TransTech company Dhandho by Mohnish Pabrai

Hello friends, in today’s article, we see the TransTech company case study, this company is started by Mohnish Prabrai. Mohnish Prabrai explains his own Company business framework to Add to the Flavors of Dhandho. In this article, we learn how the author starts his own company while doing the job, how they value their own company, as well as how much percent return they get on the company’s invested capital.

so let’s start.

Laxshi Mittal Steel Company information

TransTech Dhandho:-

TransTech company Dhandho by Mohnish Pabrai

The author ( Mohnish Prabrai) explains, how is he start a part-time company, by applying the simple Dhandho Framework, so let’s understand, in his words.

the author says, ” To add to the Flavors of Dhandho, let’s exercise my own Dhandho Experience.

When I founded my first business, TransTech, Inc., I had virtually no money – there was about $30,000 in my 401(K) retirement amount at Tellabs and $70,000 available in credit card limits, on a number of credit cards that I signed up for in anticipation of starting my business.

I researched U.S. Bankruptcy laws and I found that they were not too onerous. if the business went south and I was unable to cover my debts, I could declare personal bankruptcy and start over.

It was a very similar situation to Papa Patel- there wasn’t much downside because there wasn’t much to lose. also, when I resigned, my boss told me that they’d have to have me back any time, and they were likely to give me a decent raise as well. (TransTech company Dhandho by Mohnish Pabrai)

All I had to lose was the $30,000 in my 401(K) retirement account. I was all of 25 years old; the last thing I was concerned about was depleting my retirement assets.”

then author explains how they start the company

the author says, ” I incorporated Transtech in February 1990, while continuing to work at Tellabs. I took 1/2 day off as vacation time, whenever I had client sales calls. I used to work on the business at home in the morning from 6:30 AM to 8:30 AM,

Be at work during the day and again work on the business in the evening from 6:00 PM to midnight. I had a paycheck coming in and every little in the way of business expenses.

When I had the first client and revenues over $200,000 a year in the bag, I resigned. If you look at the approach. the only downside I had was the Possible loss of my paltry $30,000 in 401(K) assets.

The upside was enormous easily several million dollars. Visa and Master Card were my venture capitalists funding the rest of it. I was single at the time. (TransTech company)

There was no family to worry about. Many lunches and dinners back then were comprised of a simple subway sandwich. my expenses were pretty low.

I considered staying at Tellabs to be a risky proposition. I thought that if I just stayed at the company, it was likely to be a boring and slow corporate path.”

then the author explains, why starting at age 25 is good than 35 or 45? and what is his game plan.

the author says, ” If I woke up when I was 35 or 45 and decided to go off on my own. it would be much more complicated. I would likely have a wife and kids by then, which would make it harder to break loose and make a risk-free bet. (TransTech company Dhandho by Mohnish Pabrai)

My game plan was very simple. I had an Arbitrage-based business model. the Value proposition was leveraging India’s deep expertise and available talent in client-server computing to satisfy the deep shortages of talent in the mid-western united states.

I had $100,000 of capital available to me and the business was already producing revenue and some profit when I resigned from Tellabs.

I knew that with the first two customers on Board, generating real revenue and profits, the downside was very limited.

it was classic ” Heads, I win, Tails; I don’t lose much”

then the author explains, how the company grows and how much return gets on his investment.

the author says, ” TransTech scaled nicely. In 1996, we were recognized as an Inc. 500 company- one of the 500 fastest-growing businesses in the united states.

As revenues went from nothing to over $20 million annually in 10 years, the business never took a dime off outside capital.

Cash Flows provided all the growth capital and then some. cash was always very tight as we were growing very rapidly and reinvesting all available capital to scale.

In late 1991 I found a terrific banker, Tom Harazim, who liked our story. He paid off all my credit cards, got us off the very expensive factoring of receivables I was doing to bring in cash as quickly as possible, and got TransTech set up with a hugely cheaper line of credit based on our pristine receivables.

We did a sale of some assets for about $2 million in 1994, which made me feel rich for the first time. And then the entire business was sold in 2000 for several million dollars. (TransTech company Dhandho by Mohnish Pabrai)

A $30,000 investment got me more than 150 times return over 10 years- an annualized return of well over 65%. I went from a salary of $45,000 a year(when I quit my job) to consistently having a salary of over $300,000 a year in a few years.

The magic word is Dhandho, baby- Huge upside with virtually no downside. it was a classic.

” Head, I win; Tails, I don’t lose much”   …. kind of bet.”

so, friends, the author start their first business, before starting Pabrai Funds.

from the above story, We should have to learn, to become very wealthy.

  • Take a Job to generate income for our monthly expense
  • Start a business, part-time. (TransTech company Dhandho by Mohnish Pabrai)
  • Take a calculated risk for business, like the author takes their retirement money to start a business
  • Work very hard(100 + hours a week), and live a Dual life, up until you don’t need a job for your regular monthly expenses
  • Start early, because, you don’t have much responsibility like family expenses, students’ education, etc. don’t worry if you have family expenses, then take a calculated risk.
  • Full focus on business, and in the job, do work as like above your firing level:- not more or not less to fire

for more understanding of this concept, see the following video of Mohnish Pabrai on Secrets of creating massive wealth

Steel Companies: Mittal Dhandho

Hello friends, in today’s article, we see the Steel Companies of Laxshmi Mittal Dhandho. This story is shared in the book the Dhandho Investor by author Mohnish Prabrai ( Prabrai Fund Manager/ World Famous Value Investor/ Shameless Cloner). so let’s understand maximum capital-intensive business in Dhandho Framework.

Previous Article:- Virgin Groups Case Study

Mittal Dhandho:-Steel Companies

Steel Companies: Mohnish Prabrai on Mittal Dhandho

In starting this chapter, the author Mohnish Prabrai gives the background of Lakshmi Mittal.

the author says, ” Bordering Pakistan is Rajasthan, the most colorful state of India, And Marwar is a small district within the state. The Marvaries is regarded by many as being the very best practitioners of the art of Dhandho. Their amazing Dhandho endeavors, in many cases, leave the Patels in the dust.

in the 2005 Forbes ranking of the wealthiest humans on the planet, Bill Gates and Warren Buffett took the usual top two spots. But nipping at their heels at number three is a Marvaris entrepreneur, Laxshmi Mittal.

Mittal, from a standing start, with virtually nothing 30 years ago, has a net worth of over $20 billion today.

He began his Dhandho journey at about the same time as Bill gates, As we knew Bill invested his energies in an industry that offers the highest returns on invested capital. (Steel Companies: Mohnish Prabrai on Mittal Dhandho)

He got a few engineers together, created MS-DOS and Microsoft word, then sold hundreds of millions of copies. Let’s investigate the amazing economics at work. A single copy of Microsoft Office is sent to Dell to load onto Dell PCs.

Each time Dell loads Office on any machine, it sends Redmond, Washington, a few hundred dollars. there are hundreds of millions of copies made all over the planet-yielding billions upon billions every year for Microsoft. the return on invested capital is out of sight and the gross margin approaches 100%. ”

then the author explains the opposite business of Bill Gates’s Software company Microsoft. the business of steel companies started by Laxshmi Mittal

the author says, ” What is amazing about Lakshmi Mittal’s Dhandho journey is that he invested all his energies and tiny capital base in an industry with terrible economics.- i.e. Steel Mills.

Unlike Microsoft, In a steel Mill, you have no control over the Selling price of the finished product and you have no control over the cost of raw materials.

Steel Mills are very Capital-Intensive Creatures, if that wasn’t a toxic-enough cocktail already the workforce is usually unionized. (Steel Companies: Mohnish Prabrai on Mittal Dhandho)

The steel industry has been one of the worst places to invest capital in the past 30 years. It is no wonder that all over the globe the players in space have encountered tremendous pain and a large number have ended up bankrupt.

Mittal Started in 1976 with a single, small nondescript steel mill in Indonesia. Despite having all the odds stacked against him, he ended up creating one of the largest and most profitable steel businesses on the planet.

More important ( for him) he ended up with a net worth of over $20 billion and growing. ”

then the author explains how he does it.  they started the Steel Mill Companies.

the author says, ” How does he do it? there is a simple one-word Explanation -Dhandho.

Take the example of the deal he created to take over the gigantic Karmet steelworks in Kazakhstan.

The company had stopped paying its workforce because it was bleeding red ink and had no cash. The plant was on the verge of closure with its Soviet-era managers forced to barter steel for food for its workers.

The Kazakh Government was glad to hand Mr. Mittal the keys to the plant for nothing. Not only did Mr. Mittal retain the entire workforce and run the planet, but he also paid all the outstanding wages and within five years had turned it into a thriving business that was gushing cash.

The workers and townfolk literally worship Mittal as the person who saved their town from collapse. The same story was repeated with the Sidek-Steel Plant in Romania, and the Mexican government handed him the keys to the Sibalsa Mill for $220 million in 1992.

It had cost the Mexicans over $2 Billion to build the Plant. Getting Dollar bills at 10 cents – or less – is Dhandho-on Steroids. (Steel Companies: Mohnish Prabrai on Mittal Dhandho)

Mittal’s approach has always been to get a dollar’s worth of assets for far less than a dollar. And then he has applied his secret sauce of getting these monolith mills to run extremely efficiently.”

then the author explains, how Mittal got 3rd in Forbes magazine, across the world-famous Tech Companies Operators.

the author says, ” The people who founded Google, Oracle, Cisco, and Intel were all very talented, but they also had huge tailwinds propelling their net worth. Into the stratosphere.

They all focused on business with amazing economics and very high returns on invested capital. Amazingly, it is Mittal, facing massive headwinds, who has a higher net worth than all of them.

the Dhandho Framework helped him triumph over all but two members of the forces -400. and as we learn before we’re done, both the guys ahead of him are true connoisseurs and practitioners of the fine art of Dhandho.

Whether you hail from Seattle, Omaha, or Marwar, the Dhanho Framework to business pretty much trounces all others.”

then lastly author gives the final note on Marwaries Dhandho Framework (ways)

the author says, ” A final note on the Marwaris and their ingrained Dhandho ways.

Recently, I had dinner with a good Marwaries Friend of mine, and I asked him how the stereotypical Marwari approaches investing capital in a venture.

He said, quite nonchalantly, that Marwari business people, even with only a fifth-grade education simply expect all their invested capital to be returned in the form of dividends in no more than three years.

they expect that after having gotten their money back, their principal investment continues to be worth at least what they invested in it. (Steel Companies: Mohnish Prabrai on Mittal Dhandho)

They expect these to be ultra-low-risk bets. Now, folks, this is really good stuff- they don’t teach this at the Harvard Business School.

if you simply used this Marwari Formula before making any investments, let me assure you two things.

  • You’d take a quick pass on most investments offered to you: and
  • Starting with very little capital, after a few decades you’ll be very wealthy.

Enough said.”

so this is all about the Mittal Dhandho Framework on Steel Companies of Lakshmi Mittal from the book the Dhandho Investor written by Mohnish Prabrai.

