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Showing posts with label Saizen REIT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Saizen REIT. Show all posts

Daiwa House Logistics Trust: FX and TA.

Tuesday, October 25, 2022

The unit price of Daiwa House Logistics Trust has declined 32c or almost 40% in the last 6 months.

This is pretty dramatic.

Although I was unimpressed by Daiwa House Logistics Trust at its IPO and had some concerns, I did not expect its unit price to crash so hard.

At the end of June this year, when a reader asked if I was interested in Daiwa House Logistics Trust as its unit price had declined, I raised a new concern which was the persistent weakness in the Japanese Yen.

Unlike the ECB which is raising interest rate, the Japanese central bank seems determined to keep interest rate low which is depressing the value of the Japanese Yen.




In reply to the reader who asked if the lower unit price made Daiwa House Logistics Trust a BUY back in July, I said that if the Yen was stronger, then, the REIT would be undervalued.

Unfortunately, it wasn't.

I said:

"Since the Yen declined so much, then, a similar decline in unit price doesn't make it (i.e. the REIT) undervalued."

More recently, just a few days ago, the Yen hit a historic low against the U.S. Dollar.

With this recent development, Daiwa House Logistics Trust's unit price has sunk even lower.




I said in my last blog that China was getting very hard to read.

Japan isn't much easier either.

Why is the Japanese central bank so stubborn?

All investments are good investment at the right price.

Unfortunately, at the moment, I do not know if it is the right price but as long as the Japanese central bank is bent on their current course, Mr. Market doesn't know either.






I do not see any positive divergence in the chart as MACD and RSI decline in tandem with the unit price.

I don't have an interest in Daiwa House Logistics Trust.

Just a quick blog sharing my response to a query from someone I know.

Daiwa House Logistics Trust was priced too dearly at IPO and we now have a persistently weakening Yen thrown into the mix.




On hindsight, it might have been a blessing in disguise that Saizen REIT, Croesus Retail Trust and Accordia Golf Trust were forcibly removed from my portfolio.

Recently published:
CLCT: Staying defensive and Chinese banks?

Reference:
Daiwa House Logistics Trust: Good or not?




How to deploy the Croesus Retail Trust money?

Monday, August 28, 2017

Reader:
I understand u have pretty huge stake in CRT so I thought I can eavesdrop how you intend to redistribute the funds. If u could talk to yourself on that, I will be just eavesdropping.

AK:
I am quite happy to hold on to more cash for a while. No hurry. ;)






I do have a relatively large investment in Croesus Retail Trust but I had an even larger investment in Saizen REIT.

I am mostly an investor for income and I view the huge capital gains as having received many years of income in advance.

It means that I could wait for many years without deploying the funds and I would still be quite comfortable. I don't need to grow my wealth constantly.

Now, if you must see positive growth year after year, what I have just said will not sit well with you. You will constantly have to look for ways to make sure you do not "fall behind".

So stressful.




You are hardworking. I am lazy.

For me, well fed, I am quite happy to sit on more money while waiting for new investment opportunities to come along.

Related posts:
1. How much did AK make from Saizen REIT?
2. Croesus Retail Trust, HPH Trust, NBN Trust and SingTel.

Building your personal wealth in Singapore with some help. (AK the blogger or AK the benefactor?)

Monday, July 31, 2017

Reader:
Hey sifu thks so much
U changed my life
I was down to my last 100000
But yr saizen call
Save my life
My family

AK:
You took action. Thank yourself. 😉





Reader:
We will be praying to u
Downloaded yr pic

AK:
........................ :o





Reader:
We will pay tribute to u
Thks sifu
Really
I nearly killed myself
If not for yr call

AK:
I am glad. 🙂





Reader:
U save my life
No chance tell u
Till now
I am a ghost now
If not for u
I will ask my children pai u too
U are the benefactor


AK:
I am happy for you 🙂
Gambatte! 🙂





Reader:
Sifu wat are your latest picks?
Sifu u must help me
I need make enough for my children to study uni

AK:
Neverwinter! ;p

Anyway, I am only sharing my philosophy and experience as an investor in my blog. If it works for others too, I am happy.
I blog because I enjoy it.
If I feel that it has become work or if it has become a responsibility, I might stop blogging. ;)






To my Taoist readers, if you want to pray to AK, remember you must download the correct photo hor.


