- Joined
- 24 November 2005
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My position is that we have gone long in the property market over the last four years and I'm not looking at buying any more properties at this stage . One we have some more significant growth we will revisit that , probably in around 1-2 years .
In the mean time I'm looking at getting back into the share market and wanted to get peoples opinions in very fundamental terms of where we are at the moment .
My observation is that the Aussie market has been moving sideways since the GFC . In the last year or so the USA and OS markets have outperformed the ASX which is slightly ironical considering the the australian economy has been one of the stronger economies since the GFC . We're well short of an all time high , where the US , with an economy that still has major issues has reached one.
I remember a period a few years ago , where the ASX lagged the US and then caught up over the following time frame . Are we faced with a similar situation ? When looking at property markets in Australia , I look at the Capital Cities with the lowest 10 year growths ( sydney in the last years ) and target those and have done quite well.
There seems to be significantly less doom and gloom stories around at the moment . I'm not sure if this is deliberate under reporting , but my perception is that people are more positive , or if they're not positive now , they're trying to be. Certainly the property market is quite buoyant and in some areas boiling and this general confidence seems to be spreading through the community.
Any thoughts on other factors which might lead to the ASX breaking out and moving into a consistent up trend ?
In share investing I'm a trend follower , so I'm happy to watch from the sidelines , but I try to get in early .
Cliff
We're well short of an all time high , where the US , with an economy that still has major issues has reached one.
An interesting point to consider is the pay-out ratio of many domestic companies vs their overseas counterparts and the role that plays in achieving growth in the indicies.
I was having this discussion with a friend only this morning so its timely that you brought it up. Craft posted a chart of the XAOAI (or was it XJO?) which showed that we are actually back to GFC levels now!
I havent seen a US accumulation index chart for comparison...but the factor of distributions is one that is commonly overlooked.
IT was XJOAI
https://www.aussiestockforums.com/forums/showthread.php?t=27397&highlight=time+high
And yes distributions definately need to be taken into account, when you look at an investment property you consider rental income on top of capital growth so it is only fair to consider income from shares as part of their performance. It is also alot easier to reinvest distributions for compounding then it is to reinvest rental income from property.
Any thoughts on other factors which might lead to the ASX breaking out and moving into a consistent up trend ?
... general confidence seems to be spreading through the community ...
Hi Seech,
You would know me as a poster that used to have some vigourous disagreements with "property guru's", especially when they thought they knew something about shares.
brty
+1.The single basic premis of successful stock investments is to buy what is going up in price. Very, very simple, yet most people can't do it. I buy a small amount of whatever stock, and add to the position as it goes up. If it goes down then I get out with a small loss.
Interesting reading and sadly nothing new. For those who don't want to trawl through the whole thread, the following are some of the comments.There is a thread about the stock MCE that should be compulsory reading, it highlights typical investor behaviour that you need to stay away from. Have a chart of MCE open to see what the price was doing at the time of the various comments.
brty
Not for everyone but this is exactly the reason I do not use stop losses.
With a long term view in mind if a company passes as investment grade for me, a reduction in sp often leads me to consider buying more instead of selling.
(4 April 2011)I'll be taking the opportunity to top up, I can't see it getting any cheaper.
Above is ROE sounding a warning on 29 April 2011I'm just curious why people buy MCE at this price?
their fundamental is weakening a fair bit ..
this business is capital intensive and high fix cost
you buying for perfection from here on....
things can go very wrong very fast for this sort of business
and the capital raising was time to perfection .... market sentimental and market darling status....
Just curious that is all
(23 August 2011)Looks like MCE has copped a bit of a battering this morning down under 5 dollars.
I bought at 4 and 5 dollars last year.
Looks like I should have sold when it hit 9 but I didn't want to pay the large capital gains tax
(24 August 2011)People can't get out fast enough at the moment
(24 August 2011)It seems everytime i top up, MCE reaches a new low. needless to say i'm no longer greedy.
(24 August, 2011) (Last price this Friday 71 cents.)Could not resist buying more @ $4.20 today - had to sell something I did not want to sell but I could not let that price go past.
Last post in the thread.And the forecast for the next year is for more of the same and based on previous forecasts that probably means they are going to be worse than this year.
Interesting reading and sadly nothing new. For those who don't want to trawl through the whole thread, the following are some of the comments.
Might make a good sticky in the Beginners' Forum.
The single basic premis of successful stock investments is to buy what is going up in price. Very, very simple, yet most people can't do it. I buy a small amount of whatever stock, and add to the position as it goes up. If it goes down then I get out with a small loss.
The answer is pretty easy I think.
While money is printed to stimulate economies
Then markets will continue to rise.
Your exercise has shown that your idea is no more effective than any other.
The real doom and gloom has passed
The cloud of doom remains.
The optimism of recovery is evident
Highs are being challenged and surpassed.
Lowest lows are a thing of the past.
Probably the best thing for traders is to look for the better performing companies in the better performing industries. That has served me well so far.
Cheers
Country Lad
Nice recap Julia, you can almost feel the despair...its sad actually. I hope they didn't lose too much.
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