Wednesday, July 20, 2016

One of The "best purlin and decking" and "sandwich panel" manufacturer in the middle east .

Happened to visit the factory of "VIBGYOR INTERNATIONAL ."
My first visit was in 2009 when the company was very small to order some purlins .

During the last 7 yrs , they hvae improved a lot in terms of quality and quantity they can produce .
SANDWICH PANEL CAPACITY HAS INCREASED FROM 15000 M2 TO 70000 M2 PER MONTH .

They are the best in terms of quality of sandwich panels in the UAE .

Thursday, August 13, 2015

AJANTA PHARMA

AJANTA PHARMA
================


Till March the % share of Ajanta was around c2-3% and before that (during FY15) - it was even lower. Accordingly Ajanta recorded sales of 4cr for full year from Risperidone. Only in May, June the % share jumped - hence somewhat better numbers can be expected in FY16
The $ amount sales which we can see to be around $5-6m in latest week, this can be bit misleading because this sales is at Retail level (mentioned in the chart itself), this is similar to MRP in India. So this $6m will have retailers margin as well. What sales Ajanta record in its books will be significantly lower. There can be timing issues here as well, when the drug actually got sold in the market (which will be captured in the above graph) and when Ajanta sold drug to the distributors, etc. In short, its safe to assume more than 50% haircut to what approximations we get from this graph.

Given the data, believe sales of 15-20cr can be expected from Risperidone during Q1 for Ajanta.


Saturday, December 8, 2012

WHEN insults had class

 insults had class: Insults from an era before the English language got boiled down to 4-letter words.

* "I am enclosing two tickets to the first night of my new play; Bring a friend, if you have one."
- George Bernard Shaw to Winston Churchill.

* "Cannot possibly attend first night, I will attend second...If there is one."
- Winston Churchill, in response.

* GLADSTONE to Disraeli: "Sir, you will either die on the gallows, or of some unspeakable disease."

* "That depends, Sir," said Disraeli, "whether I embrace your policies or your mistress."

* "He had delusions of adequacy."
- Walter Kerr

*"He has all the virtues I dislike and none of the vices I admire."
- Winston Churchill

* "I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure."
- Clarence Darrow

* "He has never been known to use a word that might send a reader to the dictionary."
- William Faulkner (about Ernest Hemingway).

* "Thank you for sending me a copy of your book; I'll waste no time reading it."
- Moses Hadas

* "I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it."
- Mark Twain

* "He has no enemies, but is intensely disliked by his friends.."
- Oscar Wilde

* "I feel so miserable without you; it's almost like having you here."
- Stephen Bishop

* "He is a self-made man and worships his creator."
- John Bright

* "I've just learned about his illness. Let's hope it's nothing trivial."
- Irvin S. Cobb

* "He is not only dull himself; he is the cause of dullness in others."
- Samuel Johnson

* "He is simply a shiver looking for a spine to run up."
- Paul Keating

* "In order to avoid being called a flirt, she always yielded easily."
- Charles, Count Talleyrand

* "He loves nature in spite of what it did to him."
- Forrest Tucker

* "Why do you sit there looking like an envelope without any address on it?"
- Mark Twain

* "His mother should have thrown him away and kept the stork."
- Mae West

* "Some cause happiness wherever they go; others, whenever they go."
- Oscar Wilde

* "He uses statistics as a drunken man uses lamp-posts... For support rather than illumination."
- Andrew Lang (1844-1912)

* "He has Van Gogh's ear for music."
- Billy Wilder

* "I've had a perfectly wonderful evening. But this wasn't it."
- Groucho Marx



Wednesday, January 25, 2012

why everyone cannot be a Phaneesh Murthy !

t's hard to keep Phaneesh Murthy down

He could have been a contender but was cut down prematurely. By his own actions, some would say. Phaneesh Murthy has since moved on.by Shishir Prasad


December 1992. It was snowing hard in Boston. The man stepped off the plane and made his way to a small hotel. He had a year to prove himself in this foreign land. "It was the first time I had seen snow in my life. The first few days were tough. They had nothing vegetarian. I was eating pasta three times a day. I was fed up. I decided I had to go to a McDonald's," says Phaneesh Murthy. It had been snowing all through the week. So he just decided to wade through the slush and reach the nearest McDonald's. "But they didn't have anything vegetarian either. I was freezing so I sat there and drank three hot chocolates and munched on a few packets of French fries. It felt good. Here I was in America and I was in McDonald's. The American journey had started," he says.