Jokes aside, to all my readers, remember that my approach to wealth building is a 

1. holistic one (see related post #1) 

and if you do the 

2. right things, don't thank me, thank yourselves in future (see related post #2). 

Gambatte!






Related posts:
1. Holistic approach to wealth building.
2. Don't thank AK but thank yourself.

"Insurance agent helped himself to my money."

Monday, July 10, 2017

Recently, I met up with a friend whom I have not been in touch with for a few years and, inevitably, we also talked about money matters.

Mania over Chinese art. Huh? I blur.
Friend:
So, how is your investment in Japanese apartments now?

Me:
Oh, you mean Saizen REIT?


Friend:
Ya, you asked me to invest in this that time because it pays good dividends.


Me:
Gone already.


Friend:
Gone?


Me:
Ya, they sold all their assets to an institutional investor.


Friend:
Sounds like you made money!

Me:
OK lah.


Friend:
So lucky. That time I should have listened to you. Shouldn't have listened to my brother's insurance agent and bought the investment from him.

Me:
That was many years ago. How is it?


Friend:
I got fed up with it and sold it at a big loss.


Me: 
But you said that guy is very smart and can help you with your money, right?


Friend:
My brother say one, not me. Ya, very smart but not to help me with my money. Smart to help himself to my money. He left his job liao.


Me:
..................


Friend:
Now, you got any other money making lobang?


Me:
I have some investment in Japanese shopping malls.


Friend:
This time, I am going to invest.


Me:
But it is being sold to another institutional investor too. Not confirmed but it could happen in the next few months and the share price has shot up quite a bit by now.


Friend:
...................



The mood was gradually getting a little bit too heavy for my liking. So, I changed the topic.

My friend regrets investing in something and not investing in something else but is he really an investor? I wonder.

Related posts:
1. How many $29,000 do we have?
"Every year put in money. 20 years..."
2. Bought ILP from a friend.
'...if I cancel the plan now, I (lose) the money...'
3. Saizen REIT.
The investment was a good fit for my motivation.
4. Croesus Retail Trust.
Of course, being paid while waiting is not a bad deal.

Vote for or against selling Croesus Retail Trust?

Monday, July 3, 2017

Some might remember that the money I used to invest in Croesus Retail Trust was mostly from selling 90% of my investment in Sabana REIT a few years ago.

Since my investment in Sabana REIT was as big as my investment in AIMS AMP Capital Industrial REIT, the amount of money involved was pretty big for an average retail investor.


For those who have been following my moves over the years, they would know that I got into Sabana REIT at depressed prices, collected dividends over a 3 year period and sold as its unit price retreated from a high on the back of various red flags. 

Off the top of my head, I probably made about 13% per annum from my investment in Sabana REIT, all in.

Getting into Croesus Retail Trust after its price retreated significantly from its post IPO euqhoria and also by taking advantage of the rights issues later, I am probably looking at a total return of between 70% to 100% for the investments made at different times. 

On an annual basis, if I were to accept the offer of $1.17 a unit, the return on investment is probably between 17% to 60% per year. 






OK, please note that all numbers are off the top of my head and are only approximately right.

Now, quite understandably, not everyone is happy with the offer to take over Croesus Retail Trust at $1.17 a unit. We would be losing a good investment for income, after all.

A few readers wrote to me, asking if I would vote against the sale and a couple of readers also asked that I mobilize my army of readers to vote against the sale.

 ------------



------------

Alamak. AK is just another retail investor. AK is no king maker. So stressful.

Seriously, I will not ask anyone to vote for or against the sale but I will share a few points to put things in perspective.

1. With a DPU of about 8c, at 85c a unit, we were looking at a yield of 9.4%. At $1.17, we are looking at 6.8%. Yield has compressed by quite a fair bit.

2. Gearing is almost 50%, if I remember correctly. So, much of the yield we see is leveraged yield. If we should reduce leverage and that is possible through equity fund raising, distribution yield would drop. That makes for a fairer comparison against some retail S-REITs which have less than 40% in gearing.







3. It is not useful to say that $1.17 is X% higher than its price from X months ago. We should be interested in value. $1.17 is about 20% higher than the NAV per unit. 


