Do you own penny stocks in your portfolio?
If you've been active in the stock market over the last two years, then it's likely you do. Penny stocks have been the among the most popular stocks in this bull market.
This is especially the case with retail investors. Penny stocks have offered them a great opportunity to make money fast. And why wouldn't they take it?
After all, the pandemic caused so much disruption in our lives. Many in the middle class lost their jobs. So it was perfectly natural for them to try to make some money in penny stocks.
However, the enthusiasm for penny stocks has been far too strong. These stocks have raced far ahead of their fundamentals.
And that has brought to the fore the risks in these stocks.
Penny stocks are extremely volatile. They have the potential to deliver multibagger returns in a few months. But they can also crash is short order. Corrections of 80-90% are common in this space.
As long as the market is going up, these stocks reward investors with huge returns.
But as soon as the market changes direction, these stocks crash. Retail investors have experienced this crash recently.
If you've invested in penny stocks, it's vital to know how to filter out poor quality penny stocks.
Why?
Here's the simple fact...
Most penny stocks are toxic and just not worth your time.
They are plagued with many issues - losses, sluggish revenue growth, high debt, low promoter holding, high promoter pledging - and are not considered prudent investments.
If you invest in toxic penny stocks you're risking the safety of your hard-earned money.
Just think about it. Would you invest in a large-cap stock if the company had a history of making losses?
I'm sure you wouldn't.
So you shouldn't invest in bad penny stocks either. Just because these stocks can go up a lot is not a good enough reason. The risk-reward equation is not in your favour.
If these stocks crash, your capital would be at risk. Even worse, many penny stocks, unlike bluechips, don't recover after the crash.
We've already seen this over the last few months in the Indian stock market.
Many first time investors have realised that penny stocks are not the great investments they thought they were. In fact, they are more likely to be wealth destroyers than wealth creators.
So how do you distinguish between the two? How can identify toxic penny stocks?
Well, Equitymaster's co-head of research, and systems investing guru, Rahul Shah has the answer.
Here's Rahul's 5 point checklist to filter out toxic penny stocks.
There you have it. If you follow these 5 points, we're sure you will be able to weed out toxic penny stocks so that they never make into your portfolio.
The penny stocks that pass these filters, will be the ones you should analyse carefully before making a buying decision.
Happy investing!
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