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Prashant Jain: HDFC MF's valued asset!

Printed From: The Equity Desk
Category: Market Strategies
Forum Name: Buffet, Lynch and other legends - Investing Strategies
Forum Discription: DIscuss about the strategies followed by the great investors. Share an idea which would have impressed the masters. Try and bring their International experience into the Indian Markets.
URL: http://www.theequitydesk.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=1103
Printed Date: 07/May/2025 at 4:38am


Topic: Prashant Jain: HDFC MF's valued asset!
Posted By: Rinku
Subject: Prashant Jain: HDFC MF's valued asset!
Date Posted: 22/Jul/2007 at 11:54pm
A very very good interview
 
http://www.moneycontrol.com/india/newsarticle/news_email.php?autono=293573 - Email      Print Version      http://www.moneycontrol.com/india/video/stockmarket/21/29/newsvideo/293573"> Watch Video     

Q: What you always said and repeated in your talks is that returns are slaves to profits but they are not linear - explain that point.

 

Jain: If you buy an unlisted business and if it grows ten times in ten years, then the value will also grow nearly ten times in ten years. Similarly, if profits fall by 90% over ten years, let us say, if you bought a typewriter business the value would also have eroded by 90%. But in stock market, these unlisted businesses are listed and they are driven by so many sentiments newsflow, liquidity, so the prices are volatile. So, over the short to medium period, prices are simply volatile but over long periods, they must inevitably track the growth in profits. If profits continue to grow at a faster rate than the returns from the stock, then the P/E multiples could go towards zero, which is not likely to happen because someone or the other will come to buy that business.

 

Q: When I talk to other people and read what you said, the one thing that you start off with is the ‘eliminate’ and the one thing you want to eliminate in investing is the ‘big mistake’! How does Prashant Jain do that?

 

Jain: I think eliminating these mistakes is more important than identifying big winners. There are three four things what we do, one is we do not invest in businesses that we believe are not sustainable or are not of a minimum acceptable quality. If you do not understand a business, you will not invest in it. The other thing that is equally important is, what price are you paying for a business. So, you would not like to overpay at least significantly for any business that you buy, even if it is a great quality business.

 

And how you can stay away from overpaying is by standing slightly away from the market, thinking long-term and building different scenarios. Finally, I believe in always remaining effectively diversified. Quality of diversification is more important than the numbers of the stocks, and we realized that, one, we can make mistakes and two, the pace of change in the world and pace of technological change is so much that we can always go wrong.

 

Q: What is the Prashant Jain investment philosophy?

 

Jain: I think I am still learning and still evolving but what I have learnt so far and what I try to practice is that do not compromise on quality. The quality of the business is very important, it should be sustainable, it must have growth and it must have competitive advantages. Growth reduces the chances of your losing money, even if you have slightly overpaid for it. Secondly, one should remain diversified, across key economic variables. It is more important today, because the pace of technological change is increasing and we can also make mistakes.

 

Q: Industries can become irrelevant overtime.

 

Jain: Yes, one very important point is you must admit that I cannot see the future clearly, so when a business is becoming significantly overvalued, do a scenario analysis and even an optimistic scenario throws up that there is no value, then you must stay away.

 

Q: You were the early sellers of tech stocks in 1999?

 

Jain: Yes, that is right, in fact, we sold maybe three-six months too early. 

 

Q: Because the process told you?

 

Jain: I think yes, what we have believed is that we cannot time the markets and many people theoretically say that, 'I will sell when the stock starts going down' but in any upward trend there are so many short-term corrections. So, I do not think we can distinguish between the beginning of the reversal of a trend or whether it is one more correction in the continuing uptrend. So, we try to sell when we think it is expensive. The mistake what we did last time is we did not maintain the discipline of selling in parts. We sold slightly early.

 

Q: You have been in this business for fifteen years, what do you know now that you wish you had known fifteen years earlier?

