Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Value.Able by Roger Montgomery

Went to a seminar by Roger Montgomery last weekend and somehow, he inspired me.

Currently on my investing journey, I am quite unsure whether the way I make my investment decisions are right or wrong. I guess sometimes my decisions are irrational, bought on impulse, sell on fear. Trying to predict and beat the market. Sometimes I got it right, but sometimes I got it wrong. And I felt a bit of emptiness because I know I am not investing, but speculating.

Also, I bought a book written by him called Value Able.


 This book is about value investing and it teaches you how to value a company based on its ROE. One of the favourite quote that I like is "invest in the business, not it's stock". To be a value investor, I have to keep reminding myself about this quote.

 After reading it half-way through, I am determined to have a plan in my investment strategies which I learned from the book and follow it. No more being a speculator which I always thought I am not.

Cheers~

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

IHH IPO

Can't wait for IHH healthcare to be listed. I have always been attracted to healthcare stock. One very simple reason is because healthcare is a need, not wants. And I put my bet in them being a leading premium healthcare provider in the region.

below are the extract from http://www.valuebuddies.com/thread-2159-post-26607.html#pid26607 


S'pore retail investors offered 52m IHH sharesIPO to run from July 4-11; Temasek, GIC among 22 cornerstone investors

By JONATHAN KWOK
SINGAPORE retail investors will be able to ballot for 52 million shares in the widely anticipated initial public offering (IPO) of IHH Healthcare.

The company, Asia's biggest hospital operator, lodged the prospectus for its large-scale dual listing in Singapore and Malaysia yesterday.

The 552-page document - excluding appendices - did not reveal the price of the shares but stated that 52 million of the 2.23billion share offering, or about 2.3 per cent, will be for the Singapore public.

About 36 million shares are slated to be placed out to Singapore institutional investors. Including shares for directors, employees and business associates based here, the entire Singapore offering will be 140.6 million shares.

The Malaysia offering will be 208.5 million shares, including 161.1 million shares for the Malaysian public.

Some 498 million shares will be for placement to institutions, such as global investors, and 1.39 billion shares - about 62 per cent of the entire offering - will be for the 22 cornerstone investors which have already signed up for the IPO.

The prospectus also showed that the Government of Singapore Investment Corp is among the cornerstone investors, confirming earlier reports that the sovereign wealth fund had signed up.

Fullerton Fund Management, a wholly owned subsidiary of Temasek Holdings, has also signed up. Global investment manager BlackRock and subsidiaries of the AIA Group will be investing, as will Como Holdings, which is owned by hotelier Ong Beng Seng, and Malaysia's Employees Provident Fund.

Another one of the high-powered investors is Kencana Capital, an investment holding company controlled by Datuk Mokhzani Mahathir, who is the son of former Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad.

About 90 per cent of the public issue will be used to repay debt with the rest for working capital and listing expenses.

The IPO will 'enhance the stature of our company to market our services and expand our market position' and allow 'access (to) the equity capital market' for growth opportunities, said IHH in the prospectus.

Risk factors cited included the group's 'substantial leverage'.

The units making up the group earned combined profits of RM379.9 million (S$153million) last year, down from RM554.4million in 2010, but up from 2009's RM83.2million.

For the first quarter of this year, profits were RM123.8million, from RM101.9million in the same period last year.

The document said that the public offering will run from July4 to 11, with the price of shares set to be determined on July 12 after a placement exercise.

Trading is slated to start on July 25.

Among its operations, IHH Healthcare runs Singapore's Mount Elizabeth, Gleneagles and Parkway East hospitals.

These assets, among others, had been operated by the previously listed Parkway Holdings, which was taken private for $3.5 billion by Malaysian state investor Khazanah Nasional in 2010.

Parkway was restructured and packaged with many other operations - such as medical facilities and a health-care university in Malaysia and health-care operations in Turkey for this listing.

Some reports have suggested that IHH's shares will be sold at RM2.85 each to raise more than RM6.36 billion, though some earlier reports have estimated a more conservative figure of about RM4.7 billion.

While experts have been scrambling to estimate the windfall for Khazanah, the listing will boost Singapore's stock market too.

IHH will be the largest listing so far this year in Singapore, with the biggest so far being the $221.7 million April offering by Bumitama Agri.

Monday, May 28, 2012

Securities Trading with Standard Chartered Bank

Just submitted my saving account application to Standard Chartered Bank because I have decided to open a securities account with them. The commission charge is 0.2% with no minimum commission which I think is very good for a small trader like me. Good news for my "gross margin"!

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Taking The 1st Step

I opened my first trading account in 2010. I was then 21 years old. I remember vividly the first trading that I made. I guess my newspaper reading habit helps me to decide the first stock for me to invest in. I was looking for good fundamental stock which will grow in value in the future and I read an article in the newspaper that talks about ageing population. Thus I decided to invest in one of the healthcare stock.

I chanced upon Thomson Medical stock and thought that this company is a leading healthcare provider for woman and children and thus I decided to invest in it.

The first trade was quite a struggle when I was deciding whether to enter the market. A lot of "What ifs" appeared in my mind before I click on the "BUY". What if I lose all my money? What if the market crash? But then I convinced myself that the capital amount that I put in is an amount of money that I can afford to lose. If I want to learn how to invest, I have to take this important first step. So I clicked on the "BUY" and my investing learning journey continues till today.

I guess I was lucky then. I bought Thomson Medical at a price of $0.830/share. Within 3 months, Peter Lim announced that he will acquire majority stake in Thomson Medical at a price of $1.75/share and I sold my share, making a return of 111%. I was so elated then. But the subsequent investment that I made wasn't that lucky though and up till today, I am at my breakeven point.

I am enjoying the process of investing. Learning and gaining experience from every profit or loss that I made. I have pick up some books to read to improve my financial knowledge so that I can fine tuned my investing strategies.

I decided to start this blog so that I can record every bits and pieces of my investing journey. I will be sharing information and views on stock that is under my watchlist and some personal views of the world issues.