For the next decade it would be a ride without any punctuation. And then in June 2002, the American journey came to a sudden full stop. Accused of sexual harassment of his executive assistant, Reka Maximovitch, Phaneesh Murthy would be dragged into courts. He would stand accused of suppressing facts, misrepresenting them to the board and, as a former colleague points out, "guilty of a serious error in judgement". Rather than choose to fight, he would agree to a $3-million payout to Ms Maximovitch. Phaneesh denies being a party to the settlement, but Infosys Technologies says the exact opposite. With the Karmic wheel in complete spin, the price would be dear - loss of job and definitely some reputation.

Cast down from nine circles of heaven into purgatory, he would wander looking for a fresh start. He would find temporary relief in Quintant, a consulting outfit. He would raise $30 million ($15 million was actually invested) before his funding agency, the Rs 2,500-crore GMR Group, a successful investor in ING Vysya with large interests in power, decided to pull the plug. GMR says it wanted to invest in its power business. But there is talk of Phaneesh being unable to get the revenues and business, and his investors getting impatient. Without the redoubtable army of developers, Phaneesh would be forced to abandon the fresh start and allow himself to be courted as CEO of software company iGate. Life would slowly slip back into the familiar. The future looking more like a linear extrapolation of the past, Phaneesh Murthy would wake up from a new dream into an old reality. But what matters is that it's real.

He is ready to float once more.

Phaneesh Murthy is sliding across the globe. He's dropped off the 30th parallel into Singapore. A week later he has tumbled down the E151 longitude into the Kangaroo land. It's late at night in Sydney but he's still trying to keep his antennae up. "I know what you are trying to say... but that's not the incident which fits. Let me think.... Hmm... hmm.... Okay, here's what is interesting and this happened while I was at IIM...," he says. That's when it strikes you. Phaneesh Murthy is a modem. No, no, don't go away; this is serious stuff. Think about it. In much the same way a modem screeches, whines and wails as it tries to match its thoughts with the other modem at the far end of the line, Phaneesh keeps rummaging, shuffling and hunting through analogies, metaphors and incidents to help you 'prove' your point. "I don't think the physics teacher example really demonstrates the point about 'my persuasive powers'. I'll give you another example." And off he goes again. It is a glimpse into the mind of a man who claims he scaled up Infosys sales from $2 million to $700 million. (Never use this line when talking to Infosys - it infuriates them to no end.) He has to do it all over again now.

Phaneesh has been on the road travelling to various iGate offices. "It's been gruelling," he says. "The passion level is high but we still have to do a lot of hard work before we realise value from that passion." That's as much an admission as a confession from the man, who, even close associates say, never had to try too hard to make things happen. This time it is different. He doesn't have as disciplined a cadre as he had at Infosys. He does not have as charismatic and far-sighted a guru as N.R. Narayana Murthy ('NRN') to open doors. Neither does he have as capable a strategist as Nandan Nilekani. "Sometimes I wonder if it was all a fluke. I really want to test myself again," he told a friend recently, referring to his innings at Infosys. The innings was not supposed to end the way it did.

It wasn't even supposed to begin that way. Phaneesh wanted to study medicine. But, instead, listened to his father, appeared for the IIT JEE, got a 132 all-India rank and did the obvious: joined. The IIT years were pretty uneventful otherwise. Phaneesh recollects that at IIT he was quite a "vela character".

In 1985, when Phaneesh finished his Bachelor's, he heard the song of the medicine man once more. "This time I took the test for medical schools in the US and applied to the Top 5 schools," he says. Harvard made him an offer with financial aid. Once again his father asked him to wait a while. He took the CAT and was selected to IIM-Ahmedabad. His ability to think big started right there. "Once we were trying to raise funds for an event and we had kept the sponsorship price at Rs 5,000. I said let's take it to Rs 10,000, and it worked," he says.

