Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Interview with Basant Maheshwari – PDF

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Simple Ideas to Help You Become A Smarter Investor

Interview with Basant Maheshwari – PDF
01 Oct 2014 09:58 am | share on Twitter

I have received tremendous response for my recent interview of Mr. Basant Maheshwari. Thank you tribe members!

A lot of readers have requested me for the combined PDF of all parts of the interview, which I am happy to share now.

Click here to download the PDF (which is almost the size of a small book :-) ), or simply click on the image on the right.

Secondly, please note that admission to the third batch of my premium course in Value Investing – The Safal Niveshak Mastermind – closes on 5th October.

So if you are still waiting on the sidelines and would like to get along with 700+ students from 15+ countries who’ve decided to move away from the darkness of ignorance to the light of knowledge about how to invest independently, sensibly, and successfully in the stock market, click here to join Mastermind now!

      
Feel free to email me at: vishal@safalniveshak.com.
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Monday, September 29, 2014

Mastermind Value Investing Course: Less than 25 early bird seats remain!

Dear Tribe Member,

Trust you are doing great.

125+ members have already joined the third batch of my premium Value Investing course - The Safal Niveshak Mastermind - to learn the frameworks and processes used by the world's most successful investors...

...so that they can work towards reinventing how they invest and create their personal financial freedom.

Now, I have less than 25 early bird seats remaining that come at a special discount of Rs 1,000/-.

I'm sure you would not want to miss out on joining The Safal Niveshak Mastermind at this special discount, or before admission closes in about 5 days.

If you are willing, please click on the following link to subscribe to the Course right away –

http://safalniveshak.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=dfffd9e0dc3c1e2bec89cab7a&id=81e7751ecb&e=2aea5de6c3

With respect,
Vishal

P.S. If you face any difficulties while subscribing, please call me at +91-80970 73918 or reply to this email.

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Sunday, September 28, 2014

Seeking Wisdom in the Age of Information

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Simple Ideas to Help You Become A Smarter Investor

Seeking Wisdom in the Age of Information
29 Sep 2014 10:50 am | share on Twitter

T.S. Eliot posed the question more than fifty years ago – “Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge? Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?”

These questions find much greater relevance fifty years later, in an age of accelerated information and information overload, when people are living larger parts of their lives on Facebook and Twitter than with their families and 'real' friends.

The rate and way in which we receive information has changed dramatically – from newspapers and television to constant news online. In fact, we have made our personal lives available to the world in tweetable and retweetable moments.

Now, as much as we try to stop consuming the vast amounts of information coming at us, we wrestle against the paranoia of 'missing out' on important information or being out of the loop on something.

This is especially true when it comes to stock market information. As if the second-by-second changing stocks prices were not enough, we are seeing analysis of these changes at a similar pace if not faster.



Mastermind Value Investing Course: Less than 35 early bird seats remain for my premium online course in Value Investing. So, if you are interested and wish to save Rs 1,000/- in early bird discount, I invite you to join Mastermind right away. Click here to join now.

Every 0.01% move in the inflation is analyzed threadbare and trading strategies laid out to deal with the same. Every price movement is justified as if the analyst knew it coming. And we, as consumers of such information, believe every such spoken or written word as a gospel truth.

We Indians don't want to know everything, but that is what the audibly smart but noisy news anchors force on us, day after day, night after night. And that's not their problem. Spewing endless amount of information and making noise is what earns them their bread. And they simply say what we want to hear.


In The Little Book of Behavioral Investing, James Montier writes…

When it comes to investing, we seem to be addicted to information. The whole investment industry is obsessed with learning more and more about less and less, until we know absolutely everything about nothing. Rarely, if ever, do we stop to consider how much information we actually need to k now in order to make a decision.

As Daniel J. Boorstin opined, "The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance – it is the illusion of knowledge."

Now, the problem with information is not that it is diverting and generally useless, but that it is toxic.

Too Much Information is Dangerous
In The Signal and the Noise: Why So Many Predictions Fail — but Some Don’t, Nate Silver writes…

The instinctual shortcut that we take when we have "too much information" is to engage with it selectively, picking out the parts we like and ignoring the remainder, making allies with those who have made the same choices and enemies of the rest.

Alvin Toffler, writing in the book Future Shock in 1970, predicted some of the consequence of what he called "information overload". He thought our defence mechanism would be to simplify the world in ways that confirmed our biases, even as the world itself was growing more diverse and more complex.

That's what Charlie Munger defines as commitment and consistency bias. We want to consume so much information because we are perennially in search of the ones that are consistent with our worldviews.

So if I believe Opto Circuits is a great business, I will scour for information that proves it is a great business, and dismiss every information that tells me how foolish I am in my belief.

If I believe the Sensex is heading towards 40,000, I will keep myself busy searching for information that validates my belief, and ignore every person who tells me how the stock market does not move in a straight line.

Anyways, Nate Silver writes in his book…

…if the quantity of information by 2.5 quintillion bytes per day, the amount of useful information almost certainly isn't. Most of it is just noise, and the noise is increasing faster than the signal. There are so many hypotheses to test, so many data sets to mine – but a relatively constant amount of objective truth.

Then, Nassim Taleb writes in Fooled by Randomness

…minimal exposure to the media should be a guiding principle for someone involved in decision making under uncertainty — including all participants in financial markets.

Taleb's key argument is that what is reported in the media is noise rather than information (now, that's even worse!), but most people do not realize that the media is paid to get your attention.

You see, most of the information that stuffs our ears and eyes everyday is…

1. Unusable: If your actions or behaviour will not be changed by the information coming in, then the information is likely noise. If an event has no effect on your long-term strategy, then ignore the noise. Like what's happening in Syria, and Scotland.

2. Untimely: If you're not going to use the information you hear in the near future, and if the story could change by the time you're ready to use it, the information is noise. Just about a year back, I heard a reputed stock research house in India predicting the "End of India" when the economy was down and so were the stock markets. The same guys, in just a year's time, are selling the "India's Next Megatrends” story, when stock valuations look near their peak!

Frequently changing your views of the stock market when you're a long-term investor is a bad habit. The action might end up doing you harm if it changes your behaviour – so stop looking and stop seeking.

3. Distracting: Unwanted information can easily distract you from your long-term goal. Television anchors screaming at us so loudly that we don't dare disagree with them doesn't make their advice any better than average.

Anyways, apart for these, most information and noise you hear day in and day out is based on what someone thinks will happen. And thus it is hypothetical.

This is even true when CEOs themselves appear on business channels and predict (often under force) about their next quarter's earnings. Even if the person is right, the information is practically useless, and often misleading.


We Need Less Information, More Wisdom
Now, what is this elusive quality called wisdom? How do we get it?

First, let’s begin by taking a look at the four levels of thinking, as per the DIKW Model.

The first level is data – simple facts and figures. Example – Suzlon's stock is trading at Rs 14.

Next we have information, which is data that’s been collected and organized. For example – Suzlon's stock is down 97% from its all time high. Information is a reference tool. It is something we turn to when trying to create something else.

The third level is knowledge. For example – Suzlon's stock has crashed because the business has taken a huge hit owing to the decline in demand for wind power equipments worldwide and the company's extremely stretched balance sheet.

Knowledge is information that we have digested and now understand. Organized as knowledge, the information we have collected is given a context.

The fourth and final level is wisdom. For example – Suzlon is a gruesome business on account of its high capital intensity, dependence on government regulations, and the management's extremely poor capital allocation track record. And given my philosophy of buying only quality business, I must avoid the stock.

Now, this wisdom may seem indistinguishable from knowledge. But they are two different things. Often, what we find touted as wisdom is simply opinion.

Knowledge is not wisdom. There is a big difference. Wisdom is the proper use of knowledge. To be more precise, wisdom is knowledge that has been applied in a way that takes into account all its pertinent relationships and that is consistent with universal laws.

Someone has explained the difference between information, knowledge, and wisdom through this beautiful chart (only that he could’ve connected the dots in the wisdom chart)…


Now, too much information can be like a Catch-22 situation. While it adds to our knowledge, it can be a block to our wisdom.

This is because we can be so busy trying to process more and more information, that we don’t have the time for the quiet contemplation that is essential for the development of wisdom.

