Posts Tagged ‘stocks’
Bear Hunting
Sunday, November 2nd, 2008Yahoo Finance has just started a series of articles 40 Stocks for the Long Haul which kicks off with an article with some more great recent quotes from Warren Buffet: “Be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful,” he wrote in an opinion piece in The New York Times. “Bad news is an investor’s best friend,” he added. “It lets you buy a slice of America’s future at a marked-down price.”
As Survive-a-Bear keeps saying: If you are in it for the long haul, be an aquirer. The article goes on to list Five Criteria for evaluate stocks for a long term purchase in this bear market:
- Free cash flow
- Little or no debt
- Strong market share
- Solid management
- Attractive valuation
False sign that bad days are over?
Wednesday, October 29th, 2008Yesterday’s rally might have given you a bit of false confidence. Keep in mind that large rallys are nothing new to historical bear markets.
http://www.usnews.com/blogs/the-ticker/2008/10/29/what-matters-to-stocks-hint-its-not-the-fed.html
How to Invest in a Bear Market, a Nigerian perspective
Friday, October 24th, 2008AllAfrica.com brings us this article with a perspective on investing niche can help amateur investors not only survive, but capitalize on a bear market like the one the NSE (Nigerian Stock Exchange) is currently undergoing.
A market analyst and investment adviser, Oladipo Adewumi, said the best approach to the market in the bear period is to put money in those equities that have been beaten by the bears but which still parade strong fundamentals.
Such stocks, according to him, cut across the different sectors of the market.
“One of the ways to identify them in any industry or sector is to compare the equities current prices to the trailing, quarterly or forward earnings per share. The higher the earnings per share and the lower the share price of a particular equity, the better the stock is for the investor, all things being equal” he added.
It isn’t surprising to learn that these similar strategies are just good fundamentals that are applicable regardless of geography since worldwide, we are experiencing down markets.
Does the government’s involvement in the stock market frighten you?
Tuesday, October 21st, 2008Sandra Hamilton writes
Until the government gets out of the way and lets the free market be free, then investing in the stock market becomes simply a quest of trying to decide what the government will do next. Unfortunately, the government is a lot more irrational than the general populace and its politicians have agendas we can never know about. I can make a prediction about human action; I have no idea what the government will do next.
What do you think? Are you holding your money out of stocks until the volatility of the government’s involvement is settled?
Are you an Ordinary Investor or will you be a Legendary one?
Monday, October 13th, 2008What is the one thing that legendary the investors get, but ordinary investors don’t? That bear markets are a good thing.
Back in May at Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting, legendary investor Warren Buffett opined “I would offer you a significant sum of money if you could give me the opportunity for all of my stocks to go down 50% over the next month.” Buffett believes in the companies he invests in, and would welcome the opportunity to buy them at a discount.
Everyone knows the saying “buy low and sell high”, but you are never going to complete this equation if you are afraid to buy when the market is low. Maybe these numbers will alleviate some of your fears: Historically bear markets return gains of 5.6% annually. In the long term, that still beats or is close to beating the traditionally more conservative investments like bonds. But here are the real numbers you can’t afford to overlook: Following the last long bear market of 1969 to 1982 was an 18 year bull market that returned 18.5% annually.
Will you be an ordinary investor who gets scared into pulling out of stocks now, thus buying high and selling low, or will you follow the foot steps of the legendary investors and look long term with a mantra of “price versus value?”
Whiplash market
Friday, October 10th, 2008What a wild and crazy ride today. The Dow down near 700 points at one point today and then rallying back to close down only double digits creating the largest intra-day range in history. For us long term investors, a volatile day like this doesn’t matter much in the long run, unless of course you are buying up stocks while while the market is down these last weeks.
This mean, mean Bear
Wednesday, October 8th, 2008It’s not your imagination: This bear is a mean one writes Tom Petruno, the Los Angeles Times financial markets blogger. He is right. The S&P 500 closed down 36.3% from its high one year ago. Although the duration of this current bear is still below average, the percentage drop is in the top 5 of the worst bear markets since Standard & Poor has been measuring them. So what does one do? Well considering October has been a historical “bear slayer”, now could be a great time to move in.
How to Beat the Coming Bear Market
Friday, August 3rd, 2007We all know that it is just a matter of time until the next bear market. Some analysts expect it to come sooner rather than later. Either way, the smart investor has a strategy in place to not only survive the coming bear market, but capitalize on it. Rex Moore of the Motley Fool lays out one such great strategy.