When he left IIM-A, FMCG was big. The Nirma versus Hindustan Lever battle was drawing to a close; most people from the top of the class headed for a Lever or a Britannia. Phaneesh made the first unconventional decision of his life. He chose Sonata Software, a start-up in a tiny industry. To put things in perspective, TCS, a $1-billion company today, had a turnover of $15 million in 1987. "I did not find soaps intellectually stimulating. I wanted to do product management. In soaps or industrial products, most of the product definition is rarely changed. In software, you can use the customer feedback to improve the product," says Phaneesh. In Sonata, he also started on his first Mission Impossible. Design and sell a software for the Indian market. All the heroics were in vain though. The Indian IT industry was undergoing a disruptive change.

TCS started the offshore business model in mainframes in 1989. Soon Indian firms figured that a dollar was 17 times better than a rupee. Phaneesh realised the domestic software industry would not go anywhere. Indians could not take advantage of great products as they were just not ready for automation.

And then, in 1991, India Today carried an advertisement.

The India Today Advertisement

It was a two-page recruitment advertisement for a company called Infosys. There was a small line at the end of the ad: "We also need a marketing manager for the US. Should be willing to relocate and travel extensively." The position did not require major qualifications. "I said this is a company that needs some serious marketing help. For every other post advertised they had at least a paragraph of qualifications!" Phaneesh hit it off with Nandan. And then the turn came to meet NRN, who would be his mentor, guide and, ultimately, his judge.

NRN thought Phaneesh couldn't do the job. Phaneesh did not smoke, drink or eat meat; NRN thought he would not last. But he liked the fact that Phaneesh was a numbers-driven, facts-oriented marketing guy. The deal was done. But before that, a target had to be set. Nandan, domestic business head Vijay Kumar and Phaneesh sat down to set one for the first year. "I told $1 million," Phaneesh says. Why? "Because it was a nice number!" Nandan agreed. Infosys' turnover was about $2 million then. Vijay Kumar was bewildered and asked Nandan: "Aren't you going to ask him how he will get $1 million?" And Nandan replied: "That's his problem. If he wants help, he will ask." Phaneesh was told that he had one year to show results.

Coming To America

His first negotiations were anti-climactic. He was dealing with Apple Computers. "When I went back with the contract I found the entire team... on the deal had been sacked. I admired them. They (knew) it not personal, not stigmatic. It happened and you moved on," he says.

The years after 1992 saw a huge acceleration in IT offshoring. "We were getting so much work that when I bagged a huge order somebody said 'Shit! That means we will have to work more'," says Phaneesh. The big break came in 1994. Infosys was pitching to Nordstrom for a sale order management system. "I studied all the literature and approached the CIO. They liked the proposal but thought we were not familiar with the US market and so, gave us the merchandising system to develop." It was Infosys' first-ever million-dollar contract.




That is also when Phaneesh started building up the sales organisation. His rules were simple: agree on certain things - like not signing unlimited liability clauses, deciding on targets - and you have a free hand. That was the only one way to handle the salesforce and the bigger accounts that Infosys was trying to bag. "I met Phaneesh on his return trips to India every three months. He would be full of questions: How's so-and-so? Where have you been recently? What's the feedback on that firm? He remembered everything you told him," says T.G. Ramesh, founder, Bangalore Labs, who now works with Phaneesh.

The sales team grew after 1994 and threw up stars like Basab Pradhan, Srinjay Sengupta and Shobha Meera. "He created the 'two cultures' of Infosys. The process-driven, conservative software developers... (and) his team that was answerable only to the board," says a source in Infosys. Phaneesh feels it was more the customer-facing culture that he developed. "I believe people who interact with the customers should drive the organisation. As for a free hand - the only way you get high performance is if, after an initial watch period, you give a high degree of autonomy."

In 1996, that point was proved. For the first time Infosys went head-to-head with a formidable consulting firm - Cambridge Technology Partners (CTP). The contract was for about $9 million. CTP bid $8 million. Phaneesh and his team's math: total cost, including profits, of $4 million. The majority was for quoting this price. The sales team figured it would be a mistake: the client would think they had no idea of the project's complexity. So the team doubled the bid to $8 million. Infosys got the project. It was a crossing of the Rubicon. Infosys could beat the heavy guns at their own game.