How to Avoid the Information Noise
Life might be a race against time but it is enriched when we rise above our instincts and stop the clock to process and understand what we are doing and why.

A wise decision requires reflection, and reflection requires a pause. And you can pause only when you say NO to unwanted information.

It is essential then, that we learn to let the unwanted information we receive go in one ear and out the other and to get the knowledge we need, to stop somewhere in between.

And how do we do that? Well, here's something I practice to avoid the unwanted information to corrupt my mind, and instead focus on my pursuit of wisdom –

  • I don't watch the television, especially when it's on.
  • I don't read newspapers, and not many magazines.
  • I don't get involved on online discussions, especially stock forums.
  • I don't maintain my stock portfolio online, which helps me avoid extreme emotions that accompany changing stock prices.
  • I make my investment decisions with the help of checklists, and not readymade reports or recommendations.
  • I don't try to seek perfect information on companies I analyse (that's an unproductive use of my limited time).
  • I focus on just 4-5 most important characteristics of a business, which helps me ask better questions – like how sustainable and profitable is the business going to be 10 years down the line, how does the balance sheet looks like, what is the management doing with cash, and how seriously is the stock overvalued or undervalued.

All this leaves me enough time to focus on seeking wisdom through re-reading things like –

These are places where the real wisdom lies. At most other places, you will find just information, and too much noise.

Conclusion
It is interesting that armed with mountains of information, we have turned arguing into a national pastime – that's what has created Super Prime-Times on the bubblevision (aka, television).

In a recent post on Brain Pickings, Maria Popova shared an essay on seeking wisdom in the age of information. She wrote…

We live in a world awash with information, but we seem to face a growing scarcity of wisdom. And what's worse, we confuse the two. We believe that having access to more information produces more knowledge, which results in more wisdom. But, if anything, the opposite is true — more and more information without the proper context and interpretation only muddles our understanding of the world rather than enriching it.

This barrage of readily available information has also created an environment where one of the worst social sins is to appear uninformed. Ours is a culture where it's enormously embarrassing not to have an opinion on something, and in order to seem informed, we form our so-called opinions hastily, based on fragmentary bits of information and superficial impressions rather than true understanding.

"Knowledge," Emerson wrote, "is the knowing that we cannot know."

The Dutch philosopher Spinoza suggested that wisdom is seeing things sub specie eternitatis, that is, in view of eternity.

A fundamental principle of wisdom is to have a long term perspective; to see the big picture; to look beyond the immediate situation.

That's a great advice for you as an investor – to have a long term perspective; to see the big picture, and to look beyond the immediate situation. That's the dawn of wisdom.

But them, wisdom requires humility. You must be teachable. You must be willing to live with understanding, with meaning, and with wisdom.

But are you willing and ready?

The nation wants to know! :-)

      
Feel free to email me at: vishal@safalniveshak.com.
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Friday, September 26, 2014

I Own the World’s Best Business, and So Can You

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Simple Ideas to Help You Become A Smarter Investor

I Own the World's Best Business, and So Can You
27 Sep 2014 08:55 am | share on Twitter

I got a couple of emails from readers a few days back. The first email read…

Vishal, I would like to start a business of my own where I can put my passion of teaching Math into practice, and also earn my living out of it. I really love the way you are conducting your own business. So can you help me with the tools to start my own business?

The second email read…

Is it really possible to start a new small business that also becomes profitable over the years, given that there is so much competition all around? Also, do I really need to quit my job to start something of my own like you have done? I am not yet in a position to give up the security of a regular paycheque.

Well, here is something I wrote an year ago that is my best answer to the above two emails. I am sure many others also feel this constant urge of starting something of their own so that they can take their life’s control in their own hands.

If you are one of them, I hope you find reading what follows worthwhile and helpful in guiding you in your own journey.



Mastermind Value Investing Course: Less than 50 early bird seats remain for my premium online course in Value Investing. So, if you are interested and wish to save Rs 1,000/- in early bird discount, I invite you to join Mastermind right away. Click here to join now.

I Own the World's Best Business, and So Can You
First, a question – Which is the world's oldest and toughest profession?

