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A 5-point checklist for investors that could help navigate volatile markets

A cheap stock could remain cheap forever if the value is destroyed. Stocks like Gitanjali Gems never recovered from that cheap zone as the business was completely wiped out post the Nirav Modi crisis

October 11, 2018 / 10:23 IST
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A man looks at a screen displaying news of markets update inside the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) building in Mumbai, India, February 11, 2016. Indian shares fell more than 3 percent on Thursday and headed for their biggest daily falls in nearly six months, hitting their lowest levels since May 2014, as fears of a slowdown in the global economy hit markets worldwide. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui - RTX26H49

Jitendra Kumar Gupta Moneycontrol Research

It’s an opportune time for the deep value investors who are looking for mispriced stocks or ones that are trading significantly below their intrinsic value. Stocks across the sectors are tumbling, oil PSUs such as Hindustan Petroleum Corporation (HPCL), Bharat Petroleum Corporation (BPCL) and recent carnage in Dewan Housing Finance Corporation (DHFL), Yes Bank and many non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) are just examples of numerous falling knives.

While it is difficult to practice what Warren Buffett calls 'buy the fear', here are few points that can help in separating the wheat from the chaff.

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Many of the stocks collapse for a reason and few offer an illusion of margin of safety, an idea based on the principles of value investing as taught by Benjamin Graham.

Evaluate: Do not try to predict the bottom Last year, investors of Infosys were grappling with the important question of who would head the company after the Vishal Sikka and if the growth journey would get derailed as a result of intensifying strife between the management and the founders. Today, Yes Bank’s shares are struggling probably for the same reason as market fear the uncertainty over the exit of its founder CEO Rana Kapoor. Investors love falling stocks and try to make their quick guess about the bottom.

But in most of these cases including the past few like PC Jeweller, Dilip Buildcon, Vakrangee, Manpasand Beverages and Infibeam, the sequence of events and news unfold in an abrupt manner. The first and foremost thing to do is to wait, take a note of the crisis and think before calling the shot.

Does market know something that you are missing? The investing legend, Howard Marks of Oaktree Capital coined this as ideas of second level thinking. A first-level thinker would always have an opinion about the future in terms of saying the company is good, outlook is favourable and stock will go up.