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Winning by Losing Less

Investor Guide

Winning by Losing Less

Most investors spend their time asking one question: “Which stock will give the highest return?”


But seasoned investors know a more powerful truth: Returns improve dramatically when losses are reduced.


Protecting capital is often more important than chasing the next multibagger. Here’s a simple, disciplined framework to help you clean up your portfolio and improve long-term returns.

 

1. Re-evaluate Non-Dividend Paying Companies

Non-dividend paying companies are not bad by default—but they must justify why they retain earnings.
If profits are not coming back to shareholders either through growth or dividends, it’s time to question their relevance in your portfolio.

Ask yourself:
Is the retained capital truly creating value?

 

2. Be Extra Careful with Low-Priced Stocks (Below ₹50)

A low share price often creates a false sense of cheapness.
Many such stocks remain low-priced for years due to weak fundamentals, poor governance, or lack of growth visibility.

If a stock is cheap only because the business is weak, it doesn’t deserve a place in a serious investor’s portfolio.

 

3. Review Stocks That Have Underperformed the Sensex

If a stock has underperformed the Sensex over the last two years, it’s sending a signal.
Markets may fluctuate, but sustained underperformance often reflects deeper business issues.

Underperformance doesn’t always mean “buy the dip.”
Sometimes, it means listen to the message.

 

4. The Most Powerful Question: Would You Buy It Again Today?

Imagine you sold your entire portfolio today.
Now ask: Which of these stocks would I confidently buy again at current prices?

If the answer is “no” or even “maybe,” that stock deserves serious review. Capital is precious—allocate it only to your highest-conviction ideas.

 

5. Revisit the Story Behind Every Stock

Every stock in your portfolio should have a clear, compelling story:

  • Why does this business exist?
  • What is driving its future growth?
  • Is management capable of navigating challenges?

If the story is no longer strong, relevant, or believable—don’t hesitate to exit. Hope is not an investment strategy.

 

The Big Takeaway

Improving returns isn’t always about finding new stocks.Often, it’s about removing the weak links.

By cutting laggards, questionable stories, and low-conviction holdings, you free capital, reduce stress, and improve portfolio quality.

In investing, winning starts with not losing unnecessarily.

 

For your success!

 

Dr Anil Kumar Asnani

SEBI Reg. Research Analyst

WhatsApp: 9755920780

Mobile: 9131361959

Website: https://www.smartverc.com

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