Now, if we remember, Saizen REIT was bought over at a premium of about 3% above NAV and that was when I thought Saizen REIT's properties were probably worth more than what was carried in the books too. Also, remember, Saizen REIT's gearing was much lower than 50%.

4. It is true that even a compressed distribution yield of 6.8% is higher than comparable J-REITs' yields but we have to remember that the rules governing J-REITs are different which was an important reason why Croesus Retail Trust decided to list in Singapore. If they were to list in Japan, their DPU and, consequently, their distribution yield would have been lower.






Unfortunately, investors of Saizen REIT grew weary of waiting for value to be unlocked and agreed to its sale of assets. 

What about investors of Croesus Retail Trust? Obviously, many have a different attitude and are more willing to wait for a better offer, if any. Of course, being paid while waiting is not a bad deal.

This is interesting to me because Saizen REIT was a big investment for me and Croesus Retail Trust is a big investment for me too. I wonder.

Related post:
History with CRT and current thoughts.

"I like what I see. So, I stay invested."

History with Croesus Retail Trust and current thoughts.

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

When I found out that Croesus Retail Trust could be privatised, I had a feeling of deja vu.

It wasn't too long ago that something similar happened to Saizen REIT and, because of that, I lost a significant income generator.

Now, it seems that I may lose another significant income generator.




As I invest primarily for income, this creates a headache for me, especially when it is a relatively big investment in my portfolio. 

Mallage Saga, a CRT mall in Saga.

Some might remember that Croesus Retail Trust is one of my more significant investments as I shared this in a blog earlier this year.

In any case, the news got me nostalgic. Hence, this blog.





I first blogged about Croesus Retail Trust in July 2012 and, it was obvious, I was not too enthusiastic about it then.

See:
Croesus Retail Trust: IPO planned.



However, all investments are good at the right price and I became an investor in late 2013.

See:
Croesus Retail Trust: Long position.


I like to think that patience will be rewarded and I guess I was in this case.

Then, some readers were worried about Croesus Retail Trust and I wrote a piece titled:
Croesus Retail Trust: Motivations and risks.


When Mr. Market was feeling depressed, I bought more as I believed that an attractive investment just got more attractive. 

When Croesus Retail Trust offered rights units, I bought more because they were going to use the money for reasons which I liked.

See, for example:
22 for 100 rights issue (at 61c each)






Rights issues are not necessarily a bad thing and this is a topic I have blogged about many times in the past.

For example:

REITs and rights issues: Dilutive?

Over time, Croesus Retail Trust became a very significant investment that it is today for me.

I like what I see. 

So, I stay invested.





Oh, if you think this blog title sounds familiar, it should be because it is a play on this blog:
History with Sabana REIT and current thoughts.

Of course, regular readers would know that a big part of my investment in Croesus Retail Trust was funded by the proceeds from selling my investment in Sabana REIT years ago.

See:
Added more Croesus Retail Trust and reduced Sabana REIT.




I made pretty good money from my investment in Sabana REIT and I have made good money so far from investing in Croesus Retail Trust.

Even though I would prefer to continue receiving income from Croesus Retail Trust, if it should be privatised, then, I would probably enjoy (with misgivings) another round of capital gain.

Croesus Retail Asset Management Pte. Ltd. (the “Trustee-Manager”), as trustee-manager of Croesus Retail Trust (“CRT”), wishes to announce that it has been approached in connection with a potential transaction which may or may not lead to an acquisition of all the issued units in CRT (“Units”). 

Related post:
My investment portfolio.

Understated gains from Saizen REIT.

Sunday, March 19, 2017

For a while, I have suspected that ASSI has stalkers but the following can only happen because this stalker happens to be a friend. If he were just any other reader, I would freak out.

Reader:

I believe you made in mistake calculating your gains from Saizen. 


Just letting you know. You see if you want to amend.

"How much space is enough?"

AK:

I checked the numbers again. You are right!


Spooky!!!

I think I mixed up my average cost price for Saizen REIT with First REIT's.

So, $245,000 is too low.

It should be $30,000 to $40,000 higher.

So, the returns, in terms of percentage, should be higher. Maybe more than 25% a year.

Too lazy to come up with the exact figures. Of course, this shouldn't surprise you. LOL.

