01.02.07

On investments philosophy

Posted in Untagged, Investment at 8:22 pm by ngkaboon

I have recently cashed in some investments of over 5 years. I am sitting on some paper loss still. For the cash-in portion, I am mostly ahead.

I had a few misconceptions to my trading style. Basically, I follow a buy-and-hold strategy. In general, the strategy worked well, but the money allocation did not. If I had equally distributed my investments, I would have done better. I had most money in two stocks. One is doing okay and the other is down at least 70%. As a result, over the 5 years compound, even with discounted shares, I am only up about 2% per year. Good thing is that I did not lose that much of money but the bad thing is that 5 years have gone and I am pretty much where I started. From a timing perspective, I could not have done better, I started buying as the market loses steam and sold as the share market is hitting new peaks (and I only did 2% CAGR). The first misconception is the lack of money management/risk control. I subscribed to the Buffett-Fischer school of selecting very good stocks but the only problem is that I realized that given my time spent and the information available, there is no way I can be so accurate in picking the right stocks. As such, I need to adopt a money/risk management approach to buying stocks. More concretely, I need to be more distributed in my purchase. Putting it in two baskets is clearly not enough. I need more baskets. Having said that, I am still not a big fan of diversification and I still believe in picking a small pool and making sure this small pool do well as a whole.

Second, timing is of certain importance. For example, my global internet unit trust has lost money since my initial purchase and the fund was introduced after the internet stocks have gone down. Therefore, it looks risky buying at a high or when the trend is moving down, because using the buy-and-hold strategy, it will take a long time to reach the break-even point. If I would to do this again, I would rather buy as it is going up, rather than going down. And I should persists my buying over down period rather than stop (because I had to get married and spend money elsewhere!).

Third, what worked well was my money market fund. Sure, the returns are most likely to be described as pathetic, but the fact that I saved $100 a month for 5 years resulted in a $7k savings. Imagine, if i have saved $200, the savings would be $14k and if I have saved $500, it would be $35K. For that matter, this investment worked so well that I am really better off saving a large pool of money in this type of money market fund and invest the money when the market is really doing bad, or as it is picking up from a bad spell.

10.05.06

My job interests

Posted in Untagged at 8:40 am by ngkaboon

I tend to take the adaptive attitude towards job and the dollar value is a big factor in making some of these decisions.

On the other hand, after these few years of working, I learn more about my strengths and weaknesses, as well as my job interest.

One of my strengths is my scientific and engineering mind. I have downplayed this area of expertise over the years partly because I was never given a proper function to excel in this area and also the opportunities are fewer with the emergence of India and China brainpower. Still, I still have the technical-knowhows and I should look for a job that a normal person have trouble comprehending the technical aspects of things.

One of the buzzwords of my worklife have been value and to a certain extent, I really believe in bringing value to people. I am thus not a good project manager in completing projects, but I think I would be a good requirement analyst who will listen and understand the problem.  Afterall, without understanding the problem, it will be hard to solve a problem and most people are lost in this first part of the game.

Another area of interest is negotiation, policticking (yeah baby!), and brokering “deals”. Carrying the listening to an extreme, it becomes a case of trying to read people’s mind and their logic models, and then to either do what they want or think of ways to alter their mindset. As such, much crazy as it is, I quite often enjoy this aspect of corporate life.

My weaknesses has to be indecisiveness and some form of meritocracy driven superiority complex. As such, I cannot work for incompetent people and I cannot work in very time-sensitive operations where decision have to be made always at a split second.

So, there you have it.