Q: Not a question but a comment. As a new/beginning investor (meaning new to investing myself because I got disappointed, far too late, with mutual funds & ETFs my "advisor" was putting me into), I'm paying attention to the message I'm hearing from 5i -- don't invest in "the stock market", invest in well-managed companies.
In the past few days, three of my new investments have reported results, not great but not really bad either. All three had immediate substantial drops in share prices, certainly much greater than what I would have expected given the results.
Which leads me to conclude that there are still too many people out their investing in "the stock market" and not in good companies! And skewing the market for "real" investors in the process.
The shares of all three (Capital Power, Parkland Fuel, Wajax) are, after the initial drop, slowly (sometimes very slowly <g>) coming back up . . . and in the meantime, are still paying the dividends that were a large part of my investing in them in the first place.
In the past few days, three of my new investments have reported results, not great but not really bad either. All three had immediate substantial drops in share prices, certainly much greater than what I would have expected given the results.
Which leads me to conclude that there are still too many people out their investing in "the stock market" and not in good companies! And skewing the market for "real" investors in the process.
The shares of all three (Capital Power, Parkland Fuel, Wajax) are, after the initial drop, slowly (sometimes very slowly <g>) coming back up . . . and in the meantime, are still paying the dividends that were a large part of my investing in them in the first place.