I will publish a blog as an errata. Thanks.

This is a very good reminder to everyone that ASSI is not very reliable. If you have yet to read the ASSI disclaimer, it is at the bottom of the blog.

If you choose to eavesdrop on AK talking to himself, do it at your own risk.

What? You are like AK? Too lazy to scroll to the bottom to read?

I reproduce it here:

"The ideas expressed in this blog should not be construed as an enticement to buy or sell the securities, commodities or assets mentioned. The accuracy or completeness of the information provided cannot be guaranteed. Readers should carry out independent verification of information provided. No warranty whatsoever is given and no liability whatsoever is accepted for any loss howsoever arising whether directly or indirectly as a result of actions taken based on ideas and information found in this blog."


Related post:
How much did AK make from Saizen REIT?

How much did AK make from Saizen REIT?

Reader:

Dear AK,

I just started following your blog this year. So many gems!


Thanks for resharing your Saizen REIT blog post from 2015 on Facebook. It just tells me how much more I have to read in your archives!


I might regret asking this but how much money did you make from your investment in Saizen REIT?







AK:

Don't worry, you can ask. 


I won't bite your head off. 

Whether I give you the desired answer or not is something else.

If I did not reveal the larger investments in my portfolio recently, I would probably have refused your request.


Now, I don't see any harm in sharing the numbers. :)


Income distributions plus capital gains (excluding return of capital) from the sale of all the REIT's assets, roughly,


$ 245,000


Almost a quarter of a million dollars.


The number shouldn't be surprising since Saizen REIT was one of my 3 largest investments in S-REITs and my entry prices were pretty low.


In terms of percentage, the return was probably around 20% per year, give or take a little. 

I am not crazy enough to calculate the exact numbers.

Of course, now, with news that Saizen REIT is to be liquidated, I should be seeing another few thousand dollars coming back but that is really a return of capital.

Related posts:
1. 2016 full year passive income.

2. Saizen REIT: Right prices and luck.
3. My investment porfolio.

See errata (19 Mar 17, 9.25pm):

Understated gains from Saizen REIT.

"REMOVE SABANA REIT MANAGER" FB PAGE.

Sunday, February 5, 2017

This blog is in reply to Jerry Low's comment:

Source: HERE.
Hi Jerry,

Saizen REIT was not a shitty counter. It was just misunderstood and it was thanks to the misunderstanding that I was able to accumulate a sizable position relatively cheaply so many years ago.

In fact, I thought Saizen REIT had a very competent manager who ate their own pudding. 

Of course, the REIT was a fantastic investment, as it turned out, for me and many other investors. I shan't say more since regular readers should be quite familiar with the narrative.

As for Sabana REIT, I did blog about it quite regularly for a few years as it was a big part of my S-REITs portfolio for the same number of years. 

Although I agree that the REIT has a mediocre manager who strikes me as mostly self serving, to be fair, it was a rewarding investment for me. Having said this, I am aware that that there are fellow Sabana REIT investors who are less fortunate. 

As always, I am quite happy to help people to help themselves. If my blog has helped to educate retail investors to some degree, I am glad. 

In the end, however, I must let readers make their own decisions and I won't push them in any direction. I am not allowed to and I don't want to.

Although I am sympathetic to those who have lost money investing in Sabana REIT, I believe that they must take responsibility for their own action or inaction as investors. 

If they happen to form the majority of Sabana REIT's investors and if they choose to be apathetic for whatever reason, then, they have to accept whatever the consequences might be.

By replying to your comment in the form of a blog, I am helping to spread the word about the activism that is taking place now. 

However, please understand that I do this because I believe that more people must be made aware of how investing in REITs for income is not as easy as they might think and they must know that REITs are not risk free investments. 

I am not doing this to be a part of the activist movement against the manager of Sabana REIT.

With best wishes,

AK

If you are a Sabana REIT unitholder and if you are interested, here is the link to the FB page:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/1586399528054150/?qsefr=1


By the way, as requested by some readers, tomorrow, I will be sharing a check list for investing in REITs.
It will be part of an advertorial which was planned weeks before. If this is of interest to you, please visit my blog again tomorrow. 

Investing in REITs for income is simple enough to understand but it might not be as easy to do it well.

2016 full year passive income from S-REITs.

