17 min

Eric Choe – Make an Investment Checklist and Check it Twice My Worst Investment Ever Podcast

    • Investing

Eric Choe started his investment industry career as a sell-side equity analyst in Korea, where he worked with Samsung Securities, ABN AMRO, and Deutsche Bank. After earning his MBA at The University of Chicago Booth School of Business, he worked at Fidelity Investments where he ran the Fidelity Thailand Fund. Currently, Eric manages multi-asset portfolios for high-net-worth individuals at a private bank based in Singapore.
 
“We must have an investment checklist … every investor has different factors they look for when they make investments and watch their investments. And I think everyone has to have a different checklist for what they’re comfortable with … (which) can evolve over time.”
- Eric Choe
One lesson learned
One item on Eric’s 10-point checklist: If a stock is trading at a price-to-earnings growth ratio (PEG ratio) of above one, don’t invest in it. (The PEG is a stock’s price-to-earnings [P/E] ratio divided by the earnings per share (EPS) growth for a specified time period). Now if he’s invested in a stock in which the PEG goes above 1.0, he sells it, and if it’s trading at about 1.0, he will not buy it.
Andrew’s takeaways
Avoid investing in a company that is competing against the government. However, one exception would be when the government is truly failing in its strategy. The entry of the government into an industry isn’t the end of the world. But it can really affect the multiple of your target company and can lower the price that people are willing to pay for stock as their assessment of future growth will have fallen. Companies can survive, adjust and thrive, but their valuation will slide a little.
You can also check out Andrew’s books 
How to Start Building Your Wealth Investing in the Stock Market My Worst Investment Ever 9 Valuation Mistakes and How to Avoid Them Transform Your Business with Dr.Deming’s 14 Points
 Connect with Eric Choe
LinkedIn
Connect with Andrew Stotz
astotz.com  LinkedIn  Facebook  a...

Eric Choe started his investment industry career as a sell-side equity analyst in Korea, where he worked with Samsung Securities, ABN AMRO, and Deutsche Bank. After earning his MBA at The University of Chicago Booth School of Business, he worked at Fidelity Investments where he ran the Fidelity Thailand Fund. Currently, Eric manages multi-asset portfolios for high-net-worth individuals at a private bank based in Singapore.
 
“We must have an investment checklist … every investor has different factors they look for when they make investments and watch their investments. And I think everyone has to have a different checklist for what they’re comfortable with … (which) can evolve over time.”
- Eric Choe
One lesson learned
One item on Eric’s 10-point checklist: If a stock is trading at a price-to-earnings growth ratio (PEG ratio) of above one, don’t invest in it. (The PEG is a stock’s price-to-earnings [P/E] ratio divided by the earnings per share (EPS) growth for a specified time period). Now if he’s invested in a stock in which the PEG goes above 1.0, he sells it, and if it’s trading at about 1.0, he will not buy it.
Andrew’s takeaways
Avoid investing in a company that is competing against the government. However, one exception would be when the government is truly failing in its strategy. The entry of the government into an industry isn’t the end of the world. But it can really affect the multiple of your target company and can lower the price that people are willing to pay for stock as their assessment of future growth will have fallen. Companies can survive, adjust and thrive, but their valuation will slide a little.
You can also check out Andrew’s books 
How to Start Building Your Wealth Investing in the Stock Market My Worst Investment Ever 9 Valuation Mistakes and How to Avoid Them Transform Your Business with Dr.Deming’s 14 Points
 Connect with Eric Choe
LinkedIn
Connect with Andrew Stotz
astotz.com  LinkedIn  Facebook  a...

17 min