Investing In Cryptocurrency Basic

Hello friends, in today’s article, we see the Investing in Cryptocurrency basic. Before investing in cryptocurrency, we should know how it works. Peoples say cryptocurrency is a secure currency no one hack it, tract it. so let’s see Cryptocurrency’s basic idea.

Warren Buffett Rules on Investing 

Cryptocurrency Basic:-

Investing In Cryptocurrency Basic

Cryptocurrency all depends on the most secure Technology it’s called Blockchain technology.

If you want to understand Blockchain Technology and Cryptocurrency, before that we should know about the Cryptography technique.

In this article, we are talking about Cryptography, and how it’s used in Blockchain technology.

so let’s start.

Cryptography:-Investing In Cryptocurrency Basic

Cryptography means, the hidden writing or message.

if you want to send a private message, then you have to write in code words. Because another third person can’t understand your private message. Only those person know, one who send the message and one who receives the message. just like, some of the army missions hidden confidential messages.

Cryptography is widely used in world war II, German send messages in cryptography to their senior officer, because British or American soldiers don’t understand them. (Investing In Cryptocurrency Basic)

now let’s understand the new computer century cryptography language i.e. Blockchain Technolgy.

Blockchain Technology:-

To understand blockchain technology, we should know the three basic concepts.

1) Encryption/Decryption:-

Encryption means, the original message is converted into ciphertext with the help of a computer is known as Encryption.

Decryption means the ciphertext is converted to the original message is called Decryption.

For this Encryption and decryption, we need the keys. let’s understand the key concept in blockchain technology.

let’s understand the keys concept with the help of examples

Example:- The Original message is HELLO, let’s say, it is an encrypted key, which means One Letter next to the Original message (HELLO), so for the HELLO message, we use IFMMP. ( H=I, E= F, L=M, O=P)

so we are taking the next letter of words like secret, so I send IFMMP.

so this message is don’t understand by a third person. I know, I send Hello, and that person receives, they also knew about the key ( next letter of the word), then they can decrypt the message. (Investing In Cryptocurrency Basic)

so those people receive the message, they know the key then they decrypt IFMMP into HELLO words.

The process of encryption and decryption are two types, symmetric and Asymmetric

Symmetric:-

In Symmetric, we use the same key for encryption and decryption. The above example of hello comes in Symmetric cryptography.

the problem with symmetric cryptography is most know the key to decrypt the message by Receiver. so you have to tell them the key on the phone or meeting personally.

And in this time, other third-person, can listen to your key and understand your private message by using the key.

To solve this problem, we use Asymmetric cryptography.

Asymmetric:-

In Asymmetric, we use the different keys for encryption and decryption, but they are mathematically linked. just like our Nikes shoes. (Investing In Cryptocurrency Basic)

In this key pair, one key is used for encryption and another key is used for decryption. so these two keys have their own name

Public Key:- this key, you can share with anyone (public).

Private Key:- this key, you can not share with people, you keep yourself as a password.

By using your public key people encrypt the message and send you. and you know the how-to decrypt message, with your private key.

People can send you a public key without any hesitation, and you can send a message by using their public key, and they see the message by decryption with their private key.

In Blockchain technology, Asymmetric cryptography is widely used. this Asymmetric is used in two places.

In the first place: for your account, number/username/address

those are your public key is your account number.

In second place:- If you want to send Bitcoin or any cryptocurrency, you have to authorize that transaction by using your private key. (Investing In Cryptocurrency Basic)

The public key is your account number

The private key is your password.

So anyone can send you digital money ( cryptocurrency), but from your account, no one takes money until your private key is available to another person.

let’s see the second concept of cryptocurrency.

Hash function:-

to understand the Hash function, let’s take the math function.

A hash function is like, in math we see Addition, subtract, multiply, divide function, just like that is the Hash Function.

example:- Add function:- 3 + 2 is an input, and the result 5 is output.

just like, Subtract function:- the input 3 – 2, then output is 1.

some as the add and subtract function.

A hash function is also working, like that, by following some mathematical function.

By providing Input, give the output.

Hash Function has two types.

  1. Basic Hash Function
  2. Cryptographic Hash Function.

In blockchain technology, we use the cryptographic hash function. so let’s understand the cryptographic hash function.

Cryptographic Hash Functions, are those in that you can give any input, but their output is always Unique like a fingerprint. (Investing In Cryptocurrency Basic)

Now let’s see the characteristic of the cryptographic hash function.

Characteristics of Cryptographic Hash function:-

  • Identical output for identical input:- By giving any input, the output is always the same for example, let’s say the input is HELLO, and output is ABC. Means someone says hello, their always output is ABC. So ABC is unique output, that only comes for Hello Input.
  • Hard to find two inputs with the same output
  • Output is unpredictable even when input changed slightly.
  • by providing output for any kind of Input.
  • You can’t compare input from the output:- one-way function, means, if you know, the output is V35, so you can’t guess the input.

Hash Function, give those output, so that output, called as Hash Value Fingerprint or digest.

now, let’s see the uses of hash Function in Blockchain technology.

Uses of Hash Function:-

  1. the hash function is used to compare two data without checking content piece by piece:- Two things are the same without knowing what it is if two documents have every 10 pates so we don’t need to read line by line in the hash function. I just take the hash of both documents, if with documents has hash value sone, means their inputs are same ( nothing more difference, if they have the difference, then hash value also be different.)
  2. The hash function is used to determine, whether data was changed by someone:- if some disrupt the data, if someone disrupts, then new data hash value is different from the first one. (Investing In Cryptocurrency Basic)

now let’s see how this hash function where used in blockchain technology.

so blockchain technology is a type of register, in them, all transaction is recorded. so it is necessary to know if someone disrupts the data. so for this hash function is very important.

  1.  To store transaction data in a change sensitive manner
  2. to incur computational costs for adding/changing data:- if for hacker/thief want to change the date, it may be hard or expensive for the hash function used. In the blockchain, any new data adding or changing Old data, we have to ( solve the Hash puzzle.) so to solve that puzzle is very expensive.
  3. use as a fingerprint or transaction data:- Hash function used in blockchain to found out hash Value of Transaction data to a minimum and manageable, because, whatever size of input hash function gives output is fixed length, and that is manageable as compared to input data that may be big.

now let’s see the third important concept of cryptocurrency.

3) Digital Signature:-

The digital signature is made by using our private key when you transfer cryptocurrency from your account to another’s account.

signature are two types, one is a handwritten signature, that written by hand.

but for online work, we create Electronic signatures.

There are three types of Electronic Signatures.

  1. That signature we write on paper and upload on the computer ( this must be used in filling exam form, any scheme form)
  2. Write down the full name, they are like declaration signs, in that we write our full name.
  3. Electronic Signature is a Digital signature

so in blockchain technology, the forms are in ciphertext, so by seeing them, we can not understand.

now, let’s see, What is a digital signature, and why this is required in blockchain technology. (Investing In Cryptocurrency Basic)

Except for digital signature, other signatures have two problems, that’ why we need a digital signature.

  1. Documents can tamper after signature:- The first problem is, after signing you, your documents can be used for wrong purposes. e.g. If you sign the check and somebody edits that sign, or add one more zero on the check, or number change, these things may be happening.
  2. The signature can be copied to other documents.

so digital signature solves this problem.

A digital signature is only used for those specific documents and not for other documents.

let’s understand how it’s work

For example, Suppose, you want to send content or any documents, so you have to sign digitally. so first you pass this message in the hash function, then the hash value generates. so this hash value, you encrypt with the private key, then ciphertext come.

So this ciphertext is your digital signature.

you encrypt the message with the help of a private key and hash function which are your digital skill. so now, you can share this message in the open air, and your ciphertext ( digital signature) is also sent in the open air.

so now, let’s see how people, verify that is your message and signature.

First, they take your message and pass through the hash function then come hash value.

Second, they take your digital signature, they put the public key, then come to the original things (first)

so what is original things is the hash value of that message.

the digital signature hash value comes by using the public key and message hash value, if both are the same, then verify the signature. (Investing In Cryptocurrency Basic)

Digital signature told the sign of this thing is written by the account holder.

How they know,

the digital signature, they are in ciphertext if they come some by using a public key to passible decrypt. This means public keys corresponding private key, have account holder so that only person make the digital signature.

so the question comes, how do they verify this,

you take the Hash value of, the original message those comes in the air, then you decrypt the digital signature by using a public key, then the hash value comes.

so both are matching, so this is the original message by a private key, which means the account holder wrote this sign. means they authorize this document.

By using a hash function and private key, we can find out that, naturally owner is signed, and the other is is the content the owner signed.

so in blockchain technology, the digital signature is used in two places.

a) Transaction sign:- means if you want to transfer cryptocurrency from your account to another account, for that you use digital sign. (Investing In Cryptocurrency Basic)

b) Transaction Verification:- the minor(computer guys) verify your transaction. they take as like, see the hash value of the original message and digital signature hash value, both are same then verify your transaction.

so these are the basics of blockchain technology used in cryptocurrency.

In the next article, we see the different types of cryptocurrencies.

Hello friends, if you want to invest in cryptocurrency, you should must know above concept.

Virgin Airlines Business by Mohnish Prabrai

Hello friends, in today’s article, we see the Virgin Business Class by Mohnish Prabain from the book ” The Dhandho Investor”. In this blog, we learn about how virgin(airline) company is started by Richard Branson in the word of Mohnish Prabrai. this business model is based on the low-risk High return Philosophy of Mohnish Prabrai.

so let’s understand this business model to see the cons and pros of the business.

Previous Chapter 2

Chapter 3:-Virgin Airlines Business by Mohnish Prabrai

Virgin Airlines Business by Mohnish Prabrai

the airline business is one of the most expensive businesses. This business required the maximum capital, but Richard Branson started this expensive business with a small amount of capital, so let’s see on Mohnish Prabrai Word.

the author says, ” let’s take a look at another great Dhandho entrepreneur, who is not a Patel and does not hail from Gujrat or India. He is from surrey in England and is as Flamboyant as they come. He’s all about living life to the fullest and maximizing the fun.

while Papa Patel and Richard Branson seemingly have nothing in common, they are inextricably linked in how they approach their business endeavors. Both are hardcore practitioners Dhandho.

Let’s delve into the birth of Virgin Atlantic and learn how to start pretty much any business with minimal capital and virtually no risk- this is Dhandho on Steroids.”

then author explains how Virgin Atlantic started

the author says, ” The year was 1984 and Richard Branson knew nothing about the Airline B business. he started his entrepreneurial Journey at 15 and was very successful in building an amazing music recording and distribution business. (Virgin Airlines Business by Mohnish Prabrai)

Somebody sent Branson a business plan about starting an all-business-class airline flying between London and new york. Branson noted that when an executive in the music business received a business plan to start an airline involving, a 747 jumbo jet.

he knows that the business plan had been turned down in at least three thousand other places before landing on his desk. he was also aware that the other businessman with strong domain knowledge had turned it down.

The business plan claimed that the sector was underserved by the existing players. All weekend long he tried calling the other major discount airlines flying that route but could never get through.

His conclusion was that they either were busy lousy businessmen or were overwhelmed by demand. Which meant that there was an opportunity to start competing against them.

