By Dan Hassey
Updated: Sunday, April 27 2008 09:04:AM
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BEST TRADING AND INVESTMENT PRINCIPLES FROM INVESTMENT AND TRADING GURUS
Click Rightside Live to listen to the archived podcast on investment and trading advice from investment gurus.
11/9/2007 3:51:58 PM
Rightside LIVE (48 min.)
Rightside LIVE The RightSide Advisor Staff lists the best advice and principles from investment and trading gurus.
The investment/trading advice and principles below are gleaned from investment books and financial and investment press.
From Money Masters by John Train
Have a discipline - Pick several styles and know them well. Know when it the discipline is working and when it is not working. If it is not working sit the market out. Any successful approach is bound to fail at some point.
Know what you’re doing very well
Flexibility
Be realistic
Be patient
From Market Wizards, Jack D. Schwager
Look for hysteria and go against it.
Never put more than 5% into a trading idea
Understand risk management
Under trade
Don’t personalize the market
Be willing to make and accept mistakes
Don’t risk significant amounts of money in front of key reports
If you don’t place a trade you can’t win, if you loose everything you can’t trade.
All great trades are seekers of truth
Have conviction but have flexibility to know when your wrong and exit the position
Make sure odds are in your favor
Act independently
Don’t trade if you have other stresses in your life.
From Soros on Soros
There is no shame in making a mistake, only in failing to correct it.
From Classics An Investors Anthology
It is impossible to produce superior performance unless you do something from the majority.
The time of maximum pessimism is the best to time buy and the time of maximum optimism is the best time to sell.
The time to sell an asset is when you have found a much better bargain to replace it.
From Investment Gurus, Peter J. Tanous
Have discipline
Have focus
Work hard, if you look at 10 investment ideas you will find 1 good one, if you look at 20 you will find 2, if you look at 100 you might find 10.
Allot appropriate amount of time for your research, investing and trading
Sell if the reasons why you bought the stock has changed or look at each position as you had bought today, would you still buy, if you can’t say yes consider selling.
From Winning on Wall Street, Martin Zweig
Let your profits run and cut your losses
Don’t fight the tape.
The trend is your friend.
Don’t swim against the tide
From Stocks for the Long Run, Jeremy J. Siegel
There is some evidence that contrarian strategies of increasing stock exposure when most investors are bearish and decreasing exposure when they are bullish can improve long-term results.
Small value stocks appear to significantly outperform small growth stocks.
There is evidence that many calendar anomalies persist over time, e.g., the January effect, the September effect, intra-month returns.
Stocks in the long-run, a lifetime, has outperformed all investment classes and will keep you ahead of inflation.
Start investing now and stay invested.
From What Works on Wall Street
Buying Wall Street’s current darlings with the highest price to earnings ratios is one of the worst things you can do.
Last year’s biggest losers are the worst stocks you can buy.
From John Neff on Investing, James P. O’ Shaughnessy
Reasons to sell
-Fundamentals deteriorated
-The price approached our expectations
-Stick to a firm selling strategy
Play to your strengths
From It’s When You Sell That Counts, Donald Cassidy
Stop trying to protect your ego; focus on your capital
Overcome commission and tax phobia
Recognize crowd psychology
Take time out
Accept the irrelevance of your personal cost basis
Separate the stock and company
Know what institutions are doing
Know the anatomy of a loss
Have a price objective
Expect rotational group rotation
From Contrarian Investing, David Dreman
No stock position should be more than 5% of a portfolio
No industry or theme should be more than 20% of a portfolio
From Investment Titans, Jonathan Burton
It is better to hold a basket of unrelated investments. Diversification provides a smoother ride over time.
Minimize expenses
Investors who stay cool will outperform those who act emotionally
The market is not an accommodative machine and owes you nothing.
Optimism, overconfidence and confusing chance with skill are 3 of the biggest errors of judgment that investors make.
The future is unpredictable and you have to make decisions based on that assumption.