Such victories made the man who was once a doubting Thomas, a believer. NRN became like a father to Phaneesh. Phaneesh had been a Maths Olympiad top scorer; NRN loved to communicate in mathspeak. "You could be discussing at a dinner table and these guys would start. It would begin with problems and degenerate into discussing the greatest mathematician of all times," says a person who was at one such dinner. The relationship grew till Phaneesh broke the inverted first law of robotics: "A human may not injure a machine, or, through inaction, allow a machine to come to harm." That machine was Infosys. Phaneesh had already met Reka Maximovitch. "He tried to hurt the company. He tried to hurt Infosys," says a person who knows NRN really well.

Phaneesh had one last victory. He says he won the $37-million Greenpoint deal for Progeon. But the stories of his power within Infosys, his conduct, his putting the firm at grave risk, grew and grew. And on 23 July 2002, Phaneesh resigned. Some say he was "de-risked".

Is there something in the last two years that Phaneesh would have wanted to change? "That's a very open question. But tell you what - to go back and study medicine; that's what I want."



Tuesday, June 28, 2011

s very lucky. I started working for Acciona, a large industrial conglomerate, in 1991. A few months into the job I was assigned as an analyst to Acciona’s small investment management business, Bestinver. A year later when the fund manager, who was a value-oriented guy left, I took over the management of the fund.
Around that time I chanced upon Peter Lynch’s One Up On Wall Street. I also started reading everything about Warren Buffett, Benjamin Graham and other value investors. All these things allowed me to develop a clear framework very early in my career. You could say that value is now ingrained in my DNA.

You are often referred to as the Warren Buffett of Europe. How do you approach stocks?
We approach stocks the same way as an entrepreneur would. If an entrepreneur sees a company that is undervalued, he buys the whole company. We buy shares.
We look for good businesses with strong competitive advantages that are trading at a discount to our estimate of their fair value. We also follow what other value investors are doing — what they are buying and what they are recommending. We are very open to that.

How do you identify companies with strong competitive advantages?
A strong competitive advantage is one that we understand will still be there after 10 years. For instance, we look at the economies of scale, and whether new competitors will develop that scale. We talk to clients — whether they are willing to leave the company. We talk to a lot of people — the company, competitors, suppliers and customers — to understand how strong the competitive advantage is.

How do you differentiate between a company that has a strong competitive advantage and one that has only a strong brand?
Well, take the case of Sony. Sony is a good brand and everyone knows Sony. But it cannot charge 20 per cent more than its competitors. On the other hand, take BMW. It can still charge more than its competitors. So by definition, you have a good competitive advantage if you can charge higher prices and as a result of which you will end up with higher returns than the competition.

There are a lot of companies with good brands like BMW. You will find that the value of the brand does not get reflected in the balance sheet. How do you factor brands into your valuation?
Brands are extremely important to some companies. BMW, for instance, would be worth a lot less without the brand. But we don’t calculate the value of the brand per se. We value the brand because of its ability to allow the company to earn higher returns and generate higher amount of free cash flow. In the case of BMW, the brand allows it to earn 25 per cent return on capital employed. That is an extremely good return because all the other mainstream companies are earning only 10 per cent (RoCE).

How do you identify value traps?
After being in business for 20 years, I have learnt that value traps are companies with low-quality businesses. We used to buy average businesses at five times free cash flow (FCF); now we only buy high-quality businesses at 10-12 times free cash flow.
A company with a return on capital of 12 per cent, which enjoys a good position in the market but is unable to raise prices because of competition, could be an example of a value trap.

Then how do you avoid such value traps — companies that may not grow in revenues or profits?
We have had our share of value traps over the years. But lately, in the last two to three years, we have moved to high-quality businesses with high return on capital employed, and very high strength of balance sheet. We have moved away from average companies that are only undervalued.
In the case of high-quality businesses, even if they don’t grow, they tend not to be value traps. That is because they generate so much free cash flow that the value of the stock grows over time.