If you don't know the answer, well, it's parenting.

Now what's the most dangerous? Fishing, believe it or not. Along with flying airplanes.

The one with the worst pay? Well, that's of dishwashers or labourers, who scrape the bottom of the income barrel.

If you'd rather earn the big bucks, you're better off learning to knock people out. No, you don't need to be a boxer to do that…just an anesthesiologist.

Or you can try becoming a heart surgeon or gynaecologist. Believe it or not, CEOs don't fall into the top 10!

Thursday, September 25, 2014

Mastermind Admissions: Few Early Bird Seats Remain!

Dear Tribe Member,

Trust you are doing fine.

Yesterday, I opened admissions to the third batch of my eight-months online course in Value Investing - The Safal Niveshak Mastermind.

The fee for this Course is Rs 12,500/- (incl. taxes), but I am offering a Rs 1,000/- early bird discount to the first 150 subscribers.

Now, at the close of the first day of admissions yesterday, more than 50% of these early bird seats were taken up.

So, if you are interested to join the Mastermind course and don't want to miss out on the early bird offer, I invite you to subscribe now.

You can subscribe to Mastermind on this page - http://safalniveshak.us2.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=dfffd9e0dc3c1e2bec89cab7a&id=cf5cfa2464&e=2aea5de6c3

You see, when you join Mastermind, you get along with 550+ students from 15+ countries who've decided to move away from the darkness of ignorance to the light of knowledge about how to invest independently, sensibly, and successfully in the stock market.

Sounds good?

I look forward to your subscription.

With respect,
Vishal

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Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Mastermind Value Investing Course: 3rd Batch Admission Now Open!

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Simple Ideas to Help You Become A Smarter Investor

Mastermind Value Investing Course: 3rd Batch Admission Now Open!
25 Sep 2014 12:01 am | share on Twitter

Admission to the third batch of The Safal Niveshak Mastermind – my eight-month online course in Value Investing – is now open, and will remain so for the next 10 days.

Click Here to Join Mastermind Now

My idea through Mastermind is simple – to help you with a simple, common-sense approach to successful investing, so that you can avoid the uncertainty and outlandish time you would otherwise spend doing it all alone.

If you are interested to know more about the Course before your subscribe, I invite you visit the Mastermind website.

I've lined up a lot of things that you will receive when you become a part of The Safal Niveshak Mastermind. Here're the key ones…

  • 50+ lessons (HTML and PDF) and few hours of video classes that will help you learn the nuances of Value Investing and how you can apply it to create long-term wealth through stock investing.
  • Lessons on identifying moats and analyzing specific sectors to help you build your circle of competence.
  • Lessons on building a latticework of mental models – the Charlie Munger way – to make better investment decisions.
  • Lessons on calculating Intrinsic Values of stocks.
  • Lessons on creating a portfolio of high-quality stocks.
  • Exclusive Forum to participate in learning exercises and discuss practical examples so that you can gain experience in doing your own independent analysis.

Over the past three years, I've sifted through a mountain of amazing books, documents, lectures, websites, and the last eleven years of my personal experience as an investor – to ensure that I bring the best ideas and lessons for you in investing and building wealth.

The goal of The Safal Niveshak Mastermind Course is simple – To help you get richer every single day.

This is your opportunity to become a simpler, sensible, long-term investor, and avoid the uncertainty and outlandish time and pain that you would otherwise spend doing it all alone.

Here are the key features of the Course –

  • 100% online, self-study course
  • Convenient 24X7 online availability of all lessons, as soon as I release them
  • Downloadable PDF notes for all lessons
  • Downloadable basic excel models and templates
  • Members-only Forum for discussions and performing exercises after each lesson
  • Quizzes to test your understanding of key concepts
  • Premium access to the exclusive Mastermind website

Now, if you are willing and ready…

Let Me Offer You a Deal
The Safal Niveshak Mastermind, with all its invaluable contents and benefits as I have mentioned above, is priced at Rs 12,500/- (incl. taxes).

However, if you are among the first 150 subscribers, you can claim an early-bird discount of Rs 1,000.