He also changed the original business plan significantly-opting for a Unique dual-class service. he thought about it carefully all weekend long.

On Monday, he went to his partners and senior executives in the music business and told them of his interest in starting the airline. (Virgin Airlines Business by Mohnish Prabrai)

they told him, ” Richard, you’ve to be off your rocker.” They told him he’d need a 747 jumbo jet, the most expensive plane around, and they asked, ” Do you know what that costs?”

They told him they had no interest and did not support this wild Idea. Branson persisted. He called directory assistance in Seattle to get the main number for Boeing. when the receptionist answered, he said, that he’d like to talk to someone about leasing a 747 jumbo jet.

After he was transferred several times, he got to what seemed like the right person and asked if Boeing had an old jumbo lying around.

the guy said they did, and Branson asked if they would consider doing a year lease. The Boeing employee, likely amused by the British Accent, said that they have a small list of customers but they might consider doing such a lease with one of their regular customers.

Branson persisted and asked for some numbers. Boeing gave him some ballpark numbers, and Branson figured out that his total outlay and maximum liability for starting Virgin Atlantic Airlines ( if it failed) was just $2 million.

His record company was on track to earn $12 million that year and $20 million the next year. Branson Noted that in the Airline business with a single plane, he would pay for the fuel 30 days after the airplane landed, and for staff wages 15 to 20 days after the airplane landed, but he would get paid for all the tickets about 20 days before the plane took off.

Working Capital needs in this scenario were pretty low and with a very favorable short-term lease from Boeing, there was no need to buy an airplane. Branson figured he could hire a small ground staff place a few ads in the paper, and start taking reservations. (Virgin Airlines Business by Mohnish Prabrai)

Boy Georges records were produced by Virgin and Branson and they were good friends, to boost the morale of the early Virgin Atlantic employee and get them all excited.

he took Boy Georges over to the cargo hanger at Gatwick, Airport, which served as the headquarters for Virgin Atlantic, to meet the staff.

the employee loved it, but Boy George was quite stunned at the apparent Chaos at the facility. he later told Branson, ” I’m glad my feet are firmly on the ground.” it was a very messy start-up.

Now if someone comes up with this idea in Silicon Valley, there would be a fancy business plan put together along with the mandatory elevator pitch.

It would be based on at least $60 million in startup capital to build out the basic infrastructure, and so on. Branson Did not go down this path, the ” Business plan” was done in a weekend and resided in Branson’s head.

there was no business plan ever written there was no board of directors or advisors at the startup, no venture capitalists (VCs) or angels.

It was done by a person with no prior experience or expertise in the airline industry. my take on Virgin Atlantic is simply this: if you start a business that requires a $200 million 747 jumbo jet and a boatload of employees in a tightly regulated industry for virtually no capital, then virtually any business that you want to start can be gotten off the ground with minimal Capital. (Virgin Airlines Business by Mohnish Prabrai)

All you need to do is replace capital with creative thinking and solutions. Branson found a service gap and went after it. By the time that gap narrowed and British Airways and his other competitors woke up, he had already built a strong brand.

Even today, Virgin Atlantic offers a very unique product in a very tough industry. The Virgin Atlantic business model is pure Dhandho. heads, I win, tails, I don’t lose much.

the virgin group today is a privately held group of 200+ businesses with about $7 billion in annual revenue. It generates about $600 to $700 million a year in free cash flow.

the common ingredient in virtually all 200+ businesses is that there was very little money invested in any of them at startup. Head, I win; tails, I don’t lose much!

In 2005, they put a line of electronic products called Virgin Pulse into target stores. Target asked them to develop an exclusive line of designer personal electronics only for target.

Target guaranteed them prime floor space so virgin had zero distribution cost or risk. it had Ecco, a chic design shop, create the line, and they found a Chinese Company to manufacture it- retaining good margins for Virgin. Its downside was very limited and the upside was huge.

the manufacturers, who had to commit capacity, beyond confirmed orders, and Target, which had to set aside valuable shelf space in every store.

To launch it, the Virgin Group leveraged Branson at a New York party dancing with some hot models wearing the virgin pulse line on their person. (Virgin Airlines Business by Mohnish Prabrai)

It put very little money into it-Classic Dhandho at work. Head, I win; Tails, I don’t lose much.”

so this is the Virgin Atlantic Business. Low-risk High Return, philosophy is actually working, and this is the most famous example of an Expensive business.

so whenever you start investing or starting a business, always look for the Classic Dhanndho Framework ” Head, I win; Tails, I don’t lose much”

so in the next chapter, the author explains how to found a great business for investing.

Buy this book to learn about investing in a business

Mohnish Pabrai On Manilal Dhandho

Hello friends, in today’s article, we see the second chapter of the book Dhandho Investor by author Mohnish Prabrai. in this chapter Mohnish Pabrai is On Manilal Dhandho. so let’s see

Previous Chapter 1

Chapter 2:-Mohnish Pabrai On Manilal Dhandho

Mohnish Pabrai On Manilal Dhandho

In this chapter, we see the whole of Manilal who is a simple middle-class man who becomes a motel-business owner, this story is different than the other Patel. this story definitely helps you to understand the Head; I win, and tail; I don’t lose many concepts. and also help you to understand the value of investing, and help you to find undervalued businesses.

the author says, ” Manilal is an unassuming, pleasant 54-year-old guy, who comes across as a very honest hardworking, and likable fellow. He was born and raised in Gujrat in a family with four brothers and two sisters.

One of his brothers had migrated to the United States in 1970 and had settled in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Manilal had trained and worked as an accountant in India. in 1991, his brother sponsored him, and he was able to get his U.S. Green Card and migrate to the united states with his wife and kids.

He arrived in San Fransico with virtually no Cash or Assets. His brother hosted them, and Manilal began to look for a job so he could support his family. Manilal spoke English before he come to the united states and had already been in the united states for 15 years when we met. (Mohnish Pabrai On Manilal Dhandho)

Even, so I found it hard to understand Manilals broken and heavily accented English, especially in our phone conversations. it was easier in person, but it would have been a huge liability for him 15 years ago in the job market.

with no prior US job experience or references and his English language handicap, he had difficulty finding a white-collar accounting job and eventually abandoned that futile effort.

Manilal was under pressure to earn money to support his family. he was now pretty much ready to take any job at minimum wage. In early 1990, the united states were in a deep recession and that made it all the more difficult.

Manilal’s first job was at a gas station at minimum wage. His work hours were 3 PM to 7 AM – 16 hrs a day, 7 days a week. He was working 112 hours a week.

Through the grapevine, he heard that there was a computer power supply manufacturing company in southern California, Cherokee International, owned by a fellow Patel that was growing and adding staff.

Manilal interviewed with Cherokee and got a job there. he moved his family to southern California and his brother lent some financial support as they got settled. (Mohnish Pabrai On Manilal Dhandho)

After starting at Cherokee, he worked full-time and put in all the overtime the company would allow. Cherokee Recognized some of his accounting skills and put him in the stock room helping out with inventory management.

the pay was a little over minimum wage. his remaining two brothers and one sister ( and all their families) joined him in a few months.

They all lived together in a small apartment and in short order nearly all the adults had assembly line-type jobs at Cherokee.

One brother was single. With severe adults. the paychecks began to flow in and Manilal and all his siblings started saving in earnest. their first objective was to get a larger place and they decided to buy a house. in 1994, they pooled their savings- about $60,000, and bought a house in the pleasant town of Foothill Ranch, California, for $203,000 also, in 1994, Manilal took a second job at a Texaco Gas Station.

He now worked from 8:00 Am until 5:00 PM at Cherokee and then from 5:30 Pm Until 11:00 PM at the gas station.

The Persian gas station owner recognized Manilal’s integrity and hard work ethos, and he made him the de facto manager of the gas station. (Mohnish Pabrai On Manilal Dhandho)

Besides his wages, he gave Manilal 10% of the gas station’s net profit. Manilal managed the place like an owner. He hired and fired staff as required and made sure the gas station ran without a hitch.

Manilal become intimately Familiar with the gas station business, the Margins on Various Items the overheads, how much money the business made, and so on.

By 1998, the Chaudhari had bought a condo for his sister’s family and another home in Foothill Ranch for $169,000. they continued to live very simply. from the beginning, the four sibling families had agreed to put $500 a month per family into a common savings account.

This pool funded the initial down payment for their first home. For subsequent purchases, they also drew down on this pool. they all lived very simple lives and worked around the clock. as a result, there wasn’t much free time to spend on entertainment.

Manilal told me that tye traveled a fair amount during the first two years, hitting the usual tourist spots. After that, they didn’t have much interest in traveling and all of them worked long hours with a great deal of overtime.

Even with very low wages, they were each socking away several thousand dollars a year. In 1998, Manilal decided that he wanted to buy a small business with his extended family. he considered gas stations, liquor stores, laundromats, and such. The Texaco gas station employer supported his goals but told him not to look at liquor stores due to the high crime and headaches

Some Patels suggested motels, but in southern California these now cost millions. he kept looking for a business to buy, but was unable to find one that felt right. he was patient, in 2001, after 9/11, the travel industry went into a major slump and motel occupancy and prices declined significantly. (Mohnish Pabrai On Manilal Dhandho)

Cherokee had money Patel employees one of them Ashok Patel was a vice president at the firm. he liked Manilal and told him he’d love to invest some money with him in a business that Manilal might run.

After 9/11, Manilal comes across the best Western motel for sale in Moreno Valley for 4.5 million. It was spectacular properly on nearly three acres right off the highway. they needed to put about $1.4 million down to buy the property.

Manilal and his siblings had all of $225,000 in savings. they also had the ability to get about $125,000 through home equity loans, on their now-appreciated homes.

the deal they struck was that the Chadhruris would own 25% of the motel and put up $350,000 in cash. Ashok Patel invested about $252,000 and got an 18% interest.

Three other friends of Manilal Each invested $2,66,000 and each received a 19% interest.

Mohnish Pabrai on Manilal Dhandho

Manilal told me that he was deeply skeptical about handling his money to anyone in any type of business endeavor. However, this was a deal where he was going to manage the motel and in effect, his investors had handed him the money.

I told him Pabrai Funds worked the same way- I don’t need to do too much due diligence on my investors because I’m getting their money, and not vice-versa.

Manilal quit his Cherokee job and began running the motel full-time. he received a salary and the profits were split, among the partners in the proportion of their ownership. (Mohnish Pabrai On Manilal Dhandho)

Let’s fast forward four years. the motel’s market value is now over $9 million – a 100% increase. But wait. over the four years, some of the $3.1 million note has been paid down.

let’s assume about $200,000 was paid down every year, so now the note is due $2.3 million. their $1.4 million is now worth $6.7 million. that’s an annualized return of a stunning 48% a year.

Hold on there’s more he hasn’t Calculated the dividends this investment has yielded over the past four years. When Manilal took over the motel in 2001. Average occupancy was under 60% and the average nightly rate was $55, yielding gross revenues of under $1.6 Million.

and The average occupancy now is worth 65% the average rate is about $70, yielding gross revenues of about $2.1 million.