Are there businesses that you avoid?
Well, we stay away from businesses that we don’t understand or businesses that we think change too often, like technology. This is the Warren Buffett approach where we avoid things that we cannot forecast for the next 10 years.

Moving to valuing a stock, how do you arrive at a fair value?
If the business is good and it has a competitive advantage that is sustainable, which means that free cash flow should be stable over the next 10 years, then we apply a 15 times multiple to the free cash flow. It is that simple! For instance, Wolters Kluwer is a company with very stable FCF generation, with an enormous moat (switching costs of their clients) and it is quoted at eight times FCF.

Why 15 times?
Fifteen times is the average that stocks in the US have traded at for over the past 200 years and it translates to about 6.5 per cent free cash flow yield which seems reasonable to us.

Is 15 times the maximum that you are willing to pay?
No. We like to pay 11-12 times FCF. Fifteen times is the maximum, the target price. Take our current portfolio, for example. It is currently trading at eight times and we think that the target price is 15 times. It is very uncommon for us to buy stocks trading above 12 to 13 times FCF.
But this also depends on the alternatives available in the market. If the overall market is overvalued, we may pay 14 times. We try to buy as low as we can but you have to see what the market is quoting at.

Do you apply the 15 multiple to all companies?
Not all, but most of them. In some cases we make an exception for very high-quality businesses. Then we apply 17 times. But for the not-so-good businesses we apply 13 to 14 times FCF. As a general rule, we apply 15 times, and that’s it.

Are there circumstances in which you will be willing to pay more than 20-25 times?
No way! You never say never in life, but I can say that in 20 years we have generally not done it.

What do you do when you find yourself in a situation when stocks that you like are trading at, say, above 20 times FCF?
Well, in that case we will go for a holiday!

How long are you willing to wait for a stock in your portfolio to perform?
Oh, forever! We have been shareholders of some companies for more than 20 years and we will continue to hold those shares provided the business is growing in value every year and the market doesn’t recognise it. For instance, there is a Spanish company that we have been holding for the last 20 years. It has gone up from €15 to €400. We have made 25 times our money but we still continue to hold our shares in it because we think it is worth €600 or even €700.

When do you sell?
We sell only when we find something better. When a stock goes up 20 per cent, it becomes 20 per cent less interesting for us and we may be interested in buying something else. But sometimes a stock doesn’t move and we find alternatively something more interesting. So we sell something we like for something we like more. But it’s also relative. When a stock approaches 15 times FCF, we are more willing to sell, but it all depends on the alternatives. If the alternative is cash we will sell more slowly.

What are your views on commodities?
Commodities are really tricky. It all depends on demand and supply. We try to avoid commodities because the demand and supply situation may change dramatically and you may not even notice what is going on. Look at the gas market. All the commodities are up and gas is down from $13 to $4. You would have lost 76 per cent of your money if you had invested in gas during this commodity boom period.
There is one more thing. In commodities we look very carefully at the consumption per capita rather than in absolute terms. For instance, consumption per capita of iron or petrol in China is similar to any European country while in other commodities, such as paper, this consumption per capita is very low. Thus there is a lot of room for an increase of paper consumption in China that will have a positive effect on pulp producers all around the world.

Your views on gold?
The last time we invested in gold was 10 years ago when gold was at $300. We found a couple of companies that we were interested in, but we found that the gold cycle was very slow and we sold very early. We no longer invest in gold.
Gold is a real asset and we prefer real assets to paper money. But of all the real assets, we prefer companies with strong competitive advantages. These give better long-term returns.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Found it on net: (Have a hunch that I am repeating whats already present at TED.. cudnt find it though)


Peter Lynch's 25 Golden Rules from "Beating the street"




1. Investing is fun, exciting, and dangerous if you don't do
any work.


2. Your investor's edge is not something you get from Wall Street
experts. It's something you already have. You can outperform the
experts if you use your edge by investing in companies or
industries you already understand.

3. Over the past 3 decades, the stock market has come to be dominated
by a herd of professional investors. Contrary to popular belief, this
makes it easier for the amateur investor. You can beat the market by
ignoring the herd.