Click Here to Join Mastermind Now

If you have any further question(s) about the Course, please write to me at vishal@safalniveshak.com, or call me at +91-8097073918.

      
Feel free to email me at: vishal@safalniveshak.com.
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Tuesday, September 23, 2014

When Long-Term Thinking is a Terrible Idea

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Simple Ideas to Help You Become A Smarter Investor

When Long-Term Thinking is a Terrible Idea
24 Sep 2014 10:26 am | share on Twitter

During my evening walk yesterday, I was with a 75-year old gentleman who seemed fitter than I am, walked faster than me, had a wider smile than I can ever manage, and talked much more than I do in a few days.

During the ninety minutes we walked together, we talked about our lives, careers, and investing.

"What do you do for a living, young man?" he asked me.

"I am a blogger and an investor," I replied.

"What kind of an investor are you?" he asked back.

"Well, a long term investor in the stock market," I said.

"Long term? Great! Even I have been a long term investor all my life," he told me. "Long term investing makes a lot of sense."

"Yeah it does," I said. "Having a long-term thinking is always good."

"Well, not always, son!" he replied.

"Why do you say so?" I asked.

"Long-term thinking is definitely a great way to live as an investor, but it's a terrible way to live a life."

Now this is something I wasn't expecting. "But why do you say so?" I asked him.

"If you only think about the long term, about the future, how will you live in the present?"

I personally believe that there's a great charm in living in the moment, but the way this gentlemen expressed it was something that really led me to wonder.

"It’s a natural inclination," he continued, "Of course you think about the future, and I’m not suggesting that that’s bad. But boy, there's a lot to be gained from just being able to be in the moment and able to appreciate what’s going on around you right now, this very second."

"Yes uncle, that's true!" I said.

"I’ve more recently gotten better at this and appreciated it," he continued, "It brings peace. It helps you find your place. It’s calming in a world that is not very peaceful.

“That’s great!” I said.

"But I wish I could have learned this in my thirties instead of my sixties – it would have given me decades more to enjoy life in this world."

"It's better late than never!" I told him."

"Yeah, it's better late than never," he replied with a beautiful smile on his face.

The ‘Future’ Myth
Despite being a long term investor and believing that we must plan for our financial future, I've come to realize over these years that I've missed a great deal in the past only worrying about my future.

So I worried…

  • What if I lose this job and don't get any other?
  • What if this stock I've bought loses me money?
  • What if I lose all my savings in a stock market crisis?
  • What if I'm not able to save enough for my child's education?
  • What if I fall short of money after I retire from work?

I worried, even when I realized that was talking a huge toll on my health.

But these last three years of my life have taught me a big, big lesson in why I must not worry.

I have realized that life is in living NOW. It's all about the choices we make now, the habits we form now, the actions we take now, and the enlightenment we receive now.

Regretting about the past is like wasting time and energy on the impossible. And worrying about the future is like having no belief in your capabilities.

The best possible way to prepare for tomorrow is to concentrate with all your intelligence, all your enthusiasm, on doing today's work superbly today. That is the only possible way you can prepare for the future.

This is also true when it comes to investing – concentrate with all your intelligence, all your enthusiasm, on picking the best investments today and you will be assured of a great investment future.

But then, we human beings are curious creatures. Unlike all other species, we agonise and self-destruct over things we can't change ("I wish I had sold stocks in 2008" or "I wish I had bought stocks in 2009", for example) while wasting our opportunities, resources and potential to do better and create better in this moment.

Have you noticed how competent we've become at avoiding and deflecting?

Avoiding behaviours we should change in the now. Avoiding learning we should do in the now. Avoiding issues we should address in the now. Avoiding decisions we should make in the now.

Yes, they're all things we say we're going to do one day; some time in the future.

But that's a future we will never inhabit.

You and I will never have this day again.

Think about it.



Premium Value Investing Course: Admission to the third batch of my Mastermind Value Investing Course begins tomorrow, i.e. 25th September 2014. Here’s your chance to join 550+ students from 15+ countries who’ve decided to move away from the darkness of ignorance to the light of knowledge about how to invest independently, sensibly, and successfully in the stock market. Click here to know more details about the Course and how you can join.
      
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