Revenue has increased by about $500,000 over the past four years. I’d guess that underlying costs have increased by perhaps only $150,000. the motel is likely generating $800,000 + in free cash flow Annually- after paying Manilal a handsome salary.

Let’s examine the economics here, from Manilal’s Vantage Point. his Salary is at least $50,000 a year- a big step from his Cherokee and gas station days. His Family’s $350,000 investment in this ” motel Bond” yields an Initial annual Coupon of about $125,000 a year. (Mohnish Pabrai On Manilal Dhandho)

It has increased by about $25,000 a year and today is about $200,000. Initially, this bond paid a 36% coupon, and currently, the coupon is 57%.

In addition, if they decided to sell this bond today, they wouldn’t just get back the $350,000 but nearly, $1.7 million – about five times the initial investment in four years.

Manilal is busy these days with the construction of a new Holiday Inn Express in Chino Hills, California. he bought the land for $1.3 million and expects it to cost about $8 million in aggregate.

Revenue is expected to be around $2.3 million a year. he was understanding, and reticent to give me all his financial details, but I suspect the best western has been refinanced and the investors have gotten their money out and then some.

the refinancing, along with the robust cash flows from Best Western, is funding Chino Hills and other projects.

The family has started to set up independently owned properties by the siblings. One brother and the sister each own and run small motels in Utah.

Both properties have about 40 to 50 rooms, and they were purchased with about $250,000 down. Each sibling and spouse quit Cherokee as they started running motels. One brother still works at Cherokee. Manilal still lives modestly in the same footHill Ranch House he bought in 1994.

The kids have all done exceptionally well- they are mostly professionals- doctors, dentists, and so on. his daughter is now 32. She is married with two kids and recently bought a small motel in Utah. As well, which She manages with her husband. (Mohnish Pabrai On Manilal Dhandho)

now that’s what I’d call Manilal Dhandho. he worked hard, saved all he could, and then bet it all on a single no-brainer bet. Reeling from the severe impact of 9/11 on travel.

the motel industry was on its knee! as prices and occupancy collapsed, Manilal stepped in and made his play.

he was on the hunt for three years. he patiently waited for the right deal to materialize. Classically his story is all about ” Few bets, Big bets, infrequent Bets.’

And it’s all about only participating in coin Tosses, where ” Heads, I win; tails, I don’t lose much!”

so this is all about the Mohnish Pabrai on Manilal Dhandhol.

the DHANDHO INVESTOR By Mohnish Pabrai

Hello friends, in today’s article, we see the new book on value investing from the world-famous and also greater value investor of all time i.e. Mohnish Pabrai. the book’s name is the DHANDHO INVESTOR. In today’s article, we only see the first chapter, which helps you to understand the motel business, and most important Low-risk high return philosophy, in Mohnish Pabrai, words, says, ” if Head: I win, if tail; I don’t lose much”.

so let’s start this book

Chapter 1:-the Dhandho Investor

the DHANDHO INVESTOR By Mohnish Pabrai

In the introduction, the author ( Mohnish Pabrai) talks about, how this book, is invented.

the author says, ” this book, the DHANDHO INVESTOR, is a synthesis of ideas lived encountered in my readings, interactions with friends, and various experiences, both visceral and direct.

I have very few original ideas, virtuality everything has been listed from somewhere. if there wasn’t a warren buffet, there wouldn’t be Pabrai funds and there certainly wouldn’t be this book.

It is hard for me to overstate the influence warren buffet and charlie Munger has had on my thinking. their perspectives have, in one way or another, shaped virtually every page. I can never repay my debt to them for selflessly sharing priceless wisdom over the decade’s thanks, warren, and charlie.”

after his grand introduction, let’s start chapter 1 of this book, Patel Motel  Dhandho.

Patel Motel Dhandho:-the Dhandho Investor

in this chapter, the author gives the history of Asian Indians and also how the DHANDHO word come, and most important how Patel enters the Motel business in America. so let’s start

the author says,” Asian Indians make up about 1 percent of the population of the united states about three million people. of these, there million, a relatively small subsection is from the Indian state of Gujarat. and very few small subsections of Gujraties, the Patels, are from a tiny area in southern Gujrat.

less than one in five hundred Americans is a Patel. It is this amazing that over half of all the motels in the entire country are owned and operated by patels. what is even more stunning is that there were virtually no patels in the united states just 35 years ago. they started arriving as refugees in early 1970 without much in the way of education or capital.

their heavily accented, broken English-speaking skills didn’t improve their prospects either. from that severely handicapped beginning will all the odds stacked against them, the Patels triumphed.

Patels, as a group, today own over $40 billion in motel assets in the United States, pay over $725 million years in taxes, and employ nearly a million people.

How did this small, impoverished ethnic group come out of nowhere and end up controlling such vast resources there is a one-word explanation: DHANDHO.”

After this, the author explains the Dhandho words,

the author says, ” Dhandho (pronounced dhundoe) is a Gujarati word. Dhan comes from the Sanskrit root word Dhana meaning wealth.

Dhan-dho, literally translated, means ” Endeavors that create wealth”. the street translation of dhandho is simply “Business.” which is business if not an endeavor to create wealth.

However, if we examine the low-risk, high return approach to business taken by the patels dhandho takes on a much narrower meaning. (the Dhandho Investor by Mohnish Pabrai)

We have all been taught that earning high rates of returns requires taking a greater risk. Dhandho flips the concept around. Dhandho is all about the minimization of risk while maximizing the reward.

The stereotypical Patel naturally approaches all business endeavors with this deeply ingrained riskless dhandho framework-for him it’s like breathing.

Dhandho is thus best described as endeavors that create wealth while taking virtually no risk.

Not only should every entrepreneur seek to learn from the Patel dhandho framework, but also the primary audience for this tone-investor and allocators of capital.

Dhandho is capital allocation at its very finest. if an investor can make virtually risk-free bets with 0utsized rewards, and keep making the bets over and over, the results are stunning.

Dhandho is how the patels have exponentially compounded their net worths over the past 30-odd years.

I am getting ahead of myself. sit back, relax grab a cool one, and mellow out. you’re about to begin a remarkable journey-one that I hope is as rewarding and profitable for you as it has been for me and a generation off Patel businessman.” (the Dhandho Investor by Mohnish Pabrai)

then the author gives the history of Patels, I hope you read his history in the book, for that buy this book from the following link(image)

 

then author explains why Patels choose the Motel business. by taking one the Patel example,

the author says, ” that still begs the questions, why did the first wave of patels who entered the united states go into the motel business? why not delis, laundromats, or drugs stores? why motels? and why not just find a job?

part of the answer lies in another demographic shift that was underway in the early 1970s in the united states. after world war II, there was a huge buildout of suburbia and the interstate highway system.

the automobile had become a middle-class stable and American family-owned motels popped up all along the newly built interstates.

the 1973 Arab oil embargo and misguided American economic policies ( price and wage controls) led to a deep recession across the country.

Motels are heavily dependent on discretionary spending. the recession coupled with rational and sky-high gas prices led to huge drops in occupancy, many small nondescript motels were foreclosed by banks or went or sold at distressed prices. (the Dhandho Investor by Mohnish Pabrai)

at the same time, the kids of their old motel-owner families were coming off getting and saw plenty of opportunity outside of the motel business and left in droves to seek their fortune elsewhere.”

then the author gives the most exciting part of this chapter is the psychology behind buying a motel by Patel.

for that author give papa Patel examples.

Papa Patel:-

the author says, ” it is 1973, papa Patel has been kicked out of Kampala, Uganda and has landed as a refugee in anywhere town, the USA with his wife and three teenage kids.

He has had about two months to plan his exit and has converted as much of his assets as he could into gold and other currencies and has smuggled it out of the country.

It isn’t much- a few thousand dollars. with a family to feed, he is quickly trying to become oriented to his alien surroundings.

he figures out that the best he can do with his strange accent and broken-English speaking skills will be a job bagging groceries at minimum wage.

Papa Patel sees the small 20 rooms motel on ale at what appears to be a very cheap price and starts thinking. if he buys it, the motivated seller or a bank will likely finance 80 percent to 19 percent of the purchase price. His family can live there as well, and their rent will go to zero. his cash requirement to buy the place is a few thousand dollars. Between himself and his close relatives, he raises about $5,000 in cash and buys the motel.

A neighborhood bank and the seller agree to carry notes with the collateral being a lien on the motel. As one of the first patels, in the united state, Dahyabhai Patel succinctly put it, “I required only a small investment and it solved my accommodation problem because ( my family and I could live and work there”

then author explains how the Dahyabhai Patel gets the success and behind their calculated risk.

the author says, ” Papa Patel figures the family can live in a couple of rooms, so they have no rent or mortgage to pay and minimal need for a car. (the Dhandho Investor by Mohnish Pabrai)

even the smallest motel needs a 24-hour front desk and someone to clean the rooms and do the laundry- at least four people eight our each.

Papa Patel lets all the hired help go. mama and papa Patel work long hours on the various motel chores, and the kids help out during the evenings, weekends, and holidays.

Dahyabhai Patel, reflecting on the modus operandi during the early days, said, “I was my own front-desk clerk, my own carpenter, mu own plumber, maid, electrician, washerman, and whatnot.”

with no hired help and a very right rain an expense. Papa Patel motel has the lowest operating cost of any motel in the vicinity. he can offer the lowest nightly rate and still maintain the same ( 0r higher) profitability per room than his predecessor and competitors.

As a result, he has higher occupancy and is making super-normal profits. his competitors start seeing occupancy drop off and experience severe pressure on rates.

their cost structure prohibits them from matching the rates offered by the Patel motel leading to a spiraling reduction in occupancy and profits.

the stereotypical Patel is a vegetarian and leads a very simple life. most restaurants in the united state in 1970. don’t serve vegetarian meals, so eating at home is all the more attractive and much cheaper for Patel families.

they are busy with the motel day and night, so they have little expenses for this family that are abysmally low. with a single beater car, no home mortgage, rent, or utilities, and zero commutes eating out or spending on vacations or entertainment of any type, papa patels family lives quite comfortably on well under $5000 per year.”

then the author explains, what if they don’t buy the motel and do the job and their living expenses

the author says, ” prices are lower in the 1970s, the minimum wage is just $1.60. the best papa and mama Patel could hope for are total annual earnings of about $6000 per year, if they both take up jobs and work full time.

If they buy a 20-room motel, at a distressed price of $50,000 with about $5000 in cash and the rest finances, even at rates of $12 to $13 per day and 50 percent to 60 percent average occupancy, the motel will generate about $50,000 in annual revenue. (the Dhandho Investor by Mohnish Pabrai)

In the early 1970s, with treasures yielding about 5 percent, the owner or most banks will be delighted to finances the motel purchase at a 10 percent to 12 percent of $5000 and another $5000 to $10000 in out of pocket expenses for motel purchase at a 10 percent to 12 percent interest rate with a lien on the property.