4. Behind every stock is a company. Find out what its doing.

5. Often, there is no correlation between the success of a company's
operations and the success of its stock over a few months or even a
few years. In the long term, there is a 100 percent correlation
between the success of the company and the success of its stock.
This disparity is the key to making money; its pays to be patient, and
to own successful companies.

6. You have to know what you own, and why you own it. "This baby is a
cinch to go up!" doesn't count.

7. Long shots almost always miss the mark.

8. Owning stocks is like having children - don't get involved with
more than you can handle. The part-time stock picker probably has time
to follow 8 to 12 companies, and to buy and sell shares as conditions
warrant. There don't have to be more than 5 companies in the portfolio
at any one time.

9. If you can't find any companies that you think are attractive, put
your money in the bank until you discover some.

10. Never invest in a company without understanding its finances. The
biggest losses in stocks come from companies with poor balance sheets.
Always look at the balance sheet to see if a
company is solvent before you risk your money on it.

11. Avoid hot stocks in hot industries. Great companies in cold, non-
growth industries are consistent big winners.

12. With small companies, you're better off to wait until they turn a
profit before you invest.

13. If you're thinking about investing in a troubled industry, buy the
companies with staying power. Also, wait for the industry to show
signs of revival. Buggy whips and radio tubes were troubled industries
that never came back.

14. If you invest $1000 in a stock, all you can lose is $1000, but you
stand to gain $10000 or- even $50000 over time if you're patient.
The average person can concentrate on a few good companies, while the
fund manager is forced to diversify. By owning too many stocks, you
lose this advantage of concentration. It only takes a handful of big
winners to make a lifetime of investing worthwhile.

15. In every industry and every region of the country, the observant
amateur can find great growth companies long before the professionals
have discovered them.

16. A stock-market decline is as routine as a January blizzard in
Colorado. If you're prepared, it can't hurt you. A decline is a great
opportunity to pick up the bargains left behind by investors who are
fleeing the storm in panic.

17. Everyone has the brainpower to make money in stocks. Not everyone
has the stomach. If you are susceptible to selling everything in a
panic, you ought to avoid stocks and stock mutual funds altogether.

18. There is always something to worry about. Avoid weekend thinking
and ignore the latest dire predictions of the newscasters. Sell a
stock because the company's fundamentals deteriorate. Not because the
sky is falling.

19. Nobody can predict interest rates, the future direction of the
economy, or the stock market. Dismiss all such forecasts and
concentrate on what's actually happening to the companies in which
you've invested.

20. If you study 10 companies, you'll find 1 for which the story is
better than expected. If you study 50, you'll find 5. There are always
pleasant surprises to be found in the stock market -
companies whose achievements are being over looked by Wall Street.

21. If you don't study any companies, you have the same success buying
stocks as you do in a poker game if you bet without looking at your
cards.

22. Time is on your side when you own shares of superior companies.
You can afford to be patient - even if you missed Wal-Mart in the
first five years, it was a great stock to own in the next five years.
Time is against you when you own options.

23. If you have the stomach for stocks, but neither the time nor the
inclination to do the homework, invest in equity mutual funds.

24. Among the major stock markets of the world, the US market ranks
eight in total return in the past decade. You can take advantage of
the faster growing economies by investing some portion of your assets
in an overseas fund with a good record.

25. In the long run, a portfolio of well chosen stocks and/or equity
mutual funds will always outperform a portfolio of bonds or a money-
market account.
In the long run, a portfolio of poorly chosen stocks won't outperform
the money left under the mattress.

Found it on net: (Have a hunch that I am repeating whats already present at TED.. cudnt find it though)


Peter Lynch's 25 Golden Rules from "Beating the street"




1. Investing is fun, exciting, and dangerous if you don't do
any work.


2. Your investor's edge is not something you get from Wall Street
experts. It's something you already have. You can outperform the
experts if you use your edge by investing in companies or
industries you already understand.

3. Over the past 3 decades, the stock market has come to be dominated
by a herd of professional investors. Contrary to popular belief, this
makes it easier for the amateur investor. You can beat the market by
ignoring the herd.

