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Where would CPF money go if it is nominated to a bankrupt? When Madam Lim Lye Kiang sought to claim the $102,000 from CPF which her late sister had left her, she would never have expected that the CPF Board transferred the money to the OA (Official Assignee) to...

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Why you should not buy IPOs As Sheng Siong is launching its IPO next month, I expected a few calls as whenever an IPO is launching. And if you are my client, you know my answer. I decide to write this article so everybody can benefit...

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Questions to ask your Financial Adviser Every Sunday morning when I flip open the newspapers, I always see articles or advertisements regarding "Financial Advisers". Nowadays, just like the once prestigious word "Banker", which is misused in...

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Revision to Nomination of Insurance Nominees Regulation With the onset of the Mental Capacity Act ("MCA") coming into effect on 1st March 2010, the Insurance (Nomination of Beneficiaries) Regulations 2009 ("the Regulations") will be amended to effect 2 changes: The...

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The ABCs of the Financial Advisers Act The title, Financial Adviser, is always mis-used in the industry and misunderstood by the consumers. On 10 October 2002, the Financial Advisers Act came into effect and all financial institutions are...

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How can you outperform Warren Buffett?

Category : Stocks

If you have not noticed, Warren Buffett has “underperformed” S&P 500 index in 2011. Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway slipped 4.7% in 2011, while the Standard & Poor’s 500 index ended essentially unchanged.

What would you have done to outperform Warren Buffett in 2011? Simple, Hold Cash!

This reminds me of an interesting story. Recently, I was doing an investment portfolio review for one of my clients. His portfolio was down 4% in 2011 (wow, it outperformed Warren Buffett!), and he did not seem to be very happy because it was still negative. So I asked him, “what would you have done if I did not manage your portfolio and you were investing on your own”. His replied surprised me, “I would have held cash and I would not have lost money!”

When I recalled his investment risk profile, he indicated that he was balanced and could accept fluctuations with modest return. I also remember that when his portfolio has made some profit in 2010, he came to me to request some top up.

This incident, like some other similar cases, happened in the past few months when the investment market was in chaos. I cannot help thinking that by holding cash in 2011, did you really outperform Warren Buffett?

In Aug 2011, I posted a chart of typical DIY investor behavior as below.

Typical DIY Investor Behavior

Most of the investors will just hold cash at the worst possible time when the market is at the bottom. Straits Times Index has gone up more than 6% year to date. If I were to hold cash for the client, would they ever had these gains?

Many may have forgotten that in 2010, shares of Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway (Class A) have finished the year with a gain of 21.4 percent for 2010, far outperforming the benchmark S&P’s 12.8 percent gain.

Can any investor make money from the market by not investing?

Market Crashed! What should you do now?

Category : Market Commentary

Recently I wrote a blog “Is Cash the King now?“, today I received a friendly call from one of my insurance clients asking how I was doing for the past week. This guy is a DIY stock investor, and I have never managed his portfolio, that probably explains why he is concerned about me. He probably thought my clients were cashing out.

He couldn’t believe that none of my clients are worried and some of my clients even topped up recently. Then he assumed I must be on the short side of the markets, which I am clearly not.

Incidentally, I received an email from my stock brokers advising whose who were “stuck” in the market last week should “sell on technical rebound”. Then he quoted, “as Warren Buffet famously said, Be Greedy when others are Fearful, Be Fearful when Others are Greedy”. (a bit contradicting to me)

When I was in the office, I heard other advisers receiving calls from clients concerning their investments. To me, the fear is definitely in the markets, your friend are fearful, your stock brokers are fearful, even some of the advisers are fearful too, but how many of you are “Greedy when others are Fearful”?

As yourself this question (from Warren Buffett)

“If you want to buy hamburgers tomorrow, should you wish for the price of burgers to fall or rise before you buy?”

Of course you want the price to fall, isn’t it?

But strangely, if you are going to buy an investment, why are you panic when the price of the investment falls?

Below is a typical DIY investors behavior chart (click to enlarge). Ask yourself which point are you at this moment. When markets crash, investors buy, traders sell, speculators cut losses. Which one is for you now?

Typical DIY Investor Behavior