Reading Time: 4 Minutes
Welcome to Autumn everyone!
The year is well and truly under-way but geez laweez, can you believe it’s MARCH already!
Surely there’s a saying somewhere about how time just FLIES.
I’ve been a pretty busy bee so far this year, what with the new property purchase (read here) as well as the hunt for the next addition.
But I’m not the only one!
There’s a couple of my friends who have also been very busy with their investment journey… especially my esteemed colleague Light Beam.
Light Beam’s certainly off to a flyer in the Australian stock market – by my estimates he’s up a good $20k or so year-to-date.
I’ll take those returns ANY DAY (who else wants to know how he did it?)

And I was thinking about Light Beam when I read an article in one of the investment magazines last night.
It was about “20 Tips on Investing in the Stock Market” and written by Marcus Padley, a well renowned Aussie stockbroker who is often quoted in the media.
I certainly think there are truths to this so thought I’d share his wisdom with us all:
The Twenty
“1.
Fifty percent of making money from the stock-market is not picking the best stocks; it’s avoiding the bad stocks. So why does everyone spend 100% of the time finding the good stocks?
2.
Pick all the weeds and you are left with the flowers. Pick all the flowers and you are left with the weeds. Pick the weeds. A small weed is the best weed. Take losses, not profits.
3.
Index returns are a fantasy. They are heavily marketed as an expectation but they’re just fantasy. It’s no wonder your fund manager under-performs. The index perfectly compounds dividends, costlessly replenishes the bad stocks with good stocks, pays no dealing costs or management fees, and is therefore not reality. I am amazed we all allow ourselves to be bench-marked to it. It is hard to beat. And the relentless sniping from the sidelines that fund managers are idiots because they all under-perform the market is not a reflection of the manager’s incompetence but the speaker’s ignorance.
4.
Don’t bother predicting anything. Bear markets start and bull markets end when the market says so and it will only become obvious in hindsight. Best you go with the trend until it ends and react when it does, rather than predict the beginnings and ends, which is called guessing.
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5.
If you have a mortgage, every dollar you lose goes on your debt and you pay interest on it, possibly over 20 years. On that basis, with interest rates at 5% for the next 20 years (generous assumption), every dollar you lose costs you $2.50 and every dollar you pay off is worth over twice as much as it costs. Get on the right side of compounding.
6.
Don’t buy a portfolio, buy stocks, and one day your portfolio will miraculously appear. Focus on stocks, not financial marketing about diversification. The only reason professionals tell you to diversify is so that you can’t sue them.
7.
Only the unexpected moves a share price. You will make more money guessing what everyone doesn’t know abut a stock than you will ever make finding what everyone knows about a stock.
8.
A diversified portfolio of 20 stocks you ignore is more risky than a portfolio of one stock you know everything about.
9.
You cannot do it “the Warren Buffet way” or there would be a fund manager doing it, we would all be invested and we’d all be billionaires. Warren Buffet is not reality. Warren Buffet is a marketing tool for people who can’t sell their own products on their own merits.

10.
The market never crashes up. It falls three times as fast as it rises because loses have three times the emotional impact of a gain. Fear is a bigger driver than confidence and “it takes five minutes to be fearful but you cant get confident in five minutes”. Stock-markets rise and fall quickly. You have to react quickly to losses. In a bull market you have time. In a bear market you don’t.
11.
If you ever find yourself standing up and punching the air in delight, it means “sell”.
12.
Catching the knife. There is only one thing a falling share price tells you and it’s not “buy me!”
13.
Swim with the tide. In a bull market the core virtue is “participation”. In a bear market the core virtue is “non-participation”.
14.
Sophisticated investors: in a bull market you are a sophisticated investor when your accountant confirms you are. It takes a bear market to find out whether you are.
15.
Watch the crowd, feed the crowd, manipulate the crowd but don’t be the crowd. Bear markets end when the headlines are terrible. Bull markets end when the headlines are euphoric.

16.
The three biggest weaknesses of an amateur investor: not selling, not selling, not selling.
17.
The other weaknesses of the amateur investor: not caring, not watching, blaming other people, crusading, being emotional, caring about the purchase price, being long term, being short term, making grand declarations about the future, wasting time on macro rumination, rushing, bothering to run a diversified portfolio you could buy for $19.99, quoting Warren Buffet and thinking you sound clever.
18.
The only effortless way to get rich is to be born rich. But you only get one shot at it and people far less capable than you always seem to succeed at it.
19.
The second best way to get rich – but it requires a little more effort – is to marry rich. The best advice my parents never gave me: if faced with two equally attractive potential mating partners for life, marry the rich one.
20.
Be nice to your children. They will be the first generation of investors who have no recollection of the 2008 financial crisis and the next generation capable of a bout of irrational exuberance. It will be these delicate little cherubs who eventually pay top dollar for your assets.”
~~~
I have to admit that I shamelessly copied this down word for word, so all credit and insights must go to Marcus – BUT you can see why I respect and follow him right? He’s got a knack for cutting out the BS and telling it like it is.
Which one of his tips do you particular like? Let me know in the comments below!
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