4. Behind every stock is a company. Find out what its doing.

5. Often, there is no correlation between the success of a company's
operations and the success of its stock over a few months or even a
few years. In the long term, there is a 100 percent correlation
between the success of the company and the success of its stock.
This disparity is the key to making money; its pays to be patient, and
to own successful companies.

6. You have to know what you own, and why you own it. "This baby is a
cinch to go up!" doesn't count.

7. Long shots almost always miss the mark.

8. Owning stocks is like having children - don't get involved with
more than you can handle. The part-time stock picker probably has time
to follow 8 to 12 companies, and to buy and sell shares as conditions
warrant. There don't have to be more than 5 companies in the portfolio
at any one time.

9. If you can't find any companies that you think are attractive, put
your money in the bank until you discover some.

10. Never invest in a company without understanding its finances. The
biggest losses in stocks come from companies with poor balance sheets.
Always look at the balance sheet to see if a
company is solvent before you risk your money on it.

11. Avoid hot stocks in hot industries. Great companies in cold, non-
growth industries are consistent big winners.

12. With small companies, you're better off to wait until they turn a
profit before you invest.

13. If you're thinking about investing in a troubled industry, buy the
companies with staying power. Also, wait for the industry to show
signs of revival. Buggy whips and radio tubes were troubled industries
that never came back.

14. If you invest $1000 in a stock, all you can lose is $1000, but you
stand to gain $10000 or- even $50000 over time if you're patient.
The average person can concentrate on a few good companies, while the
fund manager is forced to diversify. By owning too many stocks, you
lose this advantage of concentration. It only takes a handful of big
winners to make a lifetime of investing worthwhile.

15. In every industry and every region of the country, the observant
amateur can find great growth companies long before the professionals
have discovered them.

16. A stock-market decline is as routine as a January blizzard in
Colorado. If you're prepared, it can't hurt you. A decline is a great
opportunity to pick up the bargains left behind by investors who are
fleeing the storm in panic.

17. Everyone has the brainpower to make money in stocks. Not everyone
has the stomach. If you are susceptible to selling everything in a
panic, you ought to avoid stocks and stock mutual funds altogether.

18. There is always something to worry about. Avoid weekend thinking
and ignore the latest dire predictions of the newscasters. Sell a
stock because the company's fundamentals deteriorate. Not because the
sky is falling.

19. Nobody can predict interest rates, the future direction of the
economy, or the stock market. Dismiss all such forecasts and
concentrate on what's actually happening to the companies in which
you've invested.

20. If you study 10 companies, you'll find 1 for which the story is
better than expected. If you study 50, you'll find 5. There are always
pleasant surprises to be found in the stock market -
companies whose achievements are being over looked by Wall Street.

21. If you don't study any companies, you have the same success buying
stocks as you do in a poker game if you bet without looking at your
cards.

22. Time is on your side when you own shares of superior companies.
You can afford to be patient - even if you missed Wal-Mart in the
first five years, it was a great stock to own in the next five years.
Time is against you when you own options.

23. If you have the stomach for stocks, but neither the time nor the
inclination to do the homework, invest in equity mutual funds.

24. Among the major stock markets of the world, the US market ranks
eight in total return in the past decade. You can take advantage of
the faster growing economies by investing some portion of your assets
in an overseas fund with a good record.

25. In the long run, a portfolio of well chosen stocks and/or equity
mutual funds will always outperform a portfolio of bonds or a money-
market account.
In the long run, a portfolio of poorly chosen stocks won't outperform
the money left under the mattress.

