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Business / Markets

Honey, my savings got Lynched by a stock

By Huang Xiangyang (China Daily) Updated: 2015-11-24 08:00
Soon after I bought the shares, the price started to fall, but I was unfazed. "Ignore short-term fluctuations"-I remembered Lynch's advice, and continued to visit the supermarket, as both a shopper and a stockholder.

But Wumart's share price was still on a downward spiral, despite the company's seemingly sound fundamentals and the perpetual crowd of consumers in the supermarket.

Instead of cutting my loss, I bought more shares in Wumart, this time at a lower price, of course, to bring the average price down. When trading in the shares was halted on Oct 5, half the value of my investment in Wumart had already evaporated.

Two weeks later, the company announced it will delist its shares from the Hong Kong bourse. It said it believes a privatization plan will "give the company the flexibility to make timely investment decisions" amid fierce competition.

Though the reported offered price of HK$6.2 for shareholders meant that I could recoup much of my paper loss, I was not overjoyed. The fact that I actually flunked in applying Lynch's theories made me feel like a loser.

Yes, to invest is human. To do it right is divine.

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