Yinson dulu 2nd board johor truck company,in 2007 I bought at 1.50,50,000 my average price is 1.00,everyday volumeless until 1 day I sold at 50cts only.from that day the price never fell below 49cts after I sold. if hold until now maybe worth more than 1 mil
American dream,land of opportunity....apple sudah almost bankrupt in the 80's also can make a comeback,trump bankrupt how many times also can make a comeback,which msian stock can be like that?
Apple...very funny....those Apple shareholders now only know about China problems meh?
I already got whatsapp message weeks ago about boycotts of Apple phones....Those carrying iphones in China better hide theirs ever since they kidnap the Huawei girl....SOEs telling employees, no salary increase , no bonus if caught carrying iphones....Love the Chinese unity , don't you?
Last August, Buffett told CNBC that he was not focusing on iPhone "sales in the next quarter or the next year," adding that he liked Apple because there are "hundreds millions of people who practically live their lives" by the iPhone.
See, WB is not "trading" AAPL. He is gonna long it for like >10 years. So probably he doesn't care unless Apple bankrupt?
Haiz.. WB where know these tech trend la.. Report said WB first invested in AAPL in early 2016, that's around $100. In 2 years he almost gained 100%. Isn't he a pro trader also? kiki
WB isn't investing for monetary gains. He just buys the companies he loves and keeps it permanently if everything is well. Not like he needs money to fund Rolls-Royce, mansion, birds kind of things.
No one can replace Steve Jobs.. There isn't anyone in Apple bold enough to create an alien product and bet it win or bust. Every executive just plays safe and earns their millions every year!
THE WAY THIS QQQ HAS DESCRIBE IS IF HAS NO BUSINESS SENSE LOH...!
I remember this qqq mentioned, the samething similiar what he says on jaks when it was rm 1.70 and sendai when it was rm 1.30, but today it is far less than few months ago & it turn out to be a big disaster if u check the price today loh...!!
Bj Graham always say ,u buy with big undervaluation & cheap as it has big margin of safety & u sell to Mr Market when he is optimistic offering to buy at an overvalue price mah...!!
As Per Bj Graham Principle If it is established this insas is highly undervalue, means that it has high margin of safety that means buy mah...!!
On the otherhand if QL is trading at PE 50x with dividend yield less than 0.50% pa, which means overvalue, u should sell to Mr Market without regret loh....!!
Thats why raider see qqq call, most of time is lousy bcos he do not follow the right proper business sense convention mah...!!
His approach is basing on greater fool theory loh...!!
Posted by qqq3 > Jan 5, 2019 10:41 PM | Report Abuse
eddy888 139 posts Posted by eddy888 > Jan 5, 2019 01:39 PM | Report Abuse
I totally agree INSAS is under value & QL is overpriced. If anyone insist to buy or hold QL, you will cry once market index drop to 1500. But your money & you manage the risk. Good luck.
Congratulations on your success and thanks for sharing.
Just some thoughts:
The supply-demand dynamics of top glove’s products may finally turn one day, having had such a good long run, leading to declining profits due to oversupply.
But QL is more prone to re-valuation to half its current price. Still, the share price of QL is miraculously resilient. Many came up to comment critically especially on QL but none suggested short-selling it. That would be interesting.
So, some caution may be in order. Extremely high PE may not be necessarily indicative of unshakable moats all the time.
You can park your cash in bonds for the short term but to be in bonds for the long term is going to be less rewarding for those knowledgeable in equities.
>>> Blog: Fundamental Analysis versus Phillip Fisher’s Business Sense: A case of Inari Vs QL
Jan 6, 2019 08:52 AM | Report Abuse
Dear Mr. Phillip, I quote on Nov 27, 2018 11:47 AM: “When you hold 1 million shares ( after buying for 10 years, share split, steadily up year after year), then you realize kids like 4444 know nothing about business.” Jan 5, 2019 11:03 PM “To be perfectly honest, the bulk of my 2m shares in QL was bought from 2009-2016, I have benefited greatly from share split since then. As such, I am not here to tell you to buy QL or recommend you to buy QL or any stock whatsoever.” Jan 6, 2019 08:15 AM “Just to prove my point, I bought QL in 2009 - 2m shares I bought TOPGLOV in 2010 - 2m shares I bought YINSON in 2012 - 600k shares I bought public bank with me, wife and father in law money in 2012 - 500k shares I am definitely not a one trick sailang pony. Just someone who sticks to his circle of competence. I am not a gambler or emotional person. I started working as engineer with 2k salary, now is 7k almost retiring at 60.” <<<
THIS MESSAGE IS DIRECTED TO MR LONG AS WELL AS 3iii,
There is many way to skin a cat & make monies mah....don be so naive and arrogant as if your way is the only way to make monies mah...!!
Posted by 3iii > Jan 6, 2019 01:56 PM | Report Abuse
>> Posted by 10154899906070843 > Jan 5, 2019 11:03 PM | Report Abuse
I appreciate your gesture sslee. I'll try to give you some further insight on my investment basis as that was how I bought into QL 2009, TOPGLOV 2010, YINSON 2013. And more importantly, how I am still holding onto the shares and adding more today, Even while everyone else started selling far too early.
To be perfectly honest, the bulk of my 2m shares in QL was bought from 2009-2016, I have benefited greatly from share split since then. As such, I am not here to tell you to buy QL or recommend you to buy QL or any stock whatsoever.
That decision is up to you.