Mr. Patel has annual interest expenses of about $5000, principal payments of $5000 and another $5000 to $10000 in pocket expenses are thus under $20,000

even if the family spends another $5000 year on living expenses ( a grand sum in 1970), Papa Patel nets over $15,000 a year after all taxes and all living expenses. If he had borrowed the $5000 from a fellow Patel he has it full repaid in four months. he could even elect to pay off the mortgage on the motel in just three years.

the annual return on that $5000 of invested capital is a stunning 400 percent ( $20,000 in annual returns from the investment- $15,000 in cash flow and $5000 in principal repayment)

if he borrows the $5000 from a fellow Patel, the return on invested capital is infinite zero dollars, in and $20,000 a year out. that’s all fine and dandy you might say, but what if the business does not work out? what if it fails?”

then author explains what if the motel business is failing

author says,”  For this first motel purchase, papa Patel not only has to give a lien on the property but most likely also a personal guarantee to the lender as well. however, papa Patel has only $5000 ( or less) to his name, so the personal guarantee is meaningless.

if he is unable to make the payments, the bank can take over the property but he has virtually no assets outside of the motel. the bank has no interest in taking over the motel and running it. it has no such competency.

it will be very hard for the book to sell a money-losing motel and cover their note.

it is very simple:- If a Patel can not make the motel run profitability, no one can. the bank’s best option is to work with papa Patel to make the motel profitable, so the bank is likely to renegotiate terms. and try to help papa Patel get back on trade. (the Dhandho Investor by Mohnish Pabrai)

It is net, net papa Patel still runs the motel; the family still lives there, and he works as hard and as smart as he can to make it- he has no choice. it makes it work or go bust and homeless.

Remember this is an existing business with a very stable business model and a long history of cash flow and profitability.

It is not rocket science. it is a simple business where the low-cost provider has an unassailable competitive advantage, and no one can run it any cheaper than papa pate.

the motel business ebbs and flows with the economy eventually, conditions are likely to become better, the bank is made current on payment, and everyone is happy most of all papa Patel.”

then the author talks about let’s look at this investment as a bet,

the author says, ” let’s look at this investment a bet, there are three possible outcomes.

First, the $5000 investment yields an annualized rate of 400 percent. let’s assume this continues for just 10 years and the business is sold for the same price as it was bought ($50,000)

This is like a bond that pays 300 percent interest a year with a final interest payment in year 10 of 900 percent. this equates to a 21 bagger on annualized return of well over 50 percent for 10 years.

Assuming a 10 percent discount rate, the discounted cash flow stream is shown in table 1.1

Table 1.1 Discounted Cashflow Analysis of the best case for Papa Patel

Year  Free Cash Flow ( $)   Present Value ( $) of future cash flow
Excess cash 0
1 15,000 13,636
2 15,000 12,397
3 15,000 11,270
4 15,000 10,247
5 15,000 9,314
6 15,000 8,467
7 15,000 7,697
8 15,000 6,998
9 15,000 6,361
10 15,000 5,783
10 Sale price 50,000 19,277
Total  111,445

 

Second, the economy goes into a severe recession, and business plummets for several years. the bank works with Mr. Patel and renegotiates loan terms as described earlier.

Mr. Patel has a zero return on his investment for five years, and then starts making $10,000 a year in excess free cash flow when the economy recovers and booms (200 percent return every year after five years)

the motel is sold in year 10 for the purchase price. now we have a bond that pays zero interest for five years, then 200 percent for five years, and a final interest payment of 900 percent ( see. Table 1.2) (the Dhandho Investor by Mohnish Pabrai)

Table 1.2 Discounted Cashflow Analysis of the Below-Average case for Papa Patel

Year  Free Cash Flow ( $)   Present Value ( $) of future cash flow
Excess cash 0
1 0 0
2 0 0
3 0 0
4 0 0
5 0 0
6 10,000 5,645
7 10,000 5,131
8 10,000 4,665
9 10,000 4,240
10 10,000 3,854
10 Sale price 50,000 19,277
Total  42,812

this equates to a seven-bagger on annualized return of over 40 percent for 10 years.

third, the economy goes into a severe recession, and business plummets.

Mr. Patel can not make the payments and the bank foreclose and Mr. Patel loses his investment. the annualized return is 100 percent. these three outcomes cover virtually the entire range of possibilities.

Assume the likelihood of the first option is 80 percent, the second is 10 percent and the third is 10 percent.

These are very conservative probabilities as we are assuming a one in five, chance of the motel performing for worse than projected-even though it was bought on the cheap at a distressed sale price and run by a best-of-breed, savvy, low-cost operator.

We have unrealistically assumed there is no rise in the model’s value or in nightly rates over 10 years. even then, the probabilities-weighted annualized return is still well over 40 percent.

the expected present value of this investment is about $93,400 (0.8 * $111,445 + 0.1 * $42,812)

from papa patels perspective, there is a 10 percent chance of losing his $5000 and a 90 percent chance of ending up with over $100,000 ( with an 80 percent chance of ending up with $200,000 over 10 years.

This sounds like a brainer bet to me.”

so some numbers are coming, please read carefully to understand the wonderful logic behind the motel business.

then the author gives simple race tract examples, on his best advice,

the author says, ” If you went to a horse race track and you were offered a 90 percent chance of losing your money, would you take that bet?

heck yes, you’d take that bet all day long, and it would make sense to bet a very large, portion of your net worth with those spectacular adds. (the Dhandho Investor by Mohnish Pabrai)

This is not a risk-free bet, but it is a very, low-risk high returns bet, Heads, I win; tails, I don’t lose much!

the skeptic in you remains unconvinced that the risk here, is low. you might say that there is still the very real possibilities of going broke if you bet all you have ( like papa Patel has done)

papa Patel does bet it all on one bet, but he has an ace in the hole. If the lender forecloses and he loses the motel, he and his wife can take up jobs bagging groceries, work 60 hours a week instead of 40, and maximize their savings.

At the 1973 minimum wage of $1.60, they earn $9,600 a year. after taxes, they can easily sock away $2,000 to $4,000 year

after two years, papa Patel could step up to the plate and buy another motel and make another bet. The odds of losing this bet twice in a row are 1 in 10. and the odds that it plays off, it’s over a 20-fold return, that’s on an ultra low-risk bet with ultra-high returns one very much worth making!

Heads, I win; Tails, I don’t lose much

with such high cash flow coming in, papa Patel is soon flush with cash. he still has a very modest lifestyle. His eldest son comes of age in a few years and he hands over the motel to him.

the family buys a modest house and goes hunting for the next motel to buy. this time, they buy a larger motel with 50 rooms, the family no longer lives at a motel, but still does not do most of the work, with little in the way of hired help.

the formula is simple: Fixate on keeping, costs as low as possible, charge lower rates than all competitors, drive up the occupancy and maximize the free cash flow.

finally, keep handling over motels to up and -coming Patel relatives to run while adding more and more properties.

there is a snowball effect here and over time we end up with these amazing statistics -half of all motels in the united states are under Patel ownership.

having fully corned the motel market the patels have begun buying higher-end motels and have derived into a number of businesses where they can apply their lowest-cost operations.

Dunkin donuts franchises, convenience stores (7-eleven), and the like. some have even bronched out into developing high-end time-share condominiums.

the snowball continues to roll down this very long hill becoming bigger over time.”

So this is all about chapter 1 from the book ” The Dhandho Investor” on Patels motel Dhandho.

Financial Literacy to become rich

Hello friends, I am Laxman Sonale, In today’s article we see the financial literacy to become rich from chapter 11:- ‘why must one invest’ from the book ” Stock To riches ” by Parag Parikh. In this chapter, you know the difference between rich people and poor and middle-class people’s income, their expenses. The most important how we become rich.

so let’s start

Previous Chapter 10

Chapter 11:- Why must one Invest:-Financial Literacy

Financial Literacy

In the starting, the author gives a quote on today’s situation.

“Modern man drives a mortgaged car over a bond financial highway on credit card gas.”

– Early Willson

In this chapter, the author talks about the basics of financial literacy. let’s see what he say

the author says, ” I would like to end the book with some thoughts on the paradigm of money and the basic of financial literacy. these concepts are very well explained in the Rich dad, poor dad series authored by Robert T. Kiyosaki with Sharon L. Lechter.

We are afraid of losing money, of not having enough to make. if you have a passion for anything you will accept by passion helps you to think positively. But when you do that you will never have enough money to fulfill your desires.

People believe that money can solve all their problems, but that idea is an illusion.

Remember when you were just out of college. you had certain desires to be fulfilled and certain bills to be paid. so you were thrilled when you got a job. (Financial Literacy)

you believed that the paycheque at the end of the month would solve all your problems when the paycheque arrived you paid the bills for your desires. you were happy about it, but this happiness was short-lived.

As soon as you fulfilled your desires, they increased and you required more money to fulfill your desires. they increased and you required more money to fulfill those new desires.

When you got a hike in your salary the pleasure was again short-lived for your desires increased in proportion to your income.

It’s a never-ending story and you are always afraid that you will never have enough. so every time you think of money fears grips you and you make decisions not with your mind but with your heart.

What you need to do is to change your paradigm. passion should drive you not to fear, think of what you can do with money and what you should do to make it.

money is an idea. you see it more clearly with your mind than your eyes. learning to play the game of money is an important step on your journey to financial freedom.”

after this explanation, then the author talks about learning the money game.

Learning the Money Game:- Financial Literacy

in this point, the author shows how money works for rich people, middle-class people, and poor people.

the author says, ‘ To be a successful investor you must know how money works, there are some elementary facts about finance that unfortunately are not taught in schools and colleges. (Financial Literacy)

so let’s begin, learning now

The question you should ask Yourself: What is an Asset?

Answer:- An asset is that which creates an income for the owner.

see the following image to understand better.

Financial Literacy

Question: What is Liability?

Answer:- A liability is that which creates an expense for the owner.

see the following image to understand better.

Financial Literacy

then the author gives the difference between asset and liability with bank examples

author says,” have you been approached by banks willing to lend you money to buy a house? Does your banker say he will help you buy an asset?

Attractive deals in the form of low-interest rates and long-term mortgage payments are offered. so you go ahead and buy your dream house thinking you are buying an asset.

By the definition of an asset, it should create an income for you. however, here it is creating on expense in the form of mortgages, taxes, interest, etc.

so common sense demands that you treat it as a liability rather than an asset.”

then, the author explains, why a banker tells you, a house is an asset.

the author says, ” Yes, the banker did tell you that you are buying an asset. what he did not tell you was that he was buying the asset for the bank and a liability for you.

There is nothing wrong in buying a house and mortgage, but understand that you are thereby creating a liability for yourself that will entail further expenses. even if you buy a house with your own money and kept it locked you should treat os as a liability as you are incurring expenses for its upkeep in the form of maintenance charges, property tax, society charges. etc. (Financial Literacy)

However, if you buy a house on mortgage and rent it, and your rental income is higher than the mortgage, then you have a positive cash flow.

House becomes an asset as it generates an income. Understanding how assets and liabilities work is basic to Financial Literacy.

Your cash flow is an indication of whether you are building assets or taking liabilities. if income is coming in your pocket, you have an asset, if income is going out of pocket, it is a liability.

Once you understand this you can work out your own financial future.”

then the author explains the Cash Flow of middle-class

Cash flow of the Middle-Class People:

In this, the author says, ” A majority of the customers of bank and consumer goods companies come from the middle-class. it is not because of their inherent purchasing power but because they happen to be attractive borrowers.