 

Jain: I think if one had greater exposure to countries outside India for maybe one-two years, it would have helped me identify companies like HDFC and Hero Honda way back. But I do not think I have any regrets because what I have realized is that actually a mistake teaches you far more than success. Every time I made a mistake, it forces you to stop and to think. I think that is the price one has to pay.

 

Q: Who have been your mentors or heroes in the stock market?

 

Jain: Some of us think that success belongs to me but I tend to think a little differently, that the environment, the people around you play a very important role. So, what I have achieved is I think of course because India has done well and also because of help from lots of people. I have benefited, particularly, from reading bits and pieces about Mr Buffett and also Mr John Bogel.

 

Q: One is a purely a pick the stocks kind of guy and one is a Index guy - who is better?

 

Jain: Yes, I think but while we can learn from both that as the market becomes more and more institutionally owned, it will become harder for you to beat the Indices. I think both are perfectly legitimate views but if you understand both, I think it will help you act better.

 

Q: What are the qualities that an analyst should have?

 

Jain: First thing is that they must have hunger to learn, willingness to work hard - these are hiring issues. What I have observed is that many of us feel that we are either too biased on a top-down approach, or we take the big picture approach but we ignore the details or some of us gets so lost in details, that we miss the big picture. What we would look for in an analyst is the ability to strike a balance between the top-down and the bottom-up analysis of a company.

 

Q: What is your favourite market proverb?

 

Jain: Lots of them but one thing which comes to my mind right now is what probably Keynes said “A rising tide lifts all boats”, so we should not be fooled by a bull market. In a bull market, everything goes up, even poor quality stocks and what is equally important is to keep what Buffett said in mind and that is “It is when the tide recedes that you realize who are swimming naked.' So, in a bull market, you must stick to discipline of owning good quality stocks and also owning what is reasonably valued.



Replies:
Posted By: India_Bull
Date Posted: 22/Jul/2007 at 4:05am
Very good interview Rinkujee,
 
Anyone has more details on Mr.John Bogel ?
 
 


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India_Bull forever Bull !
www.kapilcomedynights.com


Posted By: Rinku
Date Posted: 24/Jul/2007 at 12:01pm

Go the investing legends in TED.



Posted By: Rinku
Date Posted: 24/Jul/2007 at 12:02pm
Sandeepji hows switzerland?


Posted By: India_Bull
Date Posted: 24/Jul/2007 at 1:24am

Is duniya main agar Jannat agar kahi hai to bus yahi hai  bus yahi hai (aur thoda part mere Indian Kashmir main hain!!



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India_Bull forever Bull !
www.kapilcomedynights.com


Posted By: kulman
Date Posted: 24/Jul/2007 at 7:57am

Is duniya main agar Jannat agar kahi hai to bus yahi hai  bus yahi hai (aur thoda part mere Indian Kashmir main hain!!

------------------------------------------------------------
Kaun se Jannat ki Apsaraayen jyaada sundar hain?
 
Aur Sandeep jee....while answering this query, please do note that I've noticed the change in your tagline!!
 
 


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Life can only be understood backwards—but it must be lived forwards


Posted By: India_Bull
Date Posted: 25/Jul/2007 at 1:56pm
Apsaraayen kali ho ya gori Apsaraayen hoti hai..
 
Jaha bhi Najar dalo apsara hi apsara hai kulmanjee !!
(Aur Indian apsarayen jaisa koi bhave bhi nahi khate !!(You know what I mean !!)
 
Meri biwi to bolti hai accha hau main shadi se pahle yaha nahi aaye ho !!
 
Well Yeha ki apsara ke hath main CIgaratte jaroor dikhegi !!(I came to know that they do it for keeping themselves slim !!)


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India_Bull forever Bull !
www.kapilcomedynights.com


Posted By: India_Bull
Date Posted: 25/Jul/2007 at 2:00pm

Kulmanjee,

Aaap agar kisi ko supervise karte hoge to uski to halat jaroor kharab karte honge !!
 
