not to panic sell, but to invest more while stocks are essentially on sale.

 
 
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/start-the-year-off-right-with-advice-from-4-investing-masters-2018-01-03
Discussions
Be the first to like this. Showing 6 of 6 comments

calvintaneng

VERY GOOD

ALL FOUR SIFU POINTS TO ONE GREAT STOCK

1. VANGUARD, BEING WORLD'S LARGEST MUTUAL FUND IS TOP 18 HOLDER OF MRCB.

2. BUY AND HOLD MRCB IS THE BEST OPTION TILL GE14 ELECTION DAY.

3. DON'T HIT AND RUN OR PLAY CONTRA. JUST STICK WITH IT. JUST LIKE BUYING DRB LAST YEAR AT 92 SEN AND STICK WITH IT ALL THE OVER RM2.00.

FOUND A GOLDMINE? STICK WITH IT. OR ELSE SOMEDAY, SOMEWHERE YOU MIGHT STEP ON A LAND MINE.

4. BE A BARGAIN HUNTER. BUY WHEN IT'S CHEAP. WHEN IT IS OVERLOOKED, UNLOVED AND UNWANTED. AND WHEN OTHERS ARE STILL FEARFUL.

2018-01-07 17:54

brightsmart

great article

John Bogle: Keep it simple
Sallie Krawcheck: Stick with it
Warren Buffett: Buy and hold
Benjamin Graham: Be a bargain hunter

The last one I must comment...................

bargain hunting is a double edged sword.

many times those started as bargain hunting turns out to be ducks.

research also shows growth stock investing has out performed value investors over the last 20 years and likely to persist. ....when bargains arise, how you know you are the smart one and not the stupid one?

you got insider information?


on MRCB...I like the comment.

2018-01-07 18:38

brightsmart

many people gets attracted to low PE.....value investing and bargain investing.

I would draw people attention to article by Tong in the Edge this week and be more informed on this issue.

2018-01-07 18:41

Larrytrader

Calvin his one you write really good

2018-01-07 19:39

Larrytrader

This

2018-01-07 19:39

Alex™

value investing is as good as value trap if the market does not recognize the stock in due time. Since investing is a function of gain over time, therefore time is of paramount factor in deciding whether an approach is working or not.

2018-01-07 21:30

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