A reader sent a query on an older post "My Rules for Investing":
Great Post!!.
A generic query. Even after repeated warnings a lot of us have bought a few stocks based on TV channel/CNBC/Guru's tips etc..which results in
a) Too many stocks in portfolio around 35
b) Some are down around 25% & unfortunately i have no investment thesis & hence no plan on what to do with them.
What can be plan of action here, should i sell them at a loss, build a thesis and then accordingly hold or sell the stock or finally keep them in cold storage and hope that after 3 years they have appreciated :)
Great Post!!.
A generic query. Even after repeated warnings a lot of us have bought a few stocks based on TV channel/CNBC/Guru's tips etc..which results in
a) Too many stocks in portfolio around 35
b) Some are down around 25% & unfortunately i have no investment thesis & hence no plan on what to do with them.
What can be plan of action here, should i sell them at a loss, build a thesis and then accordingly hold or sell the stock or finally keep them in cold storage and hope that after 3 years they have appreciated :)
Here is my response. I am putting it up here so that others who may have a similar predicament, can benefit and if anyone has a better idea, can share it with me :-)
Firstly, stop listening to all "gurus" on TV for your
financial health :-) If they knew which stock would do well, they would
reverse mortgage their houses and buy those stocks :-)
For
your current holdings, the only option you have is to build conviction.
Here is a quick and dirty process that you can follow:-
- Take one or two stocks a day and go through their financial numbers and basic business (what it does)
- Check on debt levels
- Check if company pays regular dividends
- Check if sales and profits are either constant or growing over the last 5 years (atleast) - the growth need not be every year but on a average 3 out of 5 years there should be reasonable growth.
- Check the RoE & ROCE. Take a real hard look if they are below 15%
- Check if there is +ve operational cash flow for atleast last 3 out of 5 years
Also, remember once you have a set of companies that you like and understand, it may be a better bet to keep buying into those than always looking for stocks not in your portfolio.
"I measure any new purchase against what I like least in portfolio now and unless it meets the test, I'll just buy more of something in the portfolio." -- Warren Buffet