Thursday, December 22, 2016


In this final blog on S-REITs in 2016, I want to record a heart felt good bye to Saizen REIT as we knew it. The REIT was one of my largest investments in the S-REITs universe for many years. It was an asset play and an income stock that amply rewarded my strategy of being paid while I waited.

Now, this brings us nicely to the importance of investing in income producing assets. For many of us, not having passive income means working till the day we die. It would also probably mean having a weaker ability to cope with very real financial challenges in life such as inflation.


Warren Buffett once said that we should not depend on a single income and that we should make investment to create a second source. To me,  quite simply, this means investing for income, which is what I have been doing mostly.


If you are a regular reader, I hope my experience will keep you pumped up for the new year. 

If you are a new reader, I hope my experience inspires you to consider investing for income (if you are not doing it already) for a financially more secure future.

2016 full year income from S-REITs.

In 2H 2016, I added to my investment in Soilbuild REIT due to a rights issue. This was at 63c per rights unit. I took up my entitlement and also applied for excess rights. From that exercise, I increased my investment in the REIT by more than 10%.

Some details:

1. Issue of 94,353,672 new units in Soilbuild REIT on the basis of 1 New Unit for every 10 existing units in Soilbuild REIT. 

2. Funds to partially finance the purchase of a building, 2 Bukit Batok St 23, which has an initial annual rental of $8 million. 






Another bit of news of interest to me was the reverse takeover (RTO) of Saizen REIT by Sime Darby. As I am still holding on to my original investment in Saizen REIT, I received another distribution before the RTO was effected. It means that I received a tidy 5 figure sum which, of course, made me happy.

I said this earlier in August:

"We will be paid 9.87c a unit and still get to keep our investment in the REIT."


I haven't been doing much with regards to my investments in S-REITs. 

Mostly, I am just collecting dividends regularly and letting professional managers take care of the day to day operations.


Total income from S-REITs in 2016: 

S$ 452,243.52

This figure includes the bumper distribution from Saizen REIT which will not be repeated in future.

If we were to exclude all income distributions from Saizen REIT this year, total income from S-REITs in 2016 would only be:

S$ 66,933.70

Q
uite shocking how much smaller the number is, isn't it? This shows how big an investment I had in Saizen REIT. 

The lower income, without any contribution from Saizen REIT, translates to S$ 5,577.80 a month.

This is still quite comfortable for one person to live off but unless I can make up for it somewhere, this lower income from my investments in S-REITs is something I would have to live with in future. 

Of course, if you have been following my blog, you would know what I have been doing to make up for the shortfall.

A few years back, I had 5 relatively large investments in S-REITs. Today, only 2 are left.

If you are wondering which 2, with the value of my investment in Saizen REIT drastically reduced in the past year, 


AIMS AMP Capital Industrial REIT 
and 
First REIT 

are now the only S-REITs which have significantly more weight in my portfolio.

Some might remember that, a few years ago, I drastically reduced my exposure to LMIR and Sabana REIT for different reasons, locking in some decent gains in the process. So, my S-REIT portfolio has been shrinking in size for some time.

With interest rates probably going higher, there is a reasonable need to be cautious when investing in S-REITs but there is no need to be pessimistic.

In response to a reader who was rather pessimistic:


The worry is probably common amongst investors.

This was a conversation with a reader who raised two questions:


What do I find more important?
1. Relatively reasonable gearing.
2. Relatively strong cash flow.
3. Relatively good manager.

(If you want to listen to AK talking to himself a bit more, go to related post #3 at the end of the blog.)

That ends this blog post and I will share some thoughts on my non-REITs portfolio, hopefully, before the year ends.
Related posts:

Following AK, Pokemon Go, Saizen REIT DPU 9.87c etc.

Friday, August 19, 2016

I decided quite a while back that I should restrict the amount of time I spend on blogging and its related activities. So, nothing more than 2 hours a day. I think that is a fairly generous amount of time to spend daily on a hobby.

I know people who are spending a lot more time on Pokémon Go now. That is not something I understand but we decide on how we would spend our time and must be comfortable with the consequences. The latter is something people think less about.

I am also spending more time with family, gardening, exercising, shopping, cooking, watching anime and k-drama. So, even in retirement, I am kept busy as there are many things which I am spending more time on.

