My Investing Journey: Full-time investing
Source: http://mystockthoughts.blogspot.com/2007/11/my-investing-journey-full-time.htmlPosted on Tuesday, November 20th, 2007 | In Investing Lessons

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In fact in 2004, I was effectively doing full-time investing. I was on a one-year sabbatical and would not resume working until the following year. And hence I led a life that many market players would envy.
Well, not really full-time in the strict sense, as I had some other personal ventures going on, and besides, my style had never been to stay glued to the screen and day-trade. That’s why investing was a more appropriate word than trading. Indeed, I did considerably more reading off books than off the computer screen during my time off in this period.
It was with the benefit of this experience that I wrote two articles on full time trading (Part 1 and Part 2), where I highlighted the pitfalls, tangible and intangible, that should be considered by those planning to take this route. One needs the passion to sustain himself, especially when the market takes a downturn. Some ability to manage risk and the stomach to take it won’t hurt either.
The fact is that, at least for my case, full-time doesn’t mean one has the luxury of time to cover the market comprehensively. Whether one has one or twelve hours every day, he must learn to optimise it and select the focus of his investment attention, otherwise there will never be enough time.
I focused my time on doing investment research across greater breadth and depth than I could have afforded when I was working. I read newspaper reports in more detail, finally got to pore through the Newsweek magazines I regularly subscribed but previously could only skim through, and got my hands on numerous brokerage reports where I sifted the wheat (facts) from the chaff (opinions). I read investment books of all varieties at the rate of one a week. I read through numerous annual reports and IPO prospectuses to cultivate an instinct for industry value chain dynamics. I built up more fundamental analysis knowledge that year than would have been possible in five or ten if I had been working.
The second thing I did more of was that I did more thinking. About my investment approach and philosophy, my portfolio stocks, various potential stock themes. It is amazing how one realises his beliefs are just a patchwork of haphazard ideas from various books he has read if he just thinks about it; that is why one is easily confused when his stock drops and one part of his brain tells him Warren Buffett says buy and hold while another part of his brain says all savvy traders cut loss to preserve capital. Without a coherent and internalised investment philosophy, one cannot have the conviction to take decisive action. Some daily ruminations on the stocks one holds and on likely hot themes in the near future kept unearthing new daily insights while further anchoring my conviction on my stock holdings.
The third thing was that I exercised more. I did regular swimming and jogging, and I cannot overemphasise the importance of physical fitness should one want to do such a sedentary activity like trading full-time. Mental alertness and discipline must be inculcated, and physical exercise will bring that.
And my results? Not as great as I had hoped at the end of that year, partly because of the market (”The Scandals of 2004“). But the fruits of my fundamental analysis training, which is basically what I had undergone, would bear me benefits over the longer term. But that is another story for another day.
Last 5 posts by DanielXX
- How To Make Money in Stocks Part 7: Pick Low-Hanging Fruit - May 15th, 2009
- Thanks Thailand, you screwed up the show again - April 12th, 2009
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- Developing An Investment Philosophy Part 5 - January 4th, 2009
![]() About DanielXX (http://www.hotstocksnot.blogspot.com/)
DanielXX has been doing his own personal investing for quite a number of years and would like to have meaningful discussions on his favourite subject online with others sharing the same interest. |