John C. Bogle,The founder of The Vanguard group,the world's largest no load mutual fund company, was named by Fortune as one of the four financial giants of the 20th century.In his best selling work,BOGLE ON MUTUAL FUND,he spelt out the"12 pillars of wisdom"
1. INVESTING IS NOT NEARLY AS DIFFICULT AS IT LOOKS
succesful investing calls doing just few things right and guarding against serious mistakes
2. WHEN ALL ELSE FAILS ,FALL BACK ON SIMPLICITY
the simplest policy for an investor would be to commit half of the assets to a stock index fund and the rest to the bond index fund and ignore short term fluctuations
3.TIME MARCHES ON
magic of compounding
4.NOTHING VENTURED,NOTHING GAINED
take reasonable interim risk to earn higher longterm rates of return
5.DIVERSIFY,DIVERSIFY,DIVERSIFY
Investment in mutual funds eliminates ownership risk
6.THE ETERNAL TRIANGLE
risk return and cost are the 3 sides of the triangle
7.THE POWERFUL MAGNETISM OF THE MEAN
returns try to regress toward the mean,implying that returns falls after exceeding historical norms by wide margins and vice versa
8.DO NOT OVERESTIMATE YOUR ABILITY TO PICK SUPERIOR EQUITY MUTUAL FUNDS, NOR UNDERESTIMATE YOUR ABILITY TO PICK SUPERIOR BONDS AND MONEY MARKET FUNDS
9.YOU MAY HAVE A STABLE PRINCIPAL VALE OR A STABLE INCOME STREAM BUT YOU MAY NOT HAVE BOTH
10.BEWARE OF "FIGHTING THE LAST WAR"
too many investors base their decision on their experiences of the recent past.While the past should not be ignored,remember that no cyclical trends last forever
11.YOU RARELY,IF EVER, KNOW SOMETHING THAT THE MARKET DOESNOT
12.THINK LONGTERM
BOGLE SAYS "THE BEST RULE IS :STAY THE COURSE"

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

HIT BHAI

PAREKH ALUMINEX 18 %

LAKSHMI ENERGY 18 %

TTK PRESTIGE 7 %

GSPL 8 %

HAWKINS 5 %

PATELS AIRTEMP 2 %

VIVIMED LABS 6 %

APW PRESIDENT 2 %

TIME TECHNO 4 %





MEDIUM TERM

ALLIED DIGITAL 5 %

HEIDELBERG CEMENTS 6 %

IOB 6 %

OIL COUNTRY 6 %

APAR 4 %

ESCORTS 3%

Thursday, October 14, 2010

:: Aggrasive Portfolio ::
  • JM Emerging Leader Fund (Multicap Fund) 12%
  • Birla Sun Life Front Line Equity Fund (Large Cap Fund) 8%
  • Sundram BNP Paribas Select Focus Fund (Stock Picker Fund) 8%
  • JM Basic Fund (Infrastructure focus Fund) 10%
  • Reliance Regular Saving Fund (Stock Picker Fund) 10%
  • Fidelity Special Situation Fund (Stock picker Fund) 11%
  • Kotak Opportunity Fund (Diversified Equity Fund) 8%
  • HDFC TOP 200 Fund (Large Cap Fund) 13%
  • HDFC Prudence Fund (Balamce Fund) 8%
  • IDFC Liquidity Mangager Plus Fund (Liquid Fund) 6%
  • Kotak Flexi Fund (Liquid Fund) 6%

:: Moderate Portfolio ::
  • IDFC Imperial Equity Fund (Large Cap Fund) 10%
  • JM Emerging Leader Fund (Multicap Fund) 10%
  • Fidelity Equity Fund (Large Cap Fund) 11%
  • Reliance Regular Saving Fund (Stock Picker Fund) 11%
  • JM Contra Fund (Diversified Equity Fund) 10%
  • DSP TIGER Fund (Sector Fund) 9%
  • Reliance Vision Fund (Large Cap Fund) 9%
  • HDFC Prudence Fund (Balance Fund) 9%
  • ICICI Prudential Dynamic Plan (Dynamic Fund) 9%
  • IDFC Liquidity Manager Plus Fund (Liquid Fund) 6%
  • Kotak Flexi Fund (Liquid Fund) 6%

:: Conservative Portfolio ::
  • HDFC Prudence Fund (Balance Fund) 20%
  • Fidelity Equity Fund (Large Cap Equity Fund) 8%
  • Reliance Vison Fund (Largecap Fund) 8%
  • JM Contra Fund (Diversified Equity Fund) 8%
  • Birla Sun life Frontline Equity Fund (Largecap Fund) 8%
  • Canara Robeco Balance Fund (Balance Fund) 16%
  • JM Arbitrage Advantage Fund (Arbitrage Fund) 20%
  • IDFC Liquidity Manager Plus Fund (Liquid Fund) 12%