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November 16, 1999
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How to manage your equity investments
Dhirendra Kumar
After the market shot throught the roof recently, it is time to review what it takes to make equities work harder. This frenzied market rise was after five years of market depression. After a period during 1994-1999 when returns from the stock market were most depressing, it was perhaps understandable that most investors focused on the risk part of the Risk-Reward Equation (high risk = high rewards). And if the market sustains its momentum, the reverse will be true when investors tend to go overboard on equities. It is at these times that you should understand how to manage your equities, and the risks and rewards of investing in common stocks This article is intended to help put stock market valuations and returns in historical perspective and provide some prudent guidelines for individual investors.
The Stock Market Is Volatile:
This extreme volatility is the principal risk of investing in equities.And it stays in investors' memories long after stock prices have crashed. The best way to manage this risk is to invest for a long time frame. Time greatly reduces, though it does not totally eliminate, the volatility in returns from stocks. One can draw at least three conclusions from long-term equity trends. Firstly, time reduces the risks of holding equities. Secondly, there is no guarantee that you will earn the long-term average of 20 per cent a year even if you hold stocks for two decades or more, as this is a historical return. Lastly, years like 1990 and 1991, when the Sensex provided total returns of 33.82 per cent and 91.03 per cent respectively, may already have provided a sizable chunk of the returns that can reasonably be expected over the next several years.
Bear Markets Are Part of Investing
Reasonable Expectations or Surprises:
In recent years, the stock market has provided investment returns that is far below the long-term average. Some measures of stock market value indicate that stocks are currently cheap compared to long-term historical averages. No one knows whether stock valuations will move back toward their long-term averages quickly or slowly, or even when such a trend might begin. Generally, there is considerably lower risks of investing in equities, especially when stock prices are low by traditional measures of value such as price/earning ratios and dividend yields. I am not attempting to predict the direction of the stock market. Instead, I am suggesting that the risks of investing in equities have been reduced in recent years along with the sharp fall in stock prices. Prudent investors will consider the stock market's low current valuations in forming expectations for future returns and in planning their personal finances.
How to Manage Risk:
Investors are better served by using time-tested strategies for managing risk. The following precepts have been used to good effect by successful investors in all sorts of investment climates.
Know Thyself:
Keep Your Balance:
Patience:
Tune Out Market "Noise":
Take Your Time:
If you are in a state of anxiety about the markets, "sell to the sleeping point." I recommend that you do not make large, abrupt changes in the strategic asset allocations that you had determined were right for you. Rather, limit the changes in your portfolio allocations to 10 or 15 percentage points. If you have 65% of your assets in equity funds and feel too nervous, reduce the allocation to 50% or 55% of your portfolio. But don't abandon any type of asset. Keep in mind that investing is a long-term voyage and that the best decision most investors can make is to develop an investment strategy and goal, and then maintain a steady pursuit of that goal. |
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