Hello readers, we are happy to announce that our team of MoneyWiseMind.com launched a new section “Investing Insights: Weekly Q&A for Stock Market Newbies”, to spread the basic stock market knowledge to the beginners.
This
is your go-to resource for demystifying the stock market from the scratch. Each
day, we will present 10 carefully curated questions with answers that will
cover essential concepts, strategies, and terminologies. Whether you have just
entered into the market, or trying to starting your stock market journey, or
looking to strengthen your foundation, our weekly post will guide you through
the basics and beyond, making investing accessible and understandable for
everyone. Happy reading.
Day 37: Basic Stock Market Concepts
1. When should Beginners Sell their Stocks?
Valid Reasons to sell:
1)
The original investment thesis breaks (e.g., company fundamentals deteriorate)
2) You
need the money for important financial goals
3) The
stock becomes extremely overvalued
4) You
find a significantly better opportunity
5) To
rebalance your portfolio (selling winners to buy underperformers maintains
diversification).
Bad Reasons to sell:
1)
Short-term price drops
2) Media
panic
3)
Impulse to "lock in" small profits
4)
Boredom with "slow" stocks.
Have
clear sell rules before buying any stock. For long-term holdings, review
companies quarterly - has anything material changed? Avoid selling just to
"book profits" on winners - let quality compound over decades.
Similarly, don't hold losers hoping to "break even" if fundamentals
have worsened. Selling decisions should be as disciplined as buying decisions,
not emotional reactions.
2. What Records should Beginner Investors Maintain?
Keep
organized records of:
1) All
buy/sell transactions with dates, prices, and quantities
2)
Dividend receipts
3)
Brokerage statements
4) Annual
portfolio performance
5)
Investment thesis for each stock (why you bought it)
6)
Tax-related documents (especially capital gains)
7)
Company research notes.
Maintain
separate files for short-term and long-term holdings since tax treatment
differs. Track your overall asset allocation across stocks, bonds, cash etc.
Recording your thought process helps avoid repeating mistakes. Use simple spread
sheets or portfolio tracker apps. Good records help during tax filing and when
evaluating your strategy's effectiveness. They also prevent fraud - regularly
match your records with broker statements. As your portfolio grows, consider
consulting a tax professional to optimize your filings.
3. How do Beginners Handle Market Crashes?
Market crashes are normal and actually benefit long-term investors.
When prices fall:
1) Don't panic sell - quality stocks usually recover
2) Review
your portfolio - are the companies still fundamentally strong?
3) If you
have spare cash, consider buying more shares at lower prices (called
"averaging down")
4) Stick
to your original investment plan
5)
Remember that time in the market beats timing the market. Crashes separate
emotional investors from disciplined ones. Historically, every major crash has been
followed by recovery and new highs. Use crashes as learning opportunities -
analyze why certain stocks fell more than others. Maintain diversification so
no single crash destroys your portfolio. If you can't stomach 20-30% drops,
reduce stock allocation. The key is having a plan before crashes happen, not
making emotional decisions during them.
4. What Percentage of saving should Beginners
Invest?
A common beginner guideline is the "100 minus age" rule:
invest (100 - your age) % in stocks. So at 30 years old, invest 70% in stocks
and keep 30% in safer options like FDs or debt funds. But adjust this based on
your risk tolerance and financial goals. Always keep 3-6 months' expenses as
emergency cash before investing. Never invest money needed for near-term goals
(within 3 years). Start with 10-20% of your monthly savings, increasing
gradually as you learn. During market peaks, consider keeping some cash aside
for buying opportunities during dips. The exact percentage matters less than
maintaining discipline - regular investing regardless of market conditions. As
you gain experience, you can fine-tune allocations between stocks, bonds, gold
etc. based on your evolving goals and risk appetite.
5. How can
Beginners Avoid Stock market Scams?
Be extremely wary of:
1) "Guaranteed return" schemes - all investments carry
risk
2) Unsolicited stock tips via call/SMS
3) Pressure to invest quickly
4) Complex products you don't understand
5) Penny stocks with sudden price spikes.
Always verify company fundamentals
Yourself before investing. Check if brokers are SEBI-registered. Avoid
"multibagger" promises - real wealth builds gradually. Be skeptical
of celebrity endorsements or "insider information" offers. Research
company backgrounds - many scams use names similar to legitimate firms. Never
share trading passwords or OTP.
Remember that if something sounds too good to be true, it
definitely is. Stick to mainstream investments until you gain experience to
evaluate riskier opportunities properly.
6. Should Beginners
Try Trading or Stick to Investing?
Beginners should absolutely stick to long-term investing rather than
trading. Trading (day trading, swing trading) requires constant market
monitoring, quick decision-making and emotional control that most beginners
lack. Over 90% of day traders lose money. Investing means buying quality
companies and holding for years, benefiting from business growth and
compounding. Trading incurs more fees, taxes (short-term gains taxed higher),
and stress. The few who succeed at trading treat it like a full-time job with
years of practice. As a beginner, focus on learning fundamental analysis for
investing. If interested in trading later, start with paper trading (virtual
money) for 6+ months before using real capital. Remember that even professional
fund managers rarely beat the market long-term - why would a beginner think
they can out-trade the pros?
7. Should Beginners
Invest in IPOs?
IPOs seem exciting but are risky for beginners. Companies often overhype
their IPO while hiding weaknesses. Prices may drop after listing when the hype
fades. Check if the company has consistent profits (not just revenue growth),
reasonable valuation (compare P/E with industry), and trustworthy promoters.
Avoid IPOs with excessive media buzz or those from unknown companies promising
revolutionary ideas. Wait for 3-6 months post-listing to see real market
performance. Established companies' IPOs are safer than new start-ups. Allocate
only a small portion (10-15%) of your portfolio to IPOs initially.
8. Should I use Technical Analysis as a Beginner?
It's a subjective matter whether you should start with technical
analysis or fundamental analysis. Start reading some books on technical
analysis and fundamental analysis. Try to learn key terms used in the stock
market, then try as per your choice. You may avoid technical analysis
initially, because it's complex and often misleading for beginners. Focus first
on fundamental analysis (company financials, industry position). Technical
analysis requires understanding charts, indicators, and patterns which takes
years to master. Many technical traders lose money by misreading signals or
overtrading. If interested, learn basic support/resistance levels and moving
averages first. Never rely solely on charts without checking fundamentals.
Long-term investors don't need technical analysis - it's mainly for short-term
traders. Paper trade technical strategies for 6+ months before using real
money. Remember, even experts fail at market timing.
9. What should Beginners
look for in a Company?
Check if the company makes consistent profits, has manageable debt, and
good growth potential. Look at how long they've been in business and who runs
the company. Avoid businesses you don't understand or that seem too
complicated. Check quarterly and yearly results time to time, management's
skills, business structures.
10. How many Stocks
should a Beginner Own?
Aim for 10-15 different stocks across various industries. This spreads your risk - if one company does poorly, others may do well. Don't put all your money in just 1-2 stocks, no matter how good they seem. A well-diversified portfolio can bring good results, if you select stocks or different asset classes perfectly.
If you have any other questions in your mind relating to stock market basics or need any clarification, please put your query into the comment box, We will try our best to clarify the same
Disclaimer: The information provided on MoneyWiseMind is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not intended to be financial advice, and you should not rely on it as such. Before making any financial decisions, you should consult a licensed financial advisor.