{"id":62314,"date":"2024-03-22T12:25:55","date_gmt":"2024-03-22T04:25:55","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.imoney.my\/articles\/?p=62314"},"modified":"2024-03-27T11:55:48","modified_gmt":"2024-03-27T03:55:48","slug":"success-random-stocks","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.imoney.my\/articles\/success-random-stocks","title":{"rendered":"Can You Be Successful In Picking Stocks By Chance?"},"content":{"rendered":"
Experts will tell you that you need to be prepared before you start investing. Have a plan, budget carefully, tediously research companies, listen to analysts et cetera.<\/p>\n
However, experiments have been carried out to test if this is really true. Do you really need a carefully crafted portfolio, or can you get by with just picking a bunch of random stocks?<\/p>\n
After all, what use is advice if nobody goes out and finds out what happens when you don\u2019t follow it? However, when money is at stake, the thought of leaving your investments to chance might not be a decision many people will choose.<\/p>\n
Actually, this idea of not choosing investments intentionally has been tested with surprising results.<\/p>\n
In 2019, a group of Wall Street Journal writers tested the theory<\/a> that it\u2019s possible to beat the S&P 500 by random chance. To do this, they put pages from the daily stock market updates on a wall and threw darts at it to determine which stocks they would buy.<\/p>\n Success for these writers would be beating funds picked by a handful of professional investors. Surprisingly, they did – by a massive 27%.<\/p>\n Earlier studies also experimented with using cats<\/a> and monkeys<\/a> to pick stocks – both also resulted in the seemingly random selection of stocks beating expert analysis.<\/p>\n These results may show that there is no harm in letting your house cat hop on the keyboard and select stocks at random. But is that really the case?<\/p>\n Choosing random stocks by throwing darts at a newspaper may mean you end up investing too much of your money in small market capitalisation companies<\/a> – these companies tend to make up the bulk of the stock market, so you are more likely to end up hitting one of them.<\/p>\n Generally, investing in small cap companies can provide bigger returns in the short run if the economy is in the growth stage. For example, a RM200,000 increase in revenue is massive if you\u2019re only bringing in RM500,000 a year; but is less impressive if you\u2019re already pulling in RM5 million.<\/p>\n In other words, the same amount of growth will have a much bigger impact on smaller companies. This, in turn, greatly increases stock performance. After all, a stock price going from RM1 to RM1.20 is a 20% increase.<\/p>\n<\/span>What does it actually mean?<\/span><\/h2>\n