They are cautious about money yet, as they strive to improve their standard of living they get increasingly into debt. all their lives they work to pay off their mortgages, credit cards bills, car longs, etc.

they start small, like taking a loan to buy a two-wheeler, but soon their desires increase and they want to buy a car. so they go to the bank and take a car loan to fulfill their desire. with a bigger loan, the outgoings increase and they desperately look for a hike in their salary.

the hike comes and with it the desire to buy a bigger car. so the bank offers them a bigger loan. and this goes on and on. expense move and an increase in salary are soon nullified.

Only the liability increase; no-effect is a mode to increase the asset. they don’t realize that they have started working for the bank also ( by taking up liabilities.)

Now they work for two bosses. One who provides the job, and the bank to whom they give the interest, mortgage, etc?

this is the cash flow of the middle-class, which you will understand better from the following image.

Financial Literacy

As the income of the middle-class increase so does their liabilities.

they make little effects to create assets Instant gratification and financial illiteracy dominate their decision-making. they believe, they are creating assets in the form of houses, cars,s, etc. whereas they are only creating liabilities and increasing their expense. (Financial Literacy)

see the following image to understand middle-class people status quo

Middle Class Status quo

What differentiates the middle class from the rich is their lack of financial literacy.

it is the cash flow that makes all the difference the rich understand the power of money and they make it work for them. they always have a positive cash flow.”

then the author talks about the cash flow of the rich.

Cash flow of rich people:-

in this the author says, ” the rich create assets, the assets create income, from they create more assets. even if they buy a house on mortgage, they rent it and the rentals are higher than the mortgage and other charges they pay.

so the house is an asset for them even if they take a bank loan to acquire it. see the following image to understand better way.

cash flow pattern of rich people

the balance sheet of the rich consists of assets like stocks, bonds, real estate, etc.

their income derives mainly from dividends, interest, rental, etc. they make their money work for them and they do not create liabilities.

thus their expenses are under control. anyone can do what the rich do.

Firstly it requires discipline to stay the course and avoid instant gratification of desires.

Secondly, it requires an understanding of the basic principles of assets and liabilities. it’s easy to become financially literate if you have the patience.

some say that money begets money these people should have stayed rich, they lost only because they were not financially literate.

they did not know, how to harness the power of money. To become rich you must have a passion for money. Making money is a game and you must enjoy playing it. It is tough but worth the trouble.”

the Roads to Riches

then the author gives fours ways of making money.

the author says, ” there are four ways by which people make money ad each method forms one quadrant of the income generation circle. (Financial Literacy)

different people fall into different cash quadrants depending upon the source of their cash flow.

  1. Employee cash flow quadrant:- they work for somebody and earn a salary as employees.
  2. Self-employed cash flow quadrant:- they are the professionals like, doctors, lawyers, architects who are self-employed.
  3. Businessman cash flow quadrant:- they are the ones who own a business.
  4. Investor cash flow quadrant:- they are investors whose income comes from investments.

to which quadrants do you belong.

Modes of Income Generation

whichever quadrant you may be, if you want to make your money work for you need to make every effort to get into the investor quadrant.

Only then will you be able to achieve financial freedom.

A lot of us would love to be in the business quadrant, but few of us are not blessed with the skills or the abilities, or the resources to run a business.

so the best alternative would be to take a share of the profits of the company by way of dividends and capital appreciation. to gain a detailed perspective on the above concepts I would strongly recommend to the read the rich had, poor dad, cash flow quadrant by Robert T. Kiyosaki with Sharon L. Lechter ( C.P.A.)”

then the author talks about the best form of investment,

for that, you can read this in the book,

buy the book from the following image link

So this is all about the chapter 11 summary of the book ” stocks to riches ” by Parag Parikh on Financial literacy.

The Stock Market Bubble formation

Hello friends, I am Laxman Sonale, In Today’s article, we see the stock market bubble from chapter 10 of the book Stock to riches. In this chapter, the author explains the different types of thinking of participants in the markets. and how the government thinks, and how the system thinks, as well as how operator the benefits of any situation.

What are we learn from this Blog?

if you read this blog carefully then you realize how the system works, and how people play the game of the stock market bubble formation, and make the money. If you are a retail investor, then you definitely avoid this game, how to avoid detail, in this blog,

so let’s start

Previous chapter on Mutual Funds:- honest Review:

Chapter 10:- The Stock Market Bubble formation

The Stock Market Bubble

In this chapter, the author Parag Parikh talks about the financial bubble that happened in history. Their cause ad psychology of every participant. so let’s understand one by one the reason for their bubble formation and bubble bursts.

In starting the author says, ” The Stock Market are fascinating because they are so unpredictable furious activity is followed by long periods of lull. Many a fortune is made and lost. the Greed and Fear of participants make the stock market volatile. (The Stock Market Bubble)

The one who can understand this and in turn exploit it is easily the master. Stock markets are known for their intermittent bubble. to understand who and what causes them, we need to ascertain how the system works and what drives the participants. Systems Vagaries of the stock markets.”

then the author talks about how the system thinks about it.

System Thinking:-The Stock Market Bubble

In this, the author says, ” A system is that which maintains its existence and functions as a whole through the interaction of its various parts. The human body is a perfect example of a system. It consists of different parts and organs each acting separately yet all working together and each impacting the others.

Similarly, all around us, there are systems and systems within systems. System thinking is looking at the whole picture, the different parts, and the interconnection between the parts.

It thinking in circles, in loops rather than in straight lines. the parts of a system are all connected directly or indirectly. The action of one part affects the other and that other responds to the new influence.

The influence then comes back to the first part in modified ways, making a loop, not a straight line. This is known as the FeedBack loop.” (The Stock Market Bubble)

then the author gives the example of our hunger to understand the feedback loop

Hunger is a good example of this. When you feel hungry, you want to eat. so you eat as much as you need to satisfy your hunger. Once your hunger is satisfied you stop eating.

your hunger influenced your craving for food and in turn the amount of food. you ate influenced your hunger. it looks like one action but actually, it is a loop. it would be only one action if you knew exactly how much food to eat to feed your hunger and you ate that quantity of food.

When two parts are connected the influence can go both ways, like a telephone line; if you can dial a friend he can also dial you.

Feedback is the output of a system reentering as its input, or the return of information to influence the next step.

Feedback is fundamental to systems. there are two types of feedback loops.

Reinforcing Feedback:-

When changes in the whole system return to amplify the original change and this amplified change goes through the system producing more change in the same direction.

An example would be a snowball rolling down the hill. it collects snow as it rolls and becomes larger and larger until it eventually becomes a boulder.

Balancing FeedBack:-

When changes in the whole system return to oppose the original change and so dampen the effect. A balancing feedback loop is where the change in one of the systems results in a change in the rest of the system. that restrict, limit or oppose the initial change and keep the system stable, or else the reinforcing feedback would break the system. (The Stock Market Bubble)

Feedback is a circle. It takes time to travel round in a circle and so the effect can appear sometime after the cause. when there is a time delay between cause and effect and we assume there is no effect at all, we may be surprised when the effort suddenly happens.

What we do now will affect our lives in the future when the consequences come around again. We do not see the connection and we blame prevailing conditions but actually, the roots lie in our own past actions. We mold the future by our present actions.

Very often the most critical point of leverage in any system is the belief of the people because it is these beliefs that sustain the system.

The stock market is one such system and it is its beliefs and the behavior of its. Various participants from time to time shape their progress.”

then author explains each participants psychology, including governments, regulators, stock exchange, brokers, banks, companies

The Psychology of Stock Market Participants:-

At this point, you know each participant’s aim in the stock market, and how they think

in this author says, ” understanding the psychology of the participants is the key to knowing how they will behave when they are gripped by fear and greed. he who understands this psychology is able to manipulate the markets by using the different participants at different times.

Now let’s see what each one wants from the markets.

Governments:-

At this point when the world has become a global village and each country wants to attract foreign capital, governments need booming markets. (The Stock Market Bubble)

Stock markets are the barometer of an economy. they send positive signals to foreign investors when they are in a bull phase.

Booming stock markets create confidence and spur the governments to go ahead with their economic policies. No government likes depressed stock markets.

Regulator:-

Regulators are appointed by the government, the regulator also likes booming stock markets.

A rising market is evidence of good government it also results in additional revenue in the form of higher transaction of services charges due to the increase in turnover.

Stock Exchange:-

They facilitate stock transactions. during boom periods, incomes skyrocket, by way of transaction charges from brokers, listing fees, etc.

Brokers:-

in a bull market, the clientele increase and so do business opportunities. this results in higher incomes for the brokers.

Banks:-

Their business increases with soaring stock markets as opportunities open up in lending against stocks, margin trading, depository, and custodial business. etc.

The feel-good factor drives investors to banks for various financial services.

Companies:-

Rising markets lead to higher stock prices, the net worth of owners increases, and companies can map up more capital for expansions. Financially healthy companies are able to attract and retain good talent and keep their shareholders happy. (The Stock Market Bubble)

Mutual funds:-

Higher stock prices mean increased net asset value rising markets attract more investors which means more money under management fees. they are also able to come out with different kinds of funds to satisfy every requirement.

Media:-

The media plays a pivotal role in spreading information. an increase In investors means increased viewers/readers, which translates into increased advertisements revenue.

Investors:-

The lure of quick money draws investors into a bull market. Day traders become very active as they are rewarded with easy gains.

Operators:-

He is the smartest and shrewdest of all. he is aware that the bull run psychology creates the bull run. He knows the system, he understands the psychology of the participants and he has the ability to exploit that for his own benefit.

He is the king-maker who uses his knowledge to win over investors, brokers, and company management.

after this

the author explains how we make a bubble in the market.

Making the Bubble:-

in starting this point, the author gives the quote

: ” Whoever can supply them with illusion is easily their market.”   – Guston Le Bun

so the author gives three points of making bubble.

1) Stock Price:-

At this point, the author says ” The fulcrum of the stock market is the stock price. the management of companies is the biggest beneficiary of a price increase and it is in its interest to keep stock prices high.

Anyone who promises to boost line prices easily becomes its master.

The operator understands the weakness very well, he tells the management that its company stock is undervalued and convinces it that he can take it higher. in most cases, he is a broker or an investment banker, which gives him the credibility of knowing the stock markets.” (The Stock Market Bubble)

then comes the role of the second point

2) The Deal:-

The management gives the operator some stocks at the current low price and a predetermined amount to rig the stock. the operator uses the money for his stock market operations while his profits come from a portion of the stock he is given at the beginning, which he sells when the price goes up.

A fixed amount of performance fees is also given to execute the deal. Over and above that the operator makes money by way of trading on his own account during the rigging process.

the third point is one circular trading

3) Circular trading:-

This author explains step-by-step circular trading.

Step-1:- The operator has his own band of brokers who specialize in such operations. the circular trading starts, Broker-1 sells shares to Broker-2 who in turn seel broker-3 who then sells to broker-4, and so on.

