The Way To Billions


wealthymatters

So get started early.Do what you can.Don’t wait for a grand idea or a great stroke of luck.You may not become a millionaire on your first try.No matter ,learn and move on.If you keep your wits about you,your millions will become billions in time.If you learn fast and leverage your know-how and contacts you’ll get there faster.FOCUS on how many steps these gentlemen had to take to get where they are.Think of their ages and the years they have been working.

Comics As Assets


wealthymattersBought for 60 paise in the 1960s,sale price Rs 70,000 in 2013. Even accounting for inflation, that’s a super return on investment. Appropriately so, as the reason 60 paise can turn into Rs 70,000 is superheroes. A mint condition 1960s’ Indrajal comic book with a cover price of 60 paise will get you Rs 70,000 from the right buyer. Indrajal was published by Bennett Coleman & Company Ltd, which also publishes the TOI.

Old comic books like those published under titles Indrajal, Amar Chitra Katha, Tinkle and Chitra Bharti Kathamala have become highly sought-after and high priced collectors’ items. In this trend, India is following the US, where old comics have been collectors’ classics for a long time.

In 2011, Hollywood actor Nicolas Cage’s copy of Action Comics No. 1 featuring the first appearance of Superman sold for a super price of $2,161,000 in an online auction.

Bangalore-based history teacher and graphic novel collector Arun Prasad, whose old comic book fetched Rs 70,000, recently got his collection of over 15,000 comics valued. His assets in the form of graphic novels are worth over Rs 1.7 crore. Prasad is a determined collector. Recently, he took a trip to Kashmir to purchase old comic books.He possesses the entire Indrajal series in a few languages.  Read more of this post

When To Invest In Mutual Funds


wealthymattersRetail behaviour is a very contrarian reliable indicator of market movements. There is never any meaningful retail participation in low P/E markets. Rather retail has invested large amounts in high P/E markets. For instance,in 1992, after the markets had moved up 10 times in the previous four years and P/Es were at a record 45 times, a single scheme collected nearly  4,500 crores (20,000 crores at today’s prices). In 1999, IT funds and IT stocks attracted very large sums of money at three-digit P/E multiples. In 2003, at record low P/Es of less than 10 times, the net flows in all equity funds in the country were around 100 crores in one year. In 2008, at high P/E multiples again of 20-25x, inflows in equity funds were 50,000 crore in a year. Since April last year till date, nearly 20,000 crores have been withdrawn from equity funds at P/Es of nearly 14 times.

Equities are a great compounding vehicle (Sensex is roughly doubling every 5-6 years in line with nominal GDP growth rates since inception in 1979) and investors should simply practice low P/E investing. Past data suggests that investments in equity mutual funds made in low P/E markets (say a P/E below 15) have done well over 3-5 years; on the other hand in high P/E markets (say a P/E of more than 20), investors should be cautious.

Rakesh Jhunjhunwala Quote-3


wealthymattersFinally, we invest out of ignorance. We cannot be perfect.

Rakesh Jhunjhunwala Quote-2


wealthymatters “The market is like women, always commanding, always mysterious, always volatile, always exciting, and it is not a joke. In my 25-30 years of experience in the market, just as you cannot have a good relationship with a woman by bullying her, you cannot have a good relationship with the market by trying to bully it or say that you are the king. The king is the market.”