Daripada dipusingkan dengan perilaku Asing/Aseng/Asiong/(H)Asan dan BANDAR yang 
cuma bisa memanfaatkan situasi untuk mengecoh retailer dan market demi 
keuntungan jangka pendek mereka, sebaiknya kita baca saran/advice dari Engkong 
WB:
Rules That Warren Buffett Lives By
by Stephanie Loiacono
Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Warren Buffett is arguably the world's greatest stock investor. He's also a bit 
of a philosopher. He pares down his investment ideas into simple, memorable 
sound bites. Do you know what his homespun sayings really mean? Does his 
philosophy hold up in today's difficult environment? Find out below.
"Rule No. 1: Never Lose Money. Rule No. 2: Never Forget Rule No. 1."
Buffett personally lost about $23 billion in the financial crisis of 2008, and 
his company, Berkshire Hathaway, lost its revered AAA ratings. So how can he 
tell us to never lose money?
He's referring to the mindset of a sensible investor. Don't be frivolous. Don't 
gamble. Don't go into an investment with a cavalier attitude that it's OK to 
lose. Be informed. Do your homework. Buffett invests only in companies he 
thoroughly researches and understands. He doesn't go into an investment 
prepared to lose, and neither should you.
Buffett believes the most important quality for an investor is temperament, not 
intellect. A successful investor doesn't focus on being with or against the 
crowd.
The stock market will swing up and down. But in good times and bad, Buffett 
stays focused on his goals. So should we. (This esteemed investor rarely 
changes his long-term investing strategy no matter what the market does.
"If The Business Does Well, the Stock Eventually Follows"
The Intelligent Investorby Benjamin Graham convinced Buffett that investing in 
a stock equates to owning a piece of the business. So when he searches for a 
stock to invest in, Buffett seeks out businesses that exhibit favorable 
long-term prospects. Does the company have a consistent operating history? Does 
it have a dominant business franchise? Is the business generating high and 
sustainable profit margins? If the company's share price is trading below 
expectations for its future growth, then it's a stock Buffett may want to own.
Buffett never buys anything unless he can write down his reasons why he'll pay 
a specific price per share for a particular company. Do you do the same?
"It's Far Better to Buy a Wonderful Company at a Fair Price Than a Fair Company 
at a Wonderful Price"
Buffett is a value investor who likes to buy quality stocks at rock-bottom 
prices. His real goal is to build more and more operating power for Berkshire 
Hathaway by owning stocks that will generate solid profits and capital 
appreciation for years to come. When the markets reeled during the recent 
financial crisis, Buffett was stockpiling great long-term investments by 
investing billions in names like General Electric and Goldman Sachs.
To pick stocks well, investors must set down criteria for uncovering good 
businesses, and stick to their discipline. You might, for example, seek 
companies that offer a durable product or service and also have solid operating 
earnings and the germ for future profits. You might establish a minimum market 
capitalization you're willing to accept, and a maximum P/E ratio or debt level. 
Finding the right company at the right price -- with a margin for safety 
against unknown market risk -- is the ultimate goal.
Remember, the price you pay for a stock isn't the same as the value you get. 
Successful investors know the difference.
"Our Favorite Holding Period Is Forever"
How long should you hold a stock? Buffett says if you don't feel comfortable 
owning a stock for 10 years, you shouldn't own it for 10 minutes. Even during 
the period he called the "Financial Pearl Harbor," Buffett loyally held on to 
the bulk of his portfolio.
Unless a company has suffered a sea change in prospects, such as impossible 
labor problems or product obsolescence, a long holding period will keep an 
investor from acting too human. That is, being too fearful or too greedy can 
cause investors to sell stocks at the bottom or buy at the peak -- and destroy 
portfolio appreciation for the long run.
You may think the recent financial meltdown changed things, but don't be 
fooled: those unfussy sayings from the Oracle of Omaha still RULE!
 

________________________________
From: "highwaysta...@gmail.com" <highwaysta...@gmail.com>
To: obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Mon, March 1, 2010 7:49:39 PM
Subject: Re: [ob] Hari ini F inflow

  
Asing/bandar cm tek tok aja pak buat jaga index sambil jualan...

Kalo brg dah habis kan knp gak dijeblosin sekalian? Berarti msh banyak dia 
hehehe...

Analisa ngasal lah... 
Sent from my computer of course!
________________________________

From: "JT" <jsxtra...@yahoo. com> 
Date: Mon, 1 Mar 2010 19:34:16 +0700
To: <obrolan-bandar@ yahoogroups. com>
Subject: RE: [ob] Hari ini F inflow
  
Asing sama dong kelakuannya kayak kite.., sebentar OutFlow, sebentar Inflow…,  
Outflow/Inflow kok sebentar-sebentar ya?….., hehe……
 
Pertanyaan dari seorang temen yg ngga bisa saya jawab; kalo Asing Inflow, what 
should we do?…, trus sebaliknya kalo Outflow kita mesti gimana?
 
Ini serius tanya dan minta saran kepada para Sahabat  senior maupun junior yg 
Terkasih ……, (Nin style)
 
 
Web : www.JsxTrader. com
Tweet : @JT_jsxtrader
 
From:obrolan-bandar@ yahoogroups. com [mailto:obrolan- ban...@yahoogrou ps.com] 
On Behalf Of Dean Earwicker
Sent: 01 Maret 2010 18:08
To: obrolan-bandar@ yahoogroups. com
Subject: [ob] Hari ini F inflow
 


Hari ini sektor mining dan infra mengalami F inflow.







      

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