As the shares change hands the price increase. thus reported volume. when this data reaches investors they think that since the stock is moving something must be happening. (The Stock Market Bubble)

Circular trading picks up momentum and the stock price and volume increase, the referring loop is created. Even if there is pressure to sell the operator absorbs, it with the money given to him by the management.

If the conditions are bullish the operator and his band of brokers also, absorb the selling by taking their own positions.

This creates artificial scarcity and the reinforcing loop becomes stronger. see figure to understand the circular trading process.

circular trading

Creating the Reinforcing Loop:-

At this stage, the manipulators can not exit. they are making the bubble, so they need to support the price, or else the reinforcing loop will break.

the Stock needs to get its momentum before it can stand on its own. So a fund manager of a mutual fund or an institutional investor is roped in to join the inner investment adds credibility to the stock.

Investors are lured by the entrance of these investors. This helps the rigging the gives credibility to the stock.

Step-2:-

Now the stock has got its feet. Regular Volume data and the rise in price attract investors. Saliency heuristic is at work. the rise in stock is seen as a positive turn in the fortunes of the company.

Slowly the stock becomes newsworthy. Stories about the company, its growth potential, restrictions, and so on appear in the stock market, journals availability heuristics at play.

All available information on the company is positive. the recall value for the stock gains prominence and more investors start buying. (The Stock Market Bubble)

The seed of Greed is sowed. With each price rise, demand for the stock increases, and other players such as retail investors join the game. fundamentals and valuations take a back seat.

bubble starts

The initial operator and his band of brokers at this stage do not do much except plant stories in the media, generate excitement about the stock by way of research reports, and convince another intermediate who in turn recommend the stock to their clients.

Essentially, their job is done. the stock is on autopilot. the bubble starts ballooning. at this stage, the manipulators are able to exit.

Stage-3:-

the net is spread, more stock market participants enter the fray. Banks and private financiers look for lending opportunities. the stock enters the list of stocks against which banks will give an overdraft facility.

this further enhances the credibility of the stock the stock builds huge volumes as genuine buying and selling take place.

Enter the media. Stock price movements are flashed on tv screens ad analysts recommend it at investment debates.

the stocks soar further on inflexibility as more and more investors enter the market, afraid that they will miss the bus. this herd mentality pushes the stock still further. Now with greed in the driving seat representative heuristic comes effect makes investors feel that the market is undervaluing their stock and they become more confident of their holding.

they become salesmen for the stock and recommend it to their own friends, and relatives. Each person becomes an expert in his own sphere of influence. the initial operator then exits and move to other stocks in the same industry where representative heuristic is at play. (The Stock Market Bubble)

the bubble is for real and the reinforcing loop is strong. all the participants in the market are happy, as each one is a winner. Between the cause and effect, there is an interval, the duration of which no one can predict. the balancing loop has to come up to play to correct the system is to be stable. nobody can predict when that will happen but happen it will.

The severity of the balancing loop is directly proportionate to the severity of the reinforcing loop.

the buble is for real

then lastly the author explains how the bubble burst,

you can read this in this book, buying this book, from the following link

so this is all about the stock market bubble from book stock to riches.

Mutual Funds:- Honest Review

Hello friend, I am Laxman Sonale, In this article, we see Mutual Funds: an idea of when time has gone from chapter 9 of the book Stock to riches. In this Parag Parikh Explain the mutual fund industry and also the fund manager problem, as well as the destroyer environments. So let’s understand the most famous industry in finance.

Previous Chapter 8

Chapter 9: Mutual Funds: an Idea where time has Gone

Mutual Funds:- Honest Review

In this starting author explain the real meaning of Investing, If you think investing or stock market is some magical place and those take the risk on that they win and become very rich in overnight. then you can ignore this article right now.

But if you invest in mutual funds without knowing about them, and their behavior/psychology, then this article helps you most to understand this industry.

you want to learn about investing and avoid the big mistakes of financial life/in mutual funds then you must read with understanding.

so hope you get the notification. so let’s start this chapter 9

At the start, the author says, ” Investing is a game of patience, and investors get rewarded if they invest for the long term. the longer one stays invested the greater are the rewards. Buy a value, sit on it, and left time to do the rest.

In today’s changing time’s investors shun the age-old wisdom of Long term investing and chase the illusion of short-term quick profits. Keynes is often quoted – ” In the long run we are all dead” – to justify the speculative urge of Short-term quick profit.

the strategy of short-term is to time the market rather than invest in good sustainable business. sometimes you go night and make a quick buck. (Mutual Funds:- Honest Review)

But the game of Timing can be very difficult and it is hardly advisable when it concerns one’s hard-earned money. Everything changes but there are certain principles that do not change. the power of principles is that they are universal timeless truths. if we live our life based on these we can quickly adapt and apply them anywhere world, we cling to practices, structures, and systems for some sense of predictability in our lives. we forgot the principles and we are headed for trouble.

Investment management is a profession but it is being run like a business. So the rules of sound investment take a back seat and the rules of business dominate.”

then the author explains the beginning of the Mutual funds

The Beginnings of Mutual funds:-

In this point, the author explains the history of mutual funds, and how this industry is born.

the author says, ” This industry was created to channel the savings of a vast number of small investors into the capital markets. it Is a vehicle to safeguard the interests of the small investors who are assumed to be incapable of taking investment decisions on their own.

The Mutual fund industry provides the basic infrastructure for professional investors, in the form of professional fund managers investment research, business analysts, stock market analysis, and system to cater to the huge pool of investors. the aim is to fulfill the long-term investment needs of retail investors.”

the rule of the Game of mutual funds

  1. Long term Investment Strategy
  2. Investor friendly: Exit Within 24 hours
  3. Professional fund managers with strong market expertise.
  4. Backed by strong Research Analyst.

You also know about these rules, when you start investing in mutual funds, in the form of SIP. so this is the main rule, let’s see the deep game, from the fund manager side, to understand this, the author explains The Paradox concept

The Paradox:-

the author says, ” Most mutual funds talk about long-term investment strategy. however, they are open-ended and the investor can exit whenever he wants.

The paradox is that on the one hand it talks about a long-term investment philosophy but on the other, it does not encourage the investor to be a long-term player. (Mutual Funds:- Honest Review)

this is because the normal practice in the mutual fund industry is to have open-ended funds and the principle of long-term investment takes a back seat, the game is that of timing the market and looking for short-term gains.

In Fact, it would be wrong to assume that investors do not want their money looked in for long periods. If that were true then people would not invest in RBI bonds, or past savings schemes for five to seven years, or in the public provident fund, for 15 years.”

then author blames this industry, for many reasons, let’s see one by one reason

the author says, ” The industry itself needs to be blamed for nurturing and nursing the culture of open-ended schemes. As the industry grew so did the competition leading to high marketing costs.

Money comes when the markets climb as the net asset values start going up. there is a scramble to get in and fund managers are pressured to invest in a rising market at inflated asset prices.

However, pull-out(taking out money from mutual funds) forces fund managers to sell the portfolio at depressed prices to meet the redemptions.

the basic principle of buying when prices are depressed and others are selling, and selling when prices are high and others are buying is not workable. fund managers are forced to act in a way that does not conform with the basic investment principle.

fund manager’s decisions are being controlled by the environment.”

then author talk about the Fund managers Behaviour, if you invest in a mutual fund, then you should this following paragraph carefully to understand fund manager behavior

Fund Manager’s Behaviour:-

the author says, ” Because of the pressure to perform in the short run, fund managers chase each other’s net asset values rather than follow sound investment strategies.

When the information, communication, and entertainment (ICE sector) moved up in 1999, fund managers chased those stocks, and prices rose steeply. (Mutual Funds:- Honest Review)

Most of them had the same ICE stocks among their Top holdings. at the time of the rise of the public sector understanding in the oil sector, most of them had ONGC, BPCL, and HPCL as their top holdings.

then when the fed passed, they competed to sell and depressed the prices. it is obvious that the herd mentality is what drives them to make decisions.

newspaper and financial journals report quarterly performance of funds. Influenced by this news, investors enter and exit funds forcing fund managers to change strategies midway. they are thus forced to keep up with market trends and this affects their performance.

Also, the practice of offering bonuses and rewards for turning in short-term profits rather than for following a sound investment strategy forces them to adopt short-term strategies. as a result, it is the investors who lose.

For if making short-term money was so simple in the market he would not be a fund manager. he would be busy making money for himself playing the market.

This is not to say that all fund managers are mediocre. the Indian capital market does have some very good talent and we need to create the right environment for such talent to flourish and at the same time reap benefits for the mutual fund holders.”

after this, the author explains the destructive environment for mutual funds.

Destructive Environment:-

In this point, the author talks about the mutual fund environment.

the author says, ” the mutual fund manager manages the money of investors whom he has not even seen. it is the sales team and third-party distributors who bring in the investors. In a situation where fiduciary responsibility is very important, not knowing the investor whose money he is managing can call his commitment into question.

Mutual fund managers have a file of cash to be invested in the stock markets. naturally, broker company managements and other operators chase them with quick money ideas. with so much attention being showered on them,

there is a danger that they could overestimate their abilities and performance. Sometimes the rewards for performance could also make them overconfident. (Mutual Funds:- Honest Review)

It is true that we can not blame the fund manager but the point is when there are so many good professionals in the field, they should not be forced to operate in less than conducive environments.

The business of a broker depends upon the number of resources he is able to mobilize for the fund. hence brokers may try to sell a fund to investors not because it is a good investment but in order to generate business from the purchase and sale of stocks.

The fund manager and the broker please each other for their own benefit and in the process, it is the investor who suffers.

the development of the mutual fund’s concept was perfect for its time. the idea was to pool together the resources of investors and invest them in the stock markets.

Professional fund managers backed by strong research would handle the investments. thus the investor was assured of the services of professionals. but times have changed.

The level of education has improved. information flow has increased. The Internet enables the exchange of information in real-time. Online trading enables real-time execution.

Chat sites ( like our blog) help investors discuss their views and seek opinions. the power of knowledge has shifted from the hands of a few to those of the masses.

We now have a web of smart professionals with new ideas knowledge and operations as compared to a handful who are working for the mutual fund industry.

in fact, the concept of mutual funds has become outdated. mutual funds are competing with millions of traders. and with so much volatility and pressure on performance, they have also become weekly traders, if not day traders.

our belief that mutual funds are good is getting another example of a mental heuristic.

then the author talks about mutual funds as a profession or business.

Mutual funds: A profession or A Business

in this point author puts both scenarios of the profession and the business

author says, ” Money management is a profession. the professionals who make it are validated by their performance. unfortunately, the advent of mutual funds has turned it into a business where the goal is to increase the assets under management.

today, funds compete for the size of assets, chasing a benchmark of relative returns. the aim is to beat the top-performing fund. Even a poor two percent becomes a benchmark.

On the other hand, a professional like a portfolio manager will benchmark against absolute returns because in most cases has fees are linked to his performance.”

then lastly the author gives the solution of mutual funds.

