Diversification is nothing but a protection against ignorance.Care to explain why you think this?
Diversification is nothing but a protection against ignorance.Care to explain why you think this?
Diversification is nothing but a protection against ignorance.
That is stock dependant. For USG I will usually assume no growth for a few years. Ramp up at maybe 2-3% for a few years then have a jump to a new all time high at maybe year 5. I manually assign growth for the first 10 years then assume growth of 3 or 4% for years 10-20.
For soemthing like JNJ, I would assume growth at mybe 7 or 8% for 5 years then 5 or 6% for years 6-10 and 4% for years 10-20.
I then discount all those projected free cash flows to today's dollars. Typically discounting at 9% or greater. I usually check 9 and 11% but sometimes look at 13 and 15% discount rates.
Diversifictaion is not protection against ignorance. It is a sign that you don't know what you are doing. For the right price I would but every penny I own into JNJ, PG, WFC or BRK.
If you are not confident to put 100% of your money into a company, why should you be confident if it is only 5%?
Diversified investing is almost as foolish as excessive speculation.
"Diversification is a hedge against ignorance."
--Buffett
If you do not understand investing completely, diversification is not a bad thing. If you have a clear and defined objective and ideal about where you think you should put your money, diversification is a terrible idea. It depends on the investor.
I personally am investing 100% in one single sector, in two stocks and I feel 100% safe. In fact I'm probably in a safer bet than 99% of all investors, yet my approach isn't for everyone. You have you understand that not everyone knows what they are doing.
Not exactly true. There are certain types of risks that are impossible to predict. Diversification protects you against those. You give up a small amount of return in exchange for a large reduction in risk. I guarantee you Warren Buffet wouldn't advocate putting all your money in one stock as a strategy.
IMO the best strategy for a small value investor is to have 20 to 30 positions. It's just hard to follow that many companies and industries when you are doing it on your own and have a full time job. I know a guy who basically has a hedge fund with 4 or 5 other guys. They have only their own money in it. It just helps to divide up the research hours.
It sounds like you don't understand math well enough to be investing. There is a huge difference between broad diversification like buying a mutual fund, and buying enough securities to reduce company specific risk. That's why there's no hedge fund on the planet that would own a portfolio of two securities. You must be smarter than them though.
Actually, Buffett would tell most investors to just use an index fund. However if you are hand picking stocks, you should only buy if you are willing to put 100% of your money in any stock you buy. Not that you do. He has said this and gone so far as to say that he would be willing to own 100% of WFC and nothing else. The whole point is that if you are truely doing your due diligence, you should be able to confidently put 100% of your money in one stock.
Small investors shoudl have 20 to 30 stocks simply because no one should tell them other wise. 20 to 30 is pretty much the standard broker type talk. 5 is sufficient in reality if you are doing your research correctly. I have about 8 or 9 right now.
What's so great about WFC?
http://finance.yahoo.com/echarts?s=WFC+Interactive#symbol=WFC;range=5y
You'd be down 28% if you put money into this stock 5 years ago.
If the first thing you look at is a stock chart, I can not even begin to explain it. It really is this simple.
Start with the basics:
1) Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.
Can you translate to layman's? I buy WFC 5 years ago at 40. It's never passed 40 since then. Why is this such a good stock again? I have lost 28% since then. If this is true, why the hell would you "put all your money into this one stock"? Please enlighten us. Especially why a stock like this is greater for short term investing in a recession vs gold. Here's your chance, sell on me on why I should put all my money into this stock.
Since 2000 it's only up 100%. Whoopdefcking do. Gold since 2000 is 600% due to the recession.
I don't know what "hatemyjob" was thinking, but $40 was pre-housing crash/recession. The bank probably flirted with bankruptcy, and now appears to have stabilized significantly more than before. It's stock price crashed accordingly, and is now worth less than it "should" be. So... I would buy too, but I'm too busy with C and JPM.
Yep, it took a major hit and corrected. While still not a bad stock, I'm not going to "put all my money into it". You'd be a fool to not put a position in gold/silver right now. This economy isn't going to be coming out of this recession anytime soon.
Your "logic" is far from logical. You are using emotion and leaving out facts.Can you translate to layman's? I buy WFC 5 years ago at 40. It's never passed 40 since then. Why is this such a good stock again? I have lost 28% since then. If this is true, why the hell would you "put all your money into this one stock"? Please enlighten us. Especially why a stock like this is greater for short term investing in a recession vs gold. Here's your chance, sell on me on why I should put all my money into this stock.
Since 2000 it's only up 100%. Whoopdefcking do. Gold (UXG) since 2000 is up 600% due to the recession. A smart investor would invest in both in deflationary times.
Can you translate to layman's? I buy WFC 5 years ago at 40. It's never passed 40 since then. Why is this such a good stock again? I have lost 28% since then. If this is true, why the hell would you "put all your money into this one stock"? Please enlighten us. Especially why a stock like this is greater for short term investing in a recession vs gold. Here's your chance, sell on me on why I should put all my money into this stock.
Since 2000 it's only up 100%. Whoopdefcking do. Gold (UXG) since 2000 is up 600% due to the recession. A smart investor would invest in both in deflationary times.
I think 7% is a little optimistic for JNJ. If you look closely at a most big companies earnings over the past few years all the earnings growth is from cutting costs. There is almost no top line growth. You can't grow year over year just by cutting costs. US GDP is still below 2007 levels in real terms. (although usually DCFs are done in nominal terms)
I don't know what "hatemyjob" was thinking, but $40 was pre-housing crash/recession. The bank probably flirted with bankruptcy, and now appears to have stabilized significantly more than before. It's stock price crashed accordingly, and is now worth less than it "should" be. So... I would buy too, but I'm too busy with C and JPM.