Blogging is not a job and I hope it won't become a job because I might not enjoy it as much then.

Some might notice that I have more updates on my Facebook wall than in my blog these days. This is because Facebook is very convenient.

I know.

AK is terribly lazy.

Bad AK! Bad AK!

Whenever I do that, I also update the comments section of my blog here. So, for those who do not follow me on Facebook and would like to have more updates, following the comments section of my blog is something to consider.


Here is a recent email exchange with a reader on the subject:

Reader:
Hi AK
Saizen made an anoucement.  I read that we will be paid the residual sum
and Sime Derby
buying shares at about 3 cents.
I do not understand at all.
Like to understand how do you see this development and your plan of action.

Thanks for your help.

 
AK:
I am holding on to my investment to receive the payout. :)

The REIT will issue new shares to new investor and I get to stay on as an old investor.


 
Reader:
Hi AKThank You. Likely we have to pay for new the new shares. What
is the cost and the net gain for old investor.This is the area I am
not clear.Appreciate advise.
Regards
 
AK:
I shared this on my FB wall:

 R:
 "May I ask what is happening to Saizen? I've read the document
released today but still do not understand. wish you would talk to
yourself n explain in simple terms to us! Thanks!"

Assi AK:
 "We will be paid 9.87c a unit and still get to keep our investment in the REIT, it seems.
"The REIT will issue new units priced at 3.484c to new investors to  partially fund purchase of some Australian properties.
"Whether it is a good deal or not is hard to say at this moment but to  get paid and yet retain an investment that could possibly generate
income for me in future sounds good."


Reader:
Thanks AK.i do not go faceboik.Why do not you post it on your regular website.
 
AK:
I actually posted this in the comments section of my blog too.
You can follow the comments section of my blog for updates, if you like. I provide info on how to do this under "Following my blog" in the left side bar.
I don't always have the time or inclination to blog. So, the comments section or my Facebook wall are quick ways for me to do updates. :)

Related post:
Following comments in ASSI.

STE says to see crises as opportunities and accumulate.

Sunday, July 3, 2016

I am happy to publish another blog post by a fellow investor and one of ASSI's more prolific guest bloggers, STE:

“Creative Destruction”
and
The Business Cycle

“Millions saw the apple fall, but Newton was the one who asked why.” By Bernard Baruch .

 “The stock market is the story of cycles and of the human behavior that is responsible for overreactions in both directions.” By Seth Klarman

We have seen market move and swing viciously since mid of last year due to event such as “Yuan devaluation “ , “Oil and Emerging Market crisis “ , “ China’s Debts and Shadow Banking issues”  and the recent one “ Brexit “.

All these event has created huge market volatility and because of investor’s psychology swing together with these market news … we have seen the index swing up and down wildly.

One need to always remember that “"Psychological create 90% market”as quoted by Andre Kostolany.

Whatever things involving “people “ … it tends to be “ chaotic and messy “ , for me .. stock market looks like this :


Nowadays, Stock Market became more intricated and complex due to fast moving news by click of second and much intergrated / connected world by IT revolution in recent years.

News move in Nano-second and always being “magnify “to attract viewers’ attention or increase subscribers …

     


Some of the event may have long term impact on the market but some are just “ noise “ which affect the stock price in short term … but even for those major event , remembered that market always move in cycle and “mean reverting “ eventually .

Joseph Schumpeter, an “Austrian Economics “ coined the phrase of  “ Creative Destruction “ and also written great books like “ Business Cycle “ / “ Capitalism ,Socialism and Democracy “.



According to him , “Creative Destruction is the essential fact about capitalism “ and he gave example like “ blacksmith  being wiped out by factory , the car superseded the horse and buggy, and corporation overthrew by proprietorship “..

And by Wikipedia , according to Schumpeter, the "gale of creative destruction" describes the "process of industrial mutation that incessantly revolutionizes the economic structure from within, incessantly destroying the old one, incessantly creating a new one". If  you are interested on “Austrian School of Economic thought” , you may refer to this link ..   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austrian_School  and further reading on works from “Austrian Group of Economist like  Ludwig von Mises  and Friedrich Hayek .


