Tuesday, 30 May 2017

Seven Investing Tips from Dr.Neoh Soon Kean

Dr.Neoh Soon Kean is considered to be one of the successful stock investors in Malaysia. He is a founder of Dynaquest, a Penang-based investment and consulting firm.

He strongly believes that equity investment is the best way for an average person to accumulate wealth.
In the 29th May 2017 edition of The Edge Weekly, he shared 7 investing tips to the general public. I would like to summarise the key points below:

1)    Best time to buy is when market is depressed and best time to sell is when it is the most optimistic (Be a contrarian).

2)  Buy progressively over a period of time as few people are good in market timing (Buy progressively).

3)      Do not concentrate into just few stocks unless you have very good stock picking skill. With a diversified portfolio, if 70% of the shares make good money, Dr.Neoh cited he will be very happy although he could possibly lose the remaining 30% (Diversify).

4)      Do not be frightened by market decline

5)      Do not be afraid to take profit if one or more of your stocks that have made substantial gains.

6)    Choose stocks with good dividend yields, low price-earning ratio and high cash flow. Few speculative stocks have produced profit in the long run (Buy on fundamentals).

7)    Nobody is perfect, even Warren Buffet makes mistakes (Do not expect to be right every time).
Overall, the investing tips shared by Dr.Neoh resonate well with me and it serves as a constant reminder. Nevertheless, investing process may not be as simple as the above unless we assume all investors are rational being, sometimes emotional aspect could cloud an investor’s investment decision, hence the investment result.

That’s why some investors sell winners in the equity portfolio, and hold on the losers because realising losses can be emotionally painful.

Some investors own 10 stocks but fail to view the 10 stocks from portfolio perspective. Even though 8 stocks make money, if the losses from the 2 stock are huge, we will still be suffering loss from total return perspective.
I will shed more light on emotional aspect of investing in the future J

4 comments:

  1. Thanks for sharing bro. Looking forward to the emotional aspect post next.

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  2. Thank you bro Kenny for your feedback! I have published an article on emotional aspect of investing i.e How to avoid this behavioral pitfall in investing where confirmation bias issue is highlighted:)

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  3. All the tips are useful but the one the one which I like most is that buying the property at the time market is down and depressed and selling the property at the time when market is high it is truly said and do not afraid from this try to take the advantage from private equity Australia

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