Well if someone followed his philosophy, it should work. I agree on many points.
I'll just say this, you can go and pay 30PE, that is fine, but you better be damn sure its below the discounted net present value of all future cashflows.
If you buy wonderful companies at fair prices. you will do well.
If you buy wonderful companies at ANY price, you will die, unless you hold and just buy rain or shine.
If you used margin buying wonderful companies at any price, you will die.
Rule no.1 - You must be superb in stock picking. Rule no.2 - You must know how the stock market works.
A superb stock is a stock which is expected to make astronomical earnings in the near future. The stock market works in a way where panic sellers lose, composed buyer/holders win.
"the word of the sage of omaha. Reading about benjamin graham, walter schloss, philip fisher, george soros, charlie munger etc"
And then proceed to invest in,
Aokam Perdana, Ekran bhd, and most obviously "undervalued" Renong bhd
All of which had massive debts, Ekran had non stop cash calls.
And Renong, How was it undervalued? Did you rely on UEM word that it was undervalued via the Put contract? Did you do your expected value calculations?
Agree that most investor would be better finding quality stocks than getting into cheap yet seems undervalued stocks because that requires strong psychological and sharp judgement.
Disagree with definition of moat. Moat is the ability to earn an abnormal return above cost (ROIC-CoC) as well as the competitive advantage period (CAP).
There is no relationship between owning 28 stocks and poor performance, as much as I personally prefer concentrated portfolio. Joel Greenblatt has done well owning 20-30 stocks; deep value strategy rely on EV/EBIT has done well with 30-40 stocks.
Company that increase debt might require further scrutiny but it is far from destroying shareholder value. It is about capital allocation. Borrowing cost can be cheap at the right time. And there is no clear definition of 'increase' debt. Debt can go up 100%, from 1% to 2% of profit, is that a lot? It's subjective.
next gems? Vitrox is a possibility....u looking for a moat in Vitrox?.....no moat here...what u get is a company that is very innovative and delivered so far and should continue to deliver.....
For renong, when someone offers a legally binding offer to buy your stock for 4x market value, if you didn't know better, wouldn't you take the arbitrage value?
For aokam, teh soon seng was the kyy of the day. If you read the valuation reports, they had vertical integration and undervaluation with thousands of time concessions and acres of timber land, it was trading far below price to book and even had a pe of 5 once.
Ekran in 1994 won a bid for a small dam in Sarawak without open tender for 7.5 billion. It was called bakun. Imagine a small company winning such a big contact without open tender. Wouldn't you invest in it? In fact, didn't you do the same thing with jaks? Hoping for that ipp to finish completion.
The more things change, the more they stay the same.
I know now.
If I had to choose between layhong and QL in 2017, you know my clear choice. The superb company that commands good valuation. Or the so called value play.
A new sifu in town. Can say this sifu maximize his situation to his advantages. Some other people had such attitude but may not have such opportunity. Bottom line never die attitude, work hard and smart, keep learning and hit hard when you felt that is it. Then pray for luck.
Up until 2001, all my value plays, technical plays, call options, put options, warrants all turn to dust. I had to avoid in-laws and wife and friends and hide in Sabah jungle until 2008 to collect money to buy back face. I bought pbb after it has long run up in after cny bonus in 2012. Overpriced then too.
Important thing is, in no time had I ever had the fear my stock was going to come crashing down, the trauma of waking up at 1 in the morning with cold sweats thinking of how to pay back my friends and family is enough for my entire life. Banks and credit cards calling everyday. Margin calls keep hitting.
I'm sure for everyone the most important thing is to not lose money. Most people try not to lose money by buying cheap companies at cheaper prices. I just choose to pay good prices for great ones.
Ricky yeo: don't be silly. There is a direct correlation between owning too many stocks and having poor performance. The more stocks you have, the more you have to keep track of. The more you keep track of, the higher your error of margin. If you don't believe me, try buying (or even finding) 1000 of your value stocks, all you will have as average performance. Even if you didn't, how do you make sure that you can catalyze distribution of capital to all your 1000 stocks equally? You just can't.
If you don't believe me, we can do the Warren buffet 1 million challenge, you buy 1000 stocks, I'll buy 4. In 10 years let's compare results.
The only people who have different sick recommendations every week are fund managers. And they don't even invest their own money but take your commissions and charge you money to learn how to invest.
Obviously, my screener for moat is based on a ratio. Every business is different, which is why I stick to businesses I know. My concept of moat is very simple to understand, if a company is able to grow revenue and earnings consistently for more than 5 years without taking on excessive debt ( again different business have different gearings) or excessive dilution of shares(via esos, warrants, share placements), then that is a sign for me to study deeper on the company. Anything else 1. Friends/fund manager recommendations 2. Land/asset/cash and equivalent 3. Price to earnings/ price to book/ net asset value
All these are to serve as only a guide and taken with a pinch of salt. They mean absolutely nothing, especially when you are a minority shareholder unable to unlock value.
Posted by 10154899906070843 > Jan 4, 2019 09:09 PM | Report Abuse
Ricky yeo: don't be silly. There is a direct correlation between owning too many stocks and having poor performance. The more stocks you have, the more you have to keep track of. The more you keep track of, the higher your error of margin. If you don't believe me, try buying (or even finding) 1000 of your value stocks, all you will have as average performance. Even if you didn't, how do you make sure that you can catalyze distribution of capital to all your 1000 stocks equally? You just can't.
If you don't believe me, we can do the Warren buffet 1 million challenge, you buy 1000 stocks, I'll buy 4. In 10 years let's compare results. ==========
another gem...there is really no way to make it meaningful without narrowing it to 5 or less........
no decent mech eng grads get paid overtime liao in sabah... thats for some diploma holders...
what technician are you?
pump fitter?
.............
I put my head down, worked my ass off as an engineer in remote Sabah, took every extra overtime available, earned my paycheck, paid back every single cent to all my friends and family, and saved my money in the ASB account of my technicians and friends (at 10% p.a why not )
What moat do QL have?? Its brand is just so average in Malaysia, oversea nobody heard of. Ppl buy egg or surumi will not purposely goto choose QL brand la, instead there are dozen of other eggs,surumi brands in the market etc. Its not like NESTLE, APPLE, so stop talking about MOAT in QL, its imaginary.
moat to be has only one meaning the possibility of the business to be replicated. It can be strong or weak. When a business cannot be copied, its irreplacable and therefore u can demand high margin. When u think of it, all good business have high margin.
Think of it this way can macdonald ever be replicated? it can never be copied therefore it has a very strong moat. To me QL has some sort of weak moat or u could call it niche but far fetch from irreplacable.
Probability, you seem to spend vitriol without any sense whatever. If you have never worked for Mitsubishi epc, George Kent, boilermech then you probably work for some pitiful chinaman engineering firm that never pays for quality work. I am an engineering manager for a multinational company, and I sign off on overtime and outstation pay for my engineers all the time.
Maybe you are not qualified enough to work at a epc?
Funny thing is, you only know how to comment, but your biggest 2016 picks were both penny stocks which I have been even heard of before. Hexza and jaycorp. I'm sure you paid low pe and good prices for those stocks and enjoyed your big huge profit in your investment. But would you have been willing to keep those stocks for the long term? Would you have added more every quarter into your 2016 investments? No you would have not had the skills or the confidence to.
me small...you already attack me on my investing skills liao...how did that came about? is that relevant here? its not me who claimed i am stock investment expert...
its you who had claimed you are an eng manager
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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....
Flintstones
1,762 posts
Posted by Flintstones > 2019-01-04 17:51 | Report Abuse
The sifu spoke.