sharetrader
Results 1 to 10 of 11

Thread: Hello World

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Posts
    106

    Default Hello World

    Hello all, I thought I would come and introduce myself. I've been trading (investing?) for a while but am looking to get a bit more serious about it and take a few more risks. I work in finance though nothing to do with stocks.

    Most recently I've bought into WYN at (my first) IPO. Otherwise pretty standard (I'm guessing) institutional stocks, I'm also invested in a PIE fund dealing mainly in debt-securities and otherwise cash.

    I also enjoy and have had a bot of success punting with alternative investments, iPredict, Bitcoin etc, but essentially just for fun and at the 'play-money' level.

  2. #2
    Guru
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Auckland
    Posts
    3,115

    Default

    Welcome.

    WYN had an interesting start but it is now heading in the right direction. Hopefully they follow the success of DIL and XRO before them.

    I assume you are young (bit coin investment) so wonder why you have debt securities? Is that a big part of your portfolio and do you expect that to change as you grow in confidence with equities? Or are you expecting a correction in the market?

  3. #3
    Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Posts
    106

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by CJ View Post
    wonder why you have debt securities? Is that a big part of your portfolio and do you expect that to change as you grow in confidence with equities? Or are you expecting a correction in the market?
    Hi, they're not a big part of my portfolio, I've held them for some time, and yes that probably will change. At the moment I guess my approach is towards higher risk in terms of stocks, and balancing that with low risk in other investments.

  4. #4
    Guru
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Auckland
    Posts
    3,115

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by bmrm View Post
    Hi, they're not a big part of my portfolio, I've held them for some time, and yes that probably will change. At the moment I guess my approach is towards higher risk in terms of stocks, and balancing that with low risk in other investments.
    Makes sense. I started with managed funds, decided Index funds were a better buy and started supplementing with the odd pick. I am now out of the index funds and now just have stocks I picked myself.

    It can be a bit scary making decisions just based on your own research, so this forum does provide a good source of info to ensure you arent missing anything, especially when there are conflicting views.

    Just remember some to do have vested interests.
    Free delivery worldwide with Book Depository http://www.bookdepository.co.uk

  5. #5
    born2invest
    Guest

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by bmrm View Post
    At the moment I guess my approach is towards higher risk in terms of stocks, and balancing that with low risk in other investments.
    Investing in shares of a company is only high risk if you don't know enough about your research on the company or you pay a too higher price for buying the company.

    I don't understand your concept of "high risk" stocks.

  6. #6
    Guru
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Auckland
    Posts
    3,115

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by born2invest View Post
    Investing in shares of a company is only high risk if you don't know enough about your research on the company or you pay a too higher price for buying the company.

    I don't understand your concept of "high risk" stocks.
    You make it sound so simple.

    High risk stocks are those you expect a higher reward. You can do research to reduce those risks but there is still risk there. If there was no risk, then others would have driven up the price (efficient markets theory).

    Example - will PEB or BLT be successful (both were being talked up at the start of the year as the next big growth stock). If your research says yes, and you are right, then you will earn more money than someone investing in a 'safe play' like telecom. IF you are wrong, you will probably lose all your money.
    Free delivery worldwide with Book Depository http://www.bookdepository.co.uk

  7. #7
    born2invest
    Guest

    Default

    You make it sound so simple.
    Because investing is simple. People complicate it unecessarily.

    High risk stocks are those you expect a higher reward
    The definition of risk is permanent loss of capital. With your three company examples, I expect to lose money because the businesses have been poor performers for years. This is high risk, low reward.

    Compare to a company I'm invested into. Credit Corp Group on the ASX. This is low risk, high reward. I can more accurately predict its future than your three examples.

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •