Don't Get Into the Stock Market Now
Sit on the sidelines, watch others get rich instead of plunging in and singeing yourself


Investing, much like contract bridge, is a loser’s game which means that the best performers succeed by minimising their own errors and taking advantage of other people’s mistakes. The behaviour of most investors today suggests that risk is not uppermost on their minds. Since future returns are driven by perceived risk, the equity market today is not priced for above average returns during the next 12 months. The Sisyphean lure of the mantra that higher risk means higher return is inescapable in the current risk-tolerant, fully valued investment landscape.
Despite an unusually troubling macro outlook, vulnerable to issues that include:
Warren Buffett was spot on in suggesting that the “smart” investor needs to be fearful when others are getting greedy. Legends emphasise buying at low prices relative to what the business is intrinsically worth thereby limiting risk and the likelihood of capital loss. So what makes for cheapness? In effect, the perceptions of the vast majority of investors about risk and likely future returns. The best investment lessons are typically learnt by examining earlier mistakes. My hunch is the mistakes we are most vulnerable to at the present juncture are errors of commission rather than of omission. This is a time to be cautious rather than aggressive, miss opportunities by sitting on the sidelines and watch others get rich rather than plunge in and get singed by permanent capital loss. What are the options?
Disclosure: This column is neither an offer to sell nor solicitation to buy any of the securities mentioned herein. The author, a partner at Fortuna Capital, frequently invests in the shares discussed by him.
First Published: Jun 06, 2011, 08:44
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