On Tue, Sep 30, 2014 at 10:46 AM, skn <[email protected]> wrote:

> > 4. If you do have a little left over, buy some US stocks - I prefer ones
> > like Google, Tesla, Twitter, which will do nothing but rise in the next
> > 10
> > years.
>
> Always been conflicted by buying of individual shares. My reservation
> comes from the fact that unless you are a _very_ savvy investor who has
> tentacles spread in the market, there is no way armchair investors like
> us can know what is going on in advance enough to buy/sell.
>

I'm not savvy AT ALL but I do believe if I buy 5 or 10 stocks which I
believe should do well in the next 10 years and then not worry about what
happens on a daily basis, then there's enough portfolio diversification to
make the impacts of black swans on any one or two less painful to the
corpus - it's the same as running your own long-term mutual fund.

My reasons for buying index stocks is nothing but the perception that most
funds that enter a market buy stocks in the index in an attempt to beat the
index - so index stocks as a whole will always be well-bought, so they
typically shouldnt have too much of a long-term downside.

Of course, I could be dead wrong. But this has worked well over the last 20
years, for me.


My $0.02,


Mahesh







>
> -skn-
>
>

Reply via email to