Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Understanding Technical Investing as it Relates to the Nigerian Stock Exchange

Robert Kiyosaki, in his best-selling book; Guide to Investing, wrote some important things on technical investing in his attempt to define a “Qualified Investor”. Most of the lessons in that chapter happen to coincide with the market situation in the Nigerian Stock Exchange today. The following excerpts from that book, not only define technical investing in its true sense, but also give sound advice on what to do in circumstances like we have today.

Definition of Technical Investing

Technical investing: Rich Dad said, “A well-trained technical investor invests on the emotions of the market and invests with insurance from catastrophic loss. The most important consideration for selecting a good stock for investment is based on the supply of and demand for the company’s stock. The technical investor studies the patterns of the sales price of the company’s stock. Will the supply of the shares of stock being offered for sale be sufficient based on the expected demand for those shares?

Methods of a Technical Investor

The technical investor tends to buy on price and market sentiment...just like a shopper shops for sales and discounted items…

The technical investor studies the pattern of the history of the company’s stock price. A true technical investor is not concerned with the internal operations of a company as a fundamental investor would be. The primary indicators the technical investor is concerned with are the mood of the market and the price of the stock.

Reasons for Stock Price Fluctuation

One of the reasons so many people think the subject of investing is risky is because most people are technically operating as “technical investors” but don’t know the difference between a technical investor and a fundamental investor. The reason investing seems risky from the technical side is because stock prices fluctuate with market emotions. Here are just a few examples of things that can cause fluctuations in stock prices:

One day a stock is popular and in the news, next week it isn’t, or the company manipulates supply and demand by splitting the stock, diluting the pool with additional shares being created through such things as secondary offerings, or cutting back the number of shares by buying them back; or

An institutional buyer (like a mutual fund or pension fund) buys or sells the shares of a certain company in such volume that it disturbs the market.

Segun’s note: Or, as was the case in the election year of 2003, where investors bailed out of stocks in an anticipation of political instability. For some uncanny reason or the other, this occurrence has been avoided in the present election year.

Why Investing is risky to the Average Investor

Investing seems risky to the average investor because they lack the basic financial education skills to be a fundamental investor and do not have adequate technical investor skills. If they are not on the board of the company changing the supply side of the shares they have no management control over the fluctuations of supply and demand of the stock’s price on the open market. They remain at the whim of the market emotions…

Since 1995, people operating strictly as fundamental investors have not done as well as investors who also consider the technical side of the market. In this market where the people who take the most risk win, people with more cautious and value oriented views lost out on this market mania. In fact, many of these risk takers frightened many technical investors as well with their high prices of stock without any value. But in a crash, it is those investors with the strong fundamental investments and technical trading skills who do well. The amateur speculators rushing into the market will be hurt in the down turn.

Segun’s note: The market mania referred to here can be likened to the present situation in the Nigerian stock market where the banking reforms and the consequent windfall has caused many people to start trading on the secondary market without adequate technical investor skills. This has resulted in a mania and is an ample opportunity that true technical investors can cash in on. Sentiments run the market so an investor who knows when to get in AND when to get out could make a killing.

Invest Wisely, Invest in Financial Education

Finally, I’ll leave you with a word of advice from Robert Kiyosaki. It is a warning to be watchful and to aim financial intelligence before aiming for profit. It is a statement of self appraisal:

Rich dad said, “The trouble with getting rich quickly without a parachute is that you fall farther and faster. Lots of easy money makes people think they are financial geniuses when in fact, they become financial fools.” Rich dad believed that both technical as well as fundamental skills were important to survive the ups and downs of the world of investing.

George Soros who is one of the most famous technical investors, made billions of dollars in a single speculation in 1992. The classic article;
The Speculator: 3 lessons from ace investor George Soros by Laurel Kenner and Victor Niederhoffer, gives a rare insight into his generic investing methods.


Recommended Reading

Guide to Investing by Robert Kiyosaki

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