Mutual funds solution:-

in this author explain the different types of mutual funds, and which one is best, let’s see

the author says, ‘ Open-ended mutual funds are the main cause of the volatility in the markets today. I believe that close-ended mutual funds(is a type of mutual fund that issues a fixed number of shares of their own fund) are the best vehicles for a long-term investor.

it allows the fund manager to be disciples, which in turn reaps substantial rewards for investors. no doubt the choice of such funds is limited. (Mutual Funds:- Honest Review)

In this case, the price of the fund could fluctuate according to the net asset value, but when the units change hands they go from one investor to another and there is no redemption on the fund.

the fund manager, therefore, is free to make long-term decisions because the environment does not control him. for the healthy growth of the mutual fund industry, more such close-ended funds need to be floated.

however, the irony is that close-ended mutual funds quote at a premium prior to listing and at a discount to the net asset value after listing. This discount may be viewed as an expensive monument erected to the inertia and short-sightedness of the shareholders.

The price movements of close-ended funds display the fickle behavior of investors as investor sentiment varies over time.

When noise traders are optimistic, the price of the net asset value narrows. when noise traders are pessimistic, the price of close-ended funds declines, and the discount to the net asset value widens.

Investors in close-ended mutual funds are subject to two types of risk: firstly, the fundamental risk of the net asset value going down, and secondly, the noise trader risk of widening the discount due to pessimism. The opportunity arises in the second scenario.

However, the investor would need the patience to benefit from such an opportunity. But isn’t investing a game of patience after all!

then the author talks about the future of open-ended mutual funds,

you can read this in the book, by ordering on the following image link.

Mental heuristics In Stock market

Hello friends, I am Laxman Sonale, In today’s article, we see chapter 8 from the book Stock to riches ( mental Heuristics). In this chapter the author, Parag Parikh explains how our mind is working in real life as well as in the stock market. Especially when money comes. So if you want to avoid losing money, then read this article, and understand it carefully.

let’s start

Previous Chapter 7

Mental Heuristics:-

Mental Heuristics

At the start of this chapter, the author gives the two questions to test our mental heuristics, hey guys questions are so funny and logical, let’s see

Question 1:- Three birds are sitting on a tree, two decide to fly away. How many birds are there on the tree?

Question 2: Observe the following picture which line appears longer?

Mental heuristics question

The bottom line appears longer but if you look at the diagram below you notice that both the lines are of the same length.

To support the above statement, the author gives the following diagram

Mental heuristics question

 

the author gives the right answer to the first question

the author says, ” Although both the lines are the same why is It that the lower line appears longer? that’s because the brain takes a shortcut when processing information. I do not process all the information and this leads to biases. this process is known as mental heuristics.

If your answer to the first question- How many birds are there on the tree!- is one,

then you have fallen prey to mental heuristics. your brain does not the information properly. The answer should be three birds. Two had only decided to fly away.

They did not fly away had I told you that they flew away then you would be right.”

The first time I read it, I am also falling in bias

then the author gives the definite definition of mental heuristics and explains mental heuristics with examples

the author says, ” the dictionary definition of the word heuristics refers to the process by which people reach conclusions usually by trial and error.

This often leads them to develop thumb rules, But these are not always accurate. One of the greatest advances of behavioral psychology is the identification of the principle underlying these thumb rules and the errors associated with them.

in turn, these rules have themselves come to be called heuristics. In short, the following four statements define heuristics bias

  • People develop general principles as they find out things for themselves.
  • People rely on heuristics to draw inferences from available information.
  • people are susceptible to certain errors because the heuristics used are imperfect.
  • People actually commit errors in a particular situation.

Then the author gives examples of this

the author says, ” there is a newly opened megastore in the vicinity whose stock is listed on the stock market. you see a big queue outside it and you think it must be doing a roaring business.

You buy the stock hoping it will go up because the store is doing well. But there could be umpteen reasons for the queue the store definitely could be doing great business. But it is also possible that customers are queueing to return defective goods or perhaps the service is slow, or maybe all the other stores in the vicinity are closed on that day.

There are various reasons for the queue but our brain does not weigh all the probabilities and makes a decision on half-baked information.

Stock markets are interesting because Investors do this all the time.

then the author explains with reliance industries limited ( RIL) examples

the author says, ” when the company discovered a gas vein. the stock jumped as investors cashed in on this news. But let us analyze the situation without falling prey to mental heuristics.

the gas source was discovered but there were other factors to be considered the quality of the gas, the number of wells to be drilled, the time it would take, the plans to finance the project, etc.

Before the profits could be repaid yet analysts predicted the future profitability of RFL and on such hopes, investors bought the stock at rising prices.

This is how mental heuristics work when the brain does not process all the information and its implications. the tech boom was built on the same logic and we know the damage it has done.”

then author explains why we do this time by time,

the author says, ‘ Evolutionary forces shaped human cognition over centuries. that served our ancestors well, allowing for quick quality decisions.

Today, the complexities of our lives throw up multifarious data that sure minds may not assimilate very easily. The heuristics we help carry associated biases, which undermine the quality of our decisions. let’s take a look at some heuristics and their biases.”

then the author explains different heuristics

let’s see one by one

Availability heuristics:-Mental Heuristics

In this, the author says, ” One bias associated with availability is the ease of recall.

We are more likely to make judgments based on recent or easy-to-remember events rather than other similar but harder to recall instances. the flow of information around us is what happened in the India shining story of 2003-04.

All available information press, television, bureaucracy, business, and political circles, centered on the positive aspects of the Indian economy.

No negatives were permitted. shared by so much optimism the herd mentality comes into play and everyone not only believed the story, they advocated it.”

then the author explains, how these availability heuristics work in the stock market

the author says, ” this was reflected in the stock markets, the senses jumped from 2800 in April 2003 to over 6000 in April 2004. the NDA and its allies were sure they would win the electrons as the India shining story pointed a rosy picture of their governance. come May 2004 and the electron results announced that the NDA government had lost. How did this happen? the post-analysis revealed that the India shining story had been aggressively sold in the major cities; hence the exit polls in these cities placed the NDA’s chances very high. But 70 percent of the population lives in rural areas and for them, India was not shining. thus NDA was lost. (Mental Heuristics)

On may 17, 2004 the markets crashed by more than 800 points in just two days.

The reason:- All available information was negative. In bull markets, there is only positive news and in bear markets, it is only negative. that’s why markets go up or come down on reflexivity.”

then the author explains other heuristics, let’s see how they work in the stock market.

Representative Heuristics:-

In this, the author says, ‘ We assess the likelihood of an event by its similarity to other occurrences A predominant bias associated with this is an overreaction.

In the stock market, if the leaders report impressive performance, then all the stocks in that particular sector benefit.

the fortunes of the steel industry seemed to be changing and TaTa steel reported increased earnings profits. All the stocks in the sector including the junk and penny stocks attracted investors interest irrespective of whether they too would report increased earnings when the textile industry reported good profits, not only did all the stocks in that sector rise but companies in associated industries, like machinery manufacture, spinning mills, dyes, and chemicals also attracted attention. (Mental Heuristics)

Representative heuristics also affect investors’ actions. Investors try to replicate their portfolios by following the leaders. if they find that a leading find or broker or a respected personality has bought a particular stock they also buy the stock. in a way, this gives rise to the herd mentality.”

then the author explain saliency heuristic

Saliency Heuristic:-

In this, the author says, ” Individual over regret to un unusual event assuming it to be a permanent trend. Two airplanes crashed into the world trade center and the world stays flying the next day. Surely this type of incident has the next day. On the contrary, the next day was probably the safest time for flying.

In bull markets, analysts overreact to unusually good quarterly earnings assuming it would be repeated in the future and become bullish on the stock. In the bear market, they overreact to a bad quarterly estimate extrapolating it too for the future.

In 2004 second-quarter GDP growth estimates of 10 percent saw the markets going up on the assumption that the trend would continue. Actually, it needs to be sustainable to justify good times ahead, however, this is how saliency heuristic works with investors.”

then author gives overconfident examples, you can read this in the book, buy this book from the following link

then the author explain herd mentality with example in the stock market.

Herd Mentality:-Mental Heuristics

in the author says, ” Prakash bought a Maruti Western after carefully researching the decision. He was very happy with it and, enjoyed driving the car on his long haul trips to Lonavala. After a few months, a flood of strangers approached him and offered to buy the car at reduced prices.

The vehicle was in good condition and had done a few thousand miles. Worried that he had not made the right decision Prakash considered selling his Maruti at half his cost price. should he sell the car?

Before you answer, ask yourself what advice would you give him if he wanted to sell 1000 shares of Maruti, which he had bought for Rs. 400 and was now quoting at Rs. 300 due to depressed stock market conditions.

The history of the stock market shows that most investors buy stocks in companies or mutual funds for presumably sound reasons but exit their holdings the moment the market turns against them. (Mental Heuristics)

they sell when a bunch of complete strangers offers them less than what they had paid. Conversely, they will pay high prices for stocks or real estate, or paintings just because other people whom they don’t even know are willing to pay such prices. The dot-com boom was a result of such thinking.

In Stock market Parlance this is known as investing with the herd. We need to understand the manner in which the value of a stock or commodity is determined. To some extent what other people think matters a great deal.

Beauty may be in the eyes of the beholder but the value is often in the eyes of the buyer. If Prakash wanted to sell the Maruti then it was worth what the buyers would pay for it. But if he didn’t then he was the only one to decide the value of his car.”

then author explains how herd mentality work in the stock market

the author says, ”  In the stock markets most often investors allow popular opinion and behavior to define value for them; sometimes for the good but often not their buying or selling decisions are made not on the basis of their own convictions, but on the value that strangers appropriate.

The Herd mentality affects business decisions to a great extent people try to replicate the leaders. In the end everyone behaves alike which leads to cutting prices for market shares. This is very common in the stock brokering business.

Technology has made it easy to install trading terminals across the country. So to survive in a competitive market, brokers have lowered their trading commissions to as little as 3 paise. the difference between one broker and another is the difference in their commissions, not in the value they offer their clients.

that how herd mentality works in business.”

after this, the author gives the size bias

Size Bias:-

In this author talk about two friends, that invest in the market with different time frame, let’s understand size bias.

Two friends, Gautam and Salman, are just out of college and have taken up jobs. from day one Gautam sets aside Rs. 300 every month, which earns him 10 percent per annum, after 10 years he stops as he has started a family.

Salman got married early and did not save anything for a long while. After 10 years, he began to set aside Rs. 300 every month earning him 10 percent per annum.

He continued doing this for the next 30 years until he retired at the age of 60. Salman’s investment was Rs. 1,08,000 while Gautam’s was only Rs. 36,000

When both retired who has more money? it would seem to be Salman as he has been saving for 30 years. in reality it was Gautam. (Mental Heuristics)

At 60,  Gautam got Rs. 1,051,212 while Salman got Rs. 621,787. This is the power of compounding which investors normally forgot.

Salman could not make up for the 10 years that Gautam’s money compounded at an annual rate of 10 percent per annum.

We often tend to look at the big numbers and ignore the small ones.

In money matters, it is the small figures that make all the difference.”

After this author gives the wonderful advice to the trader, how their mind works, and how they recognize patterns.

this you can read in this book, buy the book from the following link.

So this is all about chapter 8 on mental heuristics from book stocks to riches by Parag Parikh.