Are you really an investor?

One time in college, we were in the middle of discussing about the ten axioms of financial management when I asked my seatmate Rex, where do you keep some of your allowance? 

"I'm in to the stock market since financial management is my major." 

Excitingly, I asked how do you get into investing? I was always enthusiastic about the market since my sociology teacher introduced it.

"I just buy stocks at it's low price and sell it when the price is right."

img.src

Redefining an Investor

The world of investing is so broad, millions flock the market hoping to take the opportunities it presents. Most of the reasons include better education for their kids, pay bills, traveling and retirement. 

 This is where the danger comes, they will be emotionally attached to their own money driving them to make irrational decision making. When someone has a couple of hundred bucks and has a scheduled utilities bill next month then he thinks putting it to an exchange hoping to ride the bull run and take some profit. But, it’s cyclical and the bears took over immediately then he waits for recovery and subsequently sells it at a loss since his bill nears its due.  

 When you search the internet, read books, listen to self-acclaimed financial gurus, friends and family members, they will present ways how to make money and to outperform the market. 

Daily chart posts, insane price prediction, circulating unconfirmed news, opinions where the market is headed, financial institutions and government regulations entering the scene. 

 Their intentions may be good but almost all of them forget to deliver the discipline on investing. Without discipline, it’s pure speculating rather than investing.   

  • Do you research about the company before buying? 
  • What will you do when you have achieved a level profit?  
  •  When should you sell if the market is correcting?  
  • How do you handle pressure from family, bills, and friends?  
  • Have you set your strategies? Goals? 
  • What aspects of a company or a project should you look for? Management? Earnings? Cash flows? 
  • Do you have a span of time on holding your shares? 
  • How do you tame your greed? 
  • Do you practice margin of safety to avoid heavy losses in the future?  
 When we have discipline, then we can have wisdom. When we acquire wisdom, we can have the right goal. When we the right goal, then we can have right plans. Then if we have the right plans, we will able to execute it properly.  

 

img.src

Conclusion

 An investor buys a business as if he owns it, an intelligent investor. 

  • He researches before making a decision. 
  • He has concrete strategies and strict about himself. 
  • He is investing in himself by reading books filled with investing disciplines. 
  • He’s not in front of the computer monitor all day. 
  • He can sleep well without worrying about his investments. 
  • He has time for himself, family, friends, and The Almighty.   

So, are you a mere speculator or an investor?