You are too good in observations and presence of mind !!


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India_Bull forever Bull !
www.kapilcomedynights.com


Posted By: Rinku
Date Posted: 29/Jul/2007 at 3:27pm
I am just trying to imagine the differrence between UK,India,Switzerland Apsaraayen.
Sandipjii BTW at the moment my wife is in india.


Posted By: India_Bull
Date Posted: 29/Jul/2007 at 5:50pm

Hmm, Rinkujee,

I cant elaborate more because we have on ths forum,many big investors but quite young at age.
 
But I would rate Swiss apsarayyen quite high in rating and they are also liberal in nature.no idea about UK (but from the sample of  female colleagues from UK, they seem to be quite conservative ,)
 
So you seem to be enjoying being ur wife in India ??
Heard floods have made life miserable for UK ?
 


-------------
India_Bull forever Bull !
www.kapilcomedynights.com


Posted By: Rinku
Date Posted: 29/Jul/2007 at 5:37am
Lots of cricket with my colleuges,surfing...and no floods near london...
Will have to see Swiss girls to decide if UK females are conservative


Posted By: India_Bull
Date Posted: 29/Jul/2007 at 6:25am
Rinkujee,
There are no swiss girls as such in Swiss as such (original swiss population is very less). Its the German, French and Italian population naturalised to swiss...


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India_Bull forever Bull !
www.kapilcomedynights.com


Posted By: Rinku
Date Posted: 31/Jul/2007 at 9:20pm
ok.LOL


Posted By: kumardiwesh
Date Posted: 19/Dec/2008 at 3:59pm

Best Time to Invest - Prashant Jain
Monday, October 13, 2008

Prashant Jain, Sr. Fund Manager and CIO of HDFC Asset Mgmt company says that this is the best time to invest in the Indian market if you are looking at a 24+ months horizon. He lives by what he preaches and holds more than 98% of his assets in Equities. Excerpts from his Q&A:

    * On the Macro, U.S has a very high deficit going forward and its an over-leveraged economy which has lead to series of problems. The Indian GDP will continue to grow at atleast 6% [Worst Case] while that of US will be less than 2% or may even go negative. Once the trend is clear, the de-coupling of valuations will surface among over-sentimental analysts who have reacted in India.
    * The Good News to India is fall in global commodity prices, really especially the Crude Oil which helps bring down the Indian fiscal deficit. This will calm down the Inflation and will go back to 6% or 7%.
    * Earlier, SENSEX of 14,000 was seen as base case. however, at 11,000, this is the best time to invest as valuations extremely low.In a high growth economy like ours, these dips should be treated as a fantastic opportunity to invest.
    * How India will sail through the current Global Crisis? India's export GDP is less than 10%. Investment of Indian entities exposed to sub-prime is very very low / nil in most cases. FDI as percentage to Indian GDP is once again very low and most of the Indian industry is dependent on internal savings. In short term, there is a liquidity crisis in the market which will be resolved. If India was facing genuine banking problems then interest rates would be rising, which is not the case. If interest rates were to touch 20% then you can expect BSE SENSEx forward P/E to touch 5 [Currently trading at 11]
    * FIIs have damaged the Indian market by sudden withdrawal. Historically, Indian institutions and investors BUY when they SELL.
    * ICICI Bank is held by all the HDFC Funds. Its Balance sheet is extremely strong and Management has indicated that there is no disruption of its normal banking activity. ICICI is the largest private insurance company and this subsidiary alone accounts for its Share Price quoted on the bourses on Friday. It is mere reputation knock that has taken place.
    * Real Estate should cool off very soon and Homes should become affordable in the next 12 months.
    * Investors should not panic and switch to Debt funds, should rather be patient and continue to BUY Equity funds with 12+ months horizon.



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"History does not tell you the probability of future financial things happening" - Warren Buffett



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