1: What Makes A Good Investment?
Introduction
A good investment, in my view, is any stock which beats the market over a
short or long period. In my professional career as an equity analyst at hedge
funds, I looked for stocks which I beli eved either:
would appreciate by 50% or more over an 18–30 month period, or
had 20% or more absolute downside in a prevailing bull market.
Of course, when you buy (or sell) the stock, you can only hope for the right
outcome – my actual results fluctuated wildly. But there are a huge number
of equities globally in which you can invest, and selection criteria such as
this are a useful way of narrowing your field of endeavour.
Routes to price appreciation
For a stock to outperform (or do better than) the market – active managers
are generally measured on their performance relative to a market
benchmark, hedge fund managers are measured in absolute dollars – one of
three things generally has to happen:
The Smart Money Method: How to pick stocks like a hedge fund pro by Stephen Clapham