All I am presenting to you is the fact that there is a far better way to invest for the long term. When I bought QL in 2009, it was pe28. Inari pe before the cliff drop was around 30. Amazon for a very long time was pe100+. Google, apple, Berkshire all have high PE.
Why? The reason is because investors a willing to pay a premium for a wonderful company. And the reason they are willing to do that is because they get REWARDED.
So my advice is. These are my criteria in stock selection in particular order:
1. Scuttlebutt. Story first and foremost. What is the competitive advantage. How accurately can you identify the business growth will be 10 years from now. 2. Valuation and fundamental analysis on intrinsic value second. Always take this with a pinch of salt, as those figures can change drastically. Books can be cooked. Companies can restate their financial results it not even submit them. 3. Technical analysis on when to buy. Personally I don't worry on this one too much anymore. Timing doesn't really matter much if your expected holding period is 10 years or more.
If you pay peanuts, you'll eventually get bitten by the monkey.
by stockraider > Jan 6, 2019 02:06 PM | Report Abuse
THIS MESSAGE IS DIRECTED TO MR LONG AS WELL AS 3iii, ========
me? I think long's way is the normal way most people can use the stock market to make a real difference, a big improvement in their lives. Long is a big hitter.....for big hitters, no better advise than..........Buy quality. Cheap people get cheap results.
and raid....you and your Insas....I guess every beginner goes through the stage of value traps like this Insas.....but for raider 10 years experience is 1 year X 10......
I think my insas is much better than your jaks loh...!!
Posted by qqq3 > Jan 6, 2019 02:28 PM | Report Abuse
by stockraider > Jan 6, 2019 02:06 PM | Report Abuse
THIS MESSAGE IS DIRECTED TO MR LONG AS WELL AS 3iii, ========
me? I think long's way is the normal most people can use the stock market to make a real difference, a big improvement in their lives. Long is a big hitter.....for big hitters, no better advise than..........Buy quality. Cheap people get cheap results.
and raid....you and your Insas....I guess every beginner goes through the stage of value traps like this Insas.....but for raider 10 years experience is 1 year X 10......
Reading back I just noticed what appoloang said about buying into ql in 2001 and yinson when it was just a trucking company in JB.
I wouldn't have bought those stocks in those days either, you wouldn't have known if it would sink or swim. But buying later, how did I know how to keep investing in the stock?
Thinking back on this fact you really have to ask yourself when should you buy a stock? The secret was very simple and outlined in Peter lunch book one over wall Street which is very easy to grasp.
You shouldn't be buying a a stock when it is cheap. You should buy it when it starts to see success, and you learn about it's growth prospects and when it gains a business advantage over it's competitors. You buy it during its stable growth phase.
You don't buy stock which is recommended by friends and strangers or things you like. You should get it after careful consideration of is business prospects, company financials and upcoming prospects.
Good article to read for most people here. However, this statement here from you puzzles me,
""what is the sacrifice of shareholder value? Anytime a company takes on more outside debt to grow its revenues and earnings, the shareholder value is damaged. Anytime a company dilutes shares to buy companies or gives out dividend, it dilutes shareholder value. (trust me this happens every single time, a company that gives out high dividends usually end up in a bad position)""
Especially the last one.
1) Taking more outside debt sacrifice shareholder value? If return from borrowings great than the costs, it can't be right. This I believe is a typing error from you.
2) A company gives out high dividend usually end up in bad position? A bad position because share price drops? Are we talking about just capital gain, or dividend return is just unimportant and not part of the total return?
I have written a few articles on stocks on high dividends; Padini, Sciientex, Perstima, Uchitech in the links below,
Uchitech in the first link has been a multi-bagger after considering all the dividends and bonus shares although its growth is not worth mentioned about.
In the second link, the total price appreciation is still 60% after 2 years, while the broad market is down by 1.6%, after taking into considerations of dividends.
I have written about many stocks of high dividend yield, and on the whole, they outperform the broad market by a wide margin too.
Most of these companies still grow, but they just need a small portion of its profit to grow because of their high return on capitals, and the rest return to shareholders, to do what they like.
Sorry for the late reply, a return follow up on my opinions.
I also term outside debt as rights issue, iculs, warrants, esos, basically anything that ties back to net profit per share in the long run. If return is greater than costs than obviously it is a good thing in the long run. However, borrowing costs are a fixed liability, while returns can be inconclusive.
2), imagine a company giving out 80% of its net profits as dividends. Where then would it be 5-10 years from now? How would it compete against is peers if it no longer has the means to defend itself? If Apple, Amazon, Google, Alibaba, even Uber and grab had started with a huge dividend policy, do you think they would have had a commanding position that is a monopoly on its own?
It is the age old question, do you have the cookie now? Or 2 cookies tomorrow.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
1) Taking more outside debt sacrifice shareholder value? If return from borrowings great than the costs, it can't be right. This I believe is a typing error from you.
2) A company gives out high dividend usually end up in bad position? A bad position because share price drops? Are we talking about just capital gain, or dividend return is just unimportant and not part of the total return?
This book is the result of the author's many years of experience and observation throughout his 26 years in the stockbroking industry. It was written for general public to learn to invest based on facts and not on fantasies or hearsay....
qqq3
13,202 posts
Posted by qqq3 > 2019-01-05 16:10 | Report Abuse
out of the 10% balance, close to 9% is held by market operators and balance of less than 1% by retailers
really meh? if true....we are all just churning the same 1% and see who live who die......