Thursday, August 25, 2016

What Investing Options Exist for a 42 Year Old with Investible Surplus of Rs.3000 Per Month?

Full and Actual Question:

As a 42 years old with a family of 4, earning ₹ 22k per month how to invest more with a debt of 5k,10k for house rent, and 4k other expenses?


Dear Mr.Daniel Paul!
You seem to have an investible surplus of Rs.3,000 per month which is decent. Your present age of 42 also decent enough with an active investing life of about 23 years and another 10-15 years even if you do not invest you keep live your past investments, although it would have been great if you had asked this question when you were 22 instead. So keep a target of of 75 to 80 years as investment life which is great.
Try to get rid of your debt repayment obligation of Rs.5000 per month as soon as possible and after that try to avoid borrowing money. Please destroy the credit card(s), if you have any, immediately.
Your present budget seems to be very tight. Your expenses are not high but your income is very limited. Can you try for a second job that may boost to your investible surplus by another Rs.5000 to 10000? This can be very helpful. If you manage to earn this extra income, please do not destroy it on luxuries like car, holidays and eating out. Use the extra money for investment only.
Open a SIP or invest in an Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) for the next 23 years. Do not stop this investment for any reason whatsoever.
If you follow this simple advice keep invested for the time frame suggested, when you look back at the age of 65 you would have accumulated a net wealth of Rs.40.46 lakhs, after an assumed annual inflation of 10%, which is very high and long term stock annual market returns of 15% which is very reasonable.
If you keep the investment alive, without disturbing for another 20 years, you would have become a really rich and wealthy person with a net wealth of Rs.5.04 Crores. Please see the calculations below:
Returns From Humble Investments

How such spectacular results are possible out of such humble investments of Rs.3000 per month? That is the power of SIP and Miracle of Compounding.
Happy Investing and Getting Rich!
Anand

Please Note: This is a reproduction of the question I had answered on the website ‘Quora’, which I thought could be useful to the visitors to this blog site also.

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Why Acquiring Company's Stock Price Drop When Announcing an Acquisition?

Dear Friend you have asked a very deep valuable question and that is why I took some time to answer.
Companies after growing organically to a very large scale find it difficult to grow further. If the shareholders of such a company which doing very well but struggling to grow further organically are all believers in Value Investing, then they will not mount pressure on the management to produce growth. However more often, this is not the case. Members cry for perpetual growth, though it is unreasonable to expect and fulfil. Under such extreme pressure, management will embark on a journey of ‘Mergers and Acquisitions’ (M&A) path of inorganic growth, much against their wishes.
Many a times CEOs take-up M&A activity for personal aggrandizement and some times out pure selfish reasons as their own remuneration is often denominated as a percentage of turnover, even though the deal may not be in the interest of the shareholders.
When the shareholders of the acquiring company feel that the acquisition is not good and will not improve their lot, they resort to selling the shares as a show of their displeasure to the proposed transaction.
However, in a few rare instances, where the acquiring company is going to be genuinely benefitted the shares of the acquiring company will go up instead of falling.
As far as the second part of your question, whether the price will eventually recover the lost ground, there is no certain trend. Public memory is short, the economic environment is dynamic and the market mood is effervescent. The interplay between these external conditions as well as the company’s own performance will eventually decide the fate of the price recovery.