Same for other crisis , eventually , people will need to move on and market will not even remember those crisis e.g Oil crisis in 70s , Asian Financial crisis , Dot-com bubble and the latest GFC caused by Housing bubble .




Look at above chart on Dow Jones since 1884 ,, market gone through many cycles and even with 2 “world war “ and various bubble & panic .  GFC in 2008 may become insignificant if we look at this chart in long term …

BUT ,,, one may argue that as investor ,, we may not have such longer time to go through the market …well , that’s fair enough !! One may need to look at shorter time frame and react to our own investment cycle / need accordingly.

For me , as per previous blog post , I will only use one chart  and react to it accordingly to adjust my portfolio allocation from time to time. That’s the “ Linear Regression Chart on market and Mean Reverting concept “ , by doing this , I hope to avoid buying high when market is in “euphoria “ and taking advantage on situation when market is in panic and over-react.

As rules of thumb , we must also avoiding those “highly speculative and  hot stock “ in the market and be realistic to our “ expectation of return on investment ”.

Also , as I mentioned before on the “Fallacy of Indexing “ … when we talk about long term index return of 8-10% … it is base on average  of very long time frame … in shorter time frame ,, index could swing by +/- 20-30% easily .

There is also “ survivorship “ biases on the stock component in the index… for those stocks who have destroyed by business cycle and lack of innovation (e.h NOL/ Noble ) been taken out from Index and new one being added . I guess this is also part of the process of “Creative Destruction “. When the old one being destroyed and disappear in the Index , the new one being added and continue to create value for the Index. 

“ Crisis = Opportunities “

If we look at  Singapore’s context ,,, market has also gone through many cycles with up and down … if one could take advantage on one or two of these crisis ,, it could really shortern our time to achieve F.I.R.E.



< I have not added the latest event on BREXIT ,,, it may turn out much more serious or may not in the list at all … it is anybody’s guess . I think>

< Credit goes to one of the bloggers who have created this table , which I have forgotten from where I got this >

For the past 20 years , market have corrected more than 9 times which have resulted negative return of -20% to -62%. This is to show that how often and crisis prone our market is.


“ Linear Regression and Mean Reverting “



My investment strategy for coming years remain the same …where I will take advantage when stock index gone down to 2500 level +/- and start to accumulate war chest again when stock rebound from that level .  Please ensure to keep some cash buffer if index went down to 2200 ( which is equivalent to crisis level in 97/00/08 ).

As mentioned earlier , market will be much more  volatile due to “flooded liquility “ couple with psychology effect due to “market NEWs ( noise ??)  “ .

Let’s tighten our seat-belt and ready for this “bumpy ride “ !!!


< Dividend update >

"Do you know the only thing that give me pleasure ? It is to see my dividend coming in …" John D Rockefeller


YES! This is most important event for investors who have invested for “passive income “ ….regardless of market volatility ,,, dividend income continue to flow in …



Total dividend collected for  1st Half 2016 = $102,426 .  (my methodology of calculation is different from AK as I did not include the privitazation return from Saizen as “dividend “ ,, instead , I would treat them as “ return of capital “).

** Total dividend increased substaintialy in 2 Qtr 2016 due to more investment in 1st Qtr 2016 on some of the blue chips by taking advantage of the market turmoil during early 2016 . Also, partly contributed by better div from Accordia Golf Trust.
Lastly , allow me to re-quote below which I have quoted before : by Warren Buffet in 1999

Stock have always come out from crises “Over the long term, the stock market news will be good. In the 20th century, the United States endured two world wars and other traumatic and expensive military conflicts; the Depression; a dozen or so recessions and financial panics; oil shocks; a flu epidemic; and the resignation of a disgraced president. Yet the Dow rose from 66 to 11,497.”

After year 2000 , stock market have experienced another 2 major crises i.e Dot-com Bubble in 2000 and GFC in 2008 … but yet .. Dow Jones stand at above 17,000  while watching at the episode of BREXIT crisis unfolding .

Happy Investing and stay focus on your Long term Investing strategy, hope & wish all could achieve F.I.R.E soon!!

Cheers!!
---------------------------------
AK:
"What does F.I.R.E. stand for? Make a guess. I did and got it right! I so clever. Ya, I know. AK is so shameless! Bad AK! Bad AK!"


Related post:
STE's investment strategy.


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