What type of investor are you?

Are you an investor, a buyer or a speculator? Do you know the difference, and how each of these affects your wealth status? PHOTO/FILE

What you need to know:

  • It takes hard work via research to be an investor at this level. You have to be prepared to keep an eye on what is going on around you to spot these opportunities.
  • Just as with the shirt, Mutua knew he had to do something extra to realise gains. It was not simply the land that would give him these gains; it was adding value to the land by building.
  • Speculation may take the least amount of work but is a very risky strategy because there are no underlying fundamentals to help you conclude that someone else will buy that particular investment from you.

Are you an investor, a buyer or a speculator? Do you know the difference, and how each of these affects your wealth status? Let me explain.

Karimi buys a shirt at Gikomba for Sh300. If she sells it to one of her friends in Nairobi’s CBD, she will be able to sell it for Sh1,000. She is an investor. She knows that the price she bought it for is well below what she could sell the shirt for in a different location.

Mutua buys the shirt from Karimi. He washes it, irons it and wraps it in a nice package. He then goes into Westlands and sells the shirt for Sh2,000. He is a buyer. He knows that the price he bought it at was the fair market value. He had to do something else to it i.e. value add to fetch a higher price.

Georgina buys the packaged shirt from Mutua expecting to sell it in Westlands to someone else for Sh3,000. Georgina is a speculator.

There is no fundamental reason why someone would buy that shirt from her at that price, and she is not doing anything extra to it to warrant a higher price. She is counting on someone else’s ignorance.

ADDING VALUE

Now, let’s look our three characters again in the context of investments. Karimi has been a keen observer in the stock market. One of the listed companies she has been researching has just initiated development of a commercial centre.

However, Karimi notices that the share price has not moved. She does some analysis and it becomes obvious that the market has not factored in the value this commercial centre will bring to the company, as well as the incremental profits that will arise from this. She decides to buy the share.

Two years later when the commercial centre is finished, leased out and is getting a lot more attention in the news, demand for the share rises. Karimi is able to sell her share with a 50 per cent gain.

It takes hard work via research to be an investor at this level. You have to be prepared to keep an eye on what is going on around you to spot these opportunities.

You also have to make decisions based on facts. It was a fact that the company was going to put up a commercial centre. Karimi literally makes money at the point of investment because she realises a fundamental development has not been factored into the share price.

Mutua buys an acre of land. The area where he buys has experienced tremendous growth. Roads have been expanded and several universities are opening up in the area. He recognises that his investment is not the land; had he been able to spot the opportunities earlier before the new developments came in, he would have now been selling that land at a higher price.

He would have been an investor at that point.

He knows he has bought the land for market value, which has already factored in all these changes. His opportunity lies in the student housing that will be required. He gets partners on board and together they develop hostels, which will provide them with decent income.

Just as with the shirt, Mutua knew he had to do something extra to realise gains. It was not simply the land that would give him these gains; it was adding value to the land by building.

The opportunities to realise gains from the land (based on fundamental changes) had already passed him by. If you are pursuing an investment at Mutua’s, level you have to be willing to go the extra mile and do something different to get your return. 

RISKY STRATEGY

Georgina buys a car. She thinks she can sell it for a higher price to her colleagues at work.  She bought the car when it had already landed and in Nairobi.

The dealer had already factored his hard work and profit margin into the sale price. Anyone else could have walked into the same dealership and would have bought it for exact same price.

Georgina is now riding on hope that someone will just buy it from her at a higher price. Unlike Karimi, she wasn’t the early bird in this equation.

Unlike Mutua, there is nothing she is doing to add value to the car. She is a speculator. Speculation may take the least amount of work but is a very risky strategy because there are no underlying fundamentals to help you conclude that someone else will buy that particular investment from you.

Just like the shirt, she is hoping others are lazy or ignorant enough to help her make an easy profit.

Do not be fooled. 

Actual investment takes a fair amount of work and no one can spoon-feed you. Which type of investor are you?