One problem gets solved. Another starts knocking at the door.
The war may be over, but the monsoon challenge is now demanding attention. Markets are never free from uncertainty , and that's exactly why investors must remain disciplined.
That's how markets work. That's how life works.
Don't try to eliminate fear. Learn to manage it with discipline.
Because the market punishes overconfidence, but rewards disciplined conviction.
As Manish Chokani says, look for companies whose future profits could equal today's market cap. 📈
That's where true multibagger opportunities are created. 💰
Credit: Clip from @ndtvprofit#stockmarket#Investing
Sensex gave zero returns from 1992 to 2003.
But Rakesh Jhunjhunwala wrote an article in The Economist on why he believed that Indian markets will rally.
The markets went up 7 times from2003 to 2008. Here’s his thinking:
“I think the first quality an investor needs is to be an optimist. And remember what Peter Lunch says:
“Wars have come, terror has come and natural disasters have come but company profits have gone up.”
“The kind of valuations, quality of earnings, ROEs and every company we went was fighting for a paise of profit.”
Pessimists will always sound right but Optimists are the one who make money.🙌🏻
The duck does not chase every fish. Great investors don't chase every stock.
Patience is not inactivity. It is disciplined waiting.
#share#investor#stocks#sharemarket
"In India, the comman man always abuses the Rich and the Industrialists. This has become a fashion nowadays.“
"For example, in any ceremony, a Filmstar and an Industrialist is present, the minister will first go and greet the Filmstar. So we should have the mindset of supporting industrialists"
- Vijay Kedia. Src: NDTV Profit
The power of compounding belongs not only to professionals.
It belongs to every disciplined citizen willing to think long term.
Not everyone can fly a plane. But everyone has the right to fly.
Similarly, not everyone can analyse stocks.
But everyone deserves the opportunity to benefit from the power of compounding.
Consider this:
Suppose a person invests Rs. 10,000 per month for 20 years.
If the post-tax return from an FD is 5%, the corpus grows to about Rs 41 lakh.
If the post-tax return from equity is 10%, the corpus grows to about Rs. 76 lakh.
Same person. Same monthly investment. Same discipline. Same 20 years. Yet the difference is Rs 35 lakh.
The difference between 5% and 10% is not 5%.
It is the difference between Rs 41 lakh and Rs. 76 lakh.
Yes, higher returns come with volatility.
But for a disciplined long-term investor, volatility is not merely a risk - it is also the price paid for the possibility of superior long term compounding.
Volatility is the price of admission. Compounding is the reward.
A nation prospers when its citizens don't just save money.
They own a share in the businesses that create wealth.
Equity investing may not be for everyone.
But the power of compounding and business ownership should belong to everyone.
Survival is the road to riches.
The investors who win aren't the ones who shine in bull markets.
They're the ones who stay in the game long enough to benefit from compounding.
“During 2018 NBFC crisis, many friends called me asking me regarding the trouble.”
“But I had investments only in HDFC, Bajaj and Sundaram finance.”
“So stick to the best quality of shares. You may have to pay up, but you can sleep well at night.”
- Govind Parikh. 2018