Sunday, April 12, 2009

How to Build Equity for Your Speculative Stock Trading

The Starter Investor Strategy for Building Equity

Effective from our update on April 5, 2023, we have rebranded from Marginal Investor to The Starter Investor. For additional details, please visit our About Us page.


STRATEGIES FOR BUILDING YOUR EQUITY for the purpose of stock trading are derived from what I shall call the Marginal Investor Triangle.

We start out with generating savings being our main objective, hence making us Savers.

Since savings does not offer protection against inflation, we seek a complementary activity that shall serve as a hedge. Thus, we become attracted to the hedge provided by capital gains obtained from engaging ourselves in the stock trading business, partly transforming us into Traders.

When the saver and the trader are placed in the presence of each other, they attract one another and from their union is born the Investor and his investments. This point completes the formation of our Marginal Investor Triangle. 





Saver

Clearly, the starting point for the investor described in my previous post Finding the Money for Investment is generating savings. Set aside no less than 275 pesos monthly and within a year, we shall have a desirable balance for opening a BPI Expressteller Savings account: 3,000 pesos.

Investor

Continue with your savings program and by the second year, we shall be ready to open our BPITrade account in preparation for our stock trading operations.

 

The First Step: Starter Stock Trader

By the third year of our savings program, we shall have the equity for speculative stock trading. From being savers, we now become swing traders looking for buying opportunities and capital gains by investing in the Philippine Stock Exchange.

The Goal: Intermediate Stock Trader

We shall continue with our saving and trading activities until we can build a fund of over 50,000 pesos. Why this amount? Because this is the minimum price of our ticket to the world of BPI Investment Funds.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

BPITrade Updated Fee Structure as of April 1, 2009

NOTE: This is an old post and most of the details are not current anymore. We are not updating this post anymore since its posting on April 11, 2009. So, readers are advised to go straight to the BPI Trade website for more details. Here is the link to the BPI Trade FAQs:


BPI TRADE FAQs


BPITrade Updated Fee Structure

BPITrade updated its fee structure beginning April 1, 2009. Here is the email message sent to BPITrade clients:



From: bpitrade@bpi.com.ph
Subject: BPITrade Updated Fee Structure
To: Marginal Investor
Date: Tuesday, March 31, 2009, 1:48 PM

Dear BPITrade Client,

In line with the implementation of the Documentary Stamp (DST) for Buy transactions, we are sending an updated Excel file which will aid you in determining your Buy and Sell transaction costs and proceeds. The breakdown of your Net Buy and Net Sell amount are presented in detail.

In addition, we are also providing you with our updated fee structure in the table below. Effectivity and implementation of the updated fees/charges will be on April 1, 2009.



For further inquiries, please call us at 816-9190 or 816-9192. Thank you very much.

BPI Securities Corporation


For illustration purposes, let us use a buy and a sell transaction under 8,000 pesos in value that we did while trading our Ayala Corporation shares:





From our total sell price of 4,414.27 pesos , we take out the total buy price of 4,067.08 pesos to give us a capital gain of 347.19 pesos or about 8.5% yield based on total buy price.


In these two transactions, our selling price of 223 pesos less buying price of 202 pesos will make a 420 pesos gross margin for 20 shares.


Then, we split our gross margin with BPITrade by about 4:1 ratio. We take over 80% while BPITrade gets under 20% of the gross margin in this completed stock trading operating cycle.



Next Post: How to Build Equity for Your Speculative Stock Trading Operations

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Marginal Investor Swings with the Stock Price

The Starter Investor Learns Swing Trading

Effective from our update on April 5, 2023, we have rebranded from Marginal Investor to The Starter Investor. For additional details, please visit our About Us page.


BECOMING A GENUINE INVESTOR in common stock is our ultimate goal. You may read that the previous two posts are parts of a series that will show how Marginal Investor understood and applied the principles and techniques described in the book The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham in the context of a beginning investor who is a Filipino, residing in the Philippines and with a shoestring budget to begin with.

Investment Money

You may also find in Awakening of the Marginal Investor or Speculator that I suggested using the speculative method of stock trading and taking advantage of quick price changes until one has the amount of over 50,000 pesos. Of course, one may invest in common stocks through the Philippine Stock Exchange with funds under 50,000 pesos. But this would be insufficient to create the suggested diversified portfolio of common stocks giving one the expected 4% to 8% average annual return. For this reason, I would put on hold the series about the Intelligent Investor until that time when we have complied with Marginal Investor's proposed fund requirements.

Investors and Stock Traders

Nevertheless, Chapter Two of The Intelligent Investor is so much related to the stock trading game that I would still venture to include some portions of it here. Entitled The Investor and Stock-Market Fluctuations, this chapter offered some description of the proper attitude that investors should take in the matter of price fluctuations in common stocks. Since, for the time being, we shall play the role of stock traders with speculative tendencies at that, we shall note the warnings and pick up suggestions as they apply to us.

Buy Low, Sell High

In discussing Market Fluctuations in Individual Stocks, it mentioned that the principle of buy-low-sell-high can be applied more satisfactorily with primary reference to individual stocks and with comparatively little regard for the level of the general market. The maxim is: "Buy during periods of of pessimism and low prices; sell during periods of optimism and high prices." This is just exactly what we need to understand because we are focusing only on one issue: Ayala Corporation. And we shall use the facilities of BPI Trade for our online stock trading.

Swing Trading

Furthermore, while we were digressing from our main focus of investing towards stock trading, we will be maintaining a clear view of our overall goal at all times. Talking about stock trading, stock traders typically gravitate around any one of the major styles of equity trading and stick only to that style. For our stopover, this Starter Investor decided to play the role of a swing trader.

Playing the role of a swing trader, we shall hold our Ayala Corporation shares for a period of time, generally a few days or two or three weeks, and we will trade this stock on the basis of its intra-week or intra-month oscillations between optimism and pessimism, following our maxim.

Stock Trading Operating Cycle

In the introduction to my previous post, I explained how I completed my first stock trading operating cycle, from 4,050 pesos cash to buy 20 shares of stock to generating receivables, then collecting the receivables and converting it back to cash and picking up 350 pesos appreciation of my principal in the process. Here is what the operating cycle looks like:



Waiting for the Swing

In the first week of April, we started a new roundtrip by using 4,080 pesos of our cash to buy 20 shares of Ayala Corporation at 204 pesos per share. Since our goal is to generate a minimum return of 6% for our total available cash position every roundtrip - which at this time is 4,400 pesos - then we need to obtain net capital gains of 265 pesos.

Transaction Cost

Transaction costs for selling our stock inventory are about 1% to 2% of gross sales. For this cycle, we should consider selling only when the price is over by a minimum of 8% based on our total purchase cost of 4,080 pesos, which means an offer price of 221 pesos per share. What we need to do now is simply wait for the stock price to swing from 204 pesos to 221 pesos per share.


Next Post: BPITrade Updated Fee Structure and Stock Cost-Proceeds Computation

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