{"id":13167,"date":"2024-08-15T14:02:35","date_gmt":"2024-08-15T06:02:35","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.imoney.my\/articles\/?p=13167"},"modified":"2024-09-12T12:40:32","modified_gmt":"2024-09-12T04:40:32","slug":"contrarian-investing-guide","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.imoney.my\/articles\/contrarian-investing-guide","title":{"rendered":"What Is Contrarian Investing (And Does It Really Work?)"},"content":{"rendered":"
Most investors buy when the market is bullish, and sell when the market is bearish. As the sayings go: jump on the bandwagon and ride the wave; make windfall profit when times are good; and cut losses when times are tough.<\/p>\n
Following the trend is a simple investment strategy, since market sentiments is usually assumed a good indicator in showing the market\u2019s direction.<\/p>\n
However, there are some investors who like to swim against the current when it comes to their investment, and they are known as contrarian investors.<\/p>\n
By definition, contrarian is an investment strategy that goes against the prevailing market. This means buying assets when they are performing poorly, and selling when they are performing well.<\/p>\n
Contrarian investing is also similar to value investing, a popular strategy where such investors look out for mispriced undervalued stocks that have good fundamentals or intrinsic value and buying it at a discount.<\/p>\n
Contrarian methodology works like this: it is presumed that the general market participants are wrong because they may be easily swayed by market fluctuation and market bubbles, and they panic easily when the bubble bursts. As a result, they buy and sell at the worst possible times. This is also known as the herd mentality.<\/p>\n
By simply doing the opposite, contrarian investors can exploit such opportunities by buying and selling at the right time, which in return make a killing when everyone else suffers losses.<\/p>\n
\u201cSell high, buy low\u201d is easier said than done. Following the herd (or trend) is simply human nature in action. So, what dictates contrarian beliefs and why they think against the crowd?<\/p>\n
Market prices constantly adjust in sub-seconds. By the time reporters pass the information to news editors to be published, chances are the market prices have already changed.<\/p>\n
Not surprisingly, many inexperienced investors relied heavily on the advice of their family and peers while buying stocks.<\/p>\n
These investors are usually inexperienced who pumped their life savings to particular company without any knowledge of its performance or the economy outlook. There are also young investors who aspire to be the next multi-millionaire in an instant. Perhaps its just lazy people who think following the trend is good enough in making an investment decision.<\/p>\n
Chances are, these investors invest without doing their homework first, and they make up the majority of the market participants, hence distorting and misleading the market direction. This results in mispricing of stocks and contribute to price volatility to a certain degree.<\/b><\/p>\n
A good example is what happened with the oversubscription and heavy trading of penny stocks that neither has value creation or real sustainable growth prospect back in 2014<\/a>. Despite being strongly discouraged by financial analysts and also various trading restrictions imposed by brokerage firms, many investors followed the trend anyway \u00a0hoping to make quick gain from it.<\/p>\n Chances are, such penny stocks that have no fundamentals are likely to crash<\/a> leaving investors penniless.<\/p>\n Time and again, history repeats itself. After the 1998 Asian Financial Crisis (AFC), the Y2K dotcom bubble burst and the 2008 Global Financial Crisis (GFC), little was learned from the mistakes by many investors.<\/p>\n4. People are overly optimistic during a bubble, and overly pessimistic during a slump<\/h4>\n