T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
565.1 | blurb from CNBC | SISE::ZELTSERMAN | | Wed Sep 08 1993 15:12 | 5 |
| for whatever it's worth, I saw a blurb on CNBC that how the market
performs the week after labor day is a strong indication of how the
market performs the rest of the year.
|
565.2 | Was that the HallyBurton Bell I heard ringing? | DSSDEV::PIEKOS | Zoo TV | Wed Sep 08 1993 15:16 | 6 |
| The Wall Street Journal just had a story on page C1 yesterday with a headline
similar to "Now is a great time to own stocks"! This is the first "great
time" article I have seen. Usually there is story after story on how nervous
investors have become.
John Piekos
|
565.3 | Peter Lynch has the right idea (IMHO) | LMOPST::AUDIO::MCGREAL | | Thu Sep 09 1993 11:29 | 23 |
|
Peter Lynch (of Fidelity Magellan fame) believes and I quote
"Stop listening to professionals!" To wit you say but HE is a professional.
True. His point is that you can drive yourself crazy trying to time the market,
figure how it will react to this or that economic data or the fact that the
market always behaves like this around this time of year.
Bottom line is watch the fundamentals of the companie(s) you invest.
That's what really matters.
Even if there is a fall in the fall it just means it will be a great time to
buy more of those stocks that have great fundamentals. The stock market can't
change that.
I've done quite well with my investments following this advice.
Please excuse my proselytizing. Half the fun of investing is talking about
what the "market" will do next.
Now. Where did I put my crystal ball.
Pat
|
565.4 | another top fund manager agrees | CADSYS::BOLIO::BENOIT | | Thu Sep 09 1993 11:37 | 7 |
| Ken Heebner of Captial Development feels the same way. He's always in the
market, never times, and concentrates on fundamentals. Ken feels that timing
doesn't do any better than not timing because timing puts you out of the market
during run ups as often as it takes you out during corrections. He must now
something....he's quite the millionaire, and manages billions of dollars!
/mtb
|
565.5 | A plug for market timing | PAMSRC::SKELDING | | Thu Sep 16 1993 18:28 | 34 |
| Heres a plug for market timing...
1. Watching technical indicators, (a lot of them) will tell you what
the world markets are doing NOW. This is a VERY good indication of what
will happen in the near term if read correctly.
2. There are good correlations between the behavior of various markets,
such as gold vs the 30 yr long bond, utilities vs bonds, various market
sectors with underlying commodities. Watching intermarket linkages can
tell you a lot about what will happen on all scales, short and long.
3. It is easy to be a successful value investor at the bottom of a major
market cycle. If you are really a competent value investor then
IT SHOULD BE VERY HARD TO INVEST near the top. This is to say, that you
should not be able to easily find investments that are undervalued to
the market. This is really a form of market timing if you look
at it the right way.
If you trick yourself into buying at a market top because you refuse to
feel the pulse of the current market, you will feel pain. The amount of
pain you will feel depends upon where you are in the market cycle.
We have not had a long term bear market for many years now. But I dont
think you will be very happy dollar cost averaging into a two year bear.
4. So... where are we? I believe that were near a long term market top
but the right interest rate environment could cause a flat market for
some time. Risk / reward does not look great at the moment.
If you want to play... pick the right stocks.
Regards,
Randy Skelding
|
565.6 | Early out | LESARC::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Tue Oct 05 1993 08:51 | 10 |
| Readers might be intersted to hear that John Templeton, Mr. "Remain
fully invested at all times", has sold his entire personal stake in the
Templeton Emerging Markets Fund. He is currently holding cash, saying
there is no hurry to reinvest.
[1] Templeton's record the last 40 years is the envy of many investors.
[2] He's in no hurry to invest right now, conspicuously out of character.
[3] What can we conclude?
John
|
565.7 | Templeton Out of Emerging Mkts Only | I18N::GLANTZ | | Tue Oct 05 1993 09:21 | 9 |
| Gee, the interview with John Templeton that _I_ read quoted him as stating the
reason that he cashed out of the fund bearing his own name is because it was
selling at a premium of over 20%. He went on to add that he intended to
reinvest that money in another emerging markets fund, but he was in no hurry
to do so.
Therefore, I conclude that Templeton is:
[1] following the maxim of selling your overpriced holdings
[2] sees no bargains in emerging market funds (so maybe he is DCAing?)
|
565.8 | | BROKE::SHAH | Amitabh "Leadership DECAF? Yuck!" | Tue Oct 05 1993 10:25 | 7 |
| Re. .6, .7
I read the same as .7, i.e., Templeton saw two very similar funds
run by the same manager, but one having a 20% premium that he could
not justify. The article said that he intends to invest the money
taken out of the first and into the second (without the premium)
over some period of time.
|
565.9 | He's no spring chicken | TLE::JBISHOP | | Tue Oct 05 1993 10:46 | 5 |
| And isn't he over 80? I can imagine that he might be doing
pre-death arrangements (whether setting up Cayman Island
trusts or buying fast cars!).
-John Bishop
|