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Preventing
Investment Mistakes: Ten Risk Minimizers
Steve Selengut
Most investment
mistakes are caused by basic misunderstandings of the securities
markets and by invalid performance expectations. The markets
move in totally unpredictable cyclical patterns of varying duration
and amplitude. Evaluating the performance of the two major classes
of investment securities needs to be done separately because
they are owned for differing purposes. Stock market equity investments
are expected to produce realized capital gains; income-producing
investments are expected to generate cash flow.
Losing money
on an investment may not be the result of an investment mistake,
and not all mistakes result in monetary losses. But errors occur
most frequently when judgment is unduly influenced by emotions
such as fear and greed, hindsightful observations, and short-term
market value comparisons with unrelated numbers. Your own misconceptions
about how securities react to varying economic, political, and
hysterical circumstances are your most vicious enemy.
Master these
ten risk-minimizers to improve your long-term investment performance:
1. Develop
an investment plan. Identify realistic goals that include considerations
of time, risk-tolerance, and future income requirements--- think
about where you are going before you start moving in the wrong
direction. A well thought out plan will not need frequent adjustments.
A well-managed plan will not be susceptible to the addition
of trendy speculations.
2. Learn
to distinguish between asset allocation and diversification
decisions. Asset allocation divides the portfolio between equity
and income securities. Diversification is a strategy that limits
the size of individual portfolio holdings in at least three
different ways. Neither activity is a hedge, or a market timing
devices. Neither can be done precisely with mutual funds, and
both are handled most efficiently by using a cost basis approach
like the Working Capital Model.
3. Be patient
with your plan. Although investing is always referred to as
long- term, it is rarely dealt with as such by investors, the
media, or financial advisors. Never change direction frequently,
and always make gradual rather than drastic adjustments. Short-term
market value movements must not be compared with un-portfolio
related indices and averages. There is no index that compares
with your portfolio, and calendar sub-divisions have no relationship
whatever to market, interest rate, or economic cycles.
4. Never
fall in love with a security, particularly when the company
was once your employer. It's alarming how often accounting and
other professionals refuse to fix the resultant single-issue
portfolios. Aside from the love issue, this becomes an unwilling-to-pay-the-taxes
problem that often brings the unrealized gain to the Schedule
D as a realized loss. No profit, in either class of securities,
should ever go unrealized. A target profit must be established
as part of your plan.
5. Prevent
"analysis paralysis" from short-circuiting your decision-making
powers. An overdose of information will cause confusion, hindsight,
and an inability to distinguish between research and sales materials---
quite often the same document. A somewhat narrow focus on information
that supports a logical and well-documented investment strategy
will be more productive in the long run. Avoid future predictors.
6. Burn,
delete, toss out the window any short cuts or gimmicks that
are supposed to provide instant stock picking success with minimum
effort. Don't allow your portfolio to become a hodgepodge of
mutual funds, index ETFs, partnerships, pennies, hedges, shorts,
strips, metals, grains, options, currencies, etc. Consumers'
obsession with products underlines how Wall Street has made
it impossible for financial professionals to survive without
them. Remember: consumers buy products; investors select securities.
7. Attend
a workshop on interest rate expectation (IRE) sensitive securities
and learn how to deal appropriately with changes in their market
value--- in either direction. The income portion of your portfolio
must be looked at separately from the growth portion. Bottom
line market value changes must be expected and understood, not
reacted to with either fear or greed. Fixed income does not
mean fixed price. Few investors ever realize (in either sense)
the full power of this portion of their portfolio.
8. Ignore
Mother Nature's evil twin daughters, speculation and pessimism.
They'll con you into buying at market peaks and panicking when
prices fall, ignoring the cyclical opportunities provided by
Momma. Never buy at all time high prices or overload the portfolio
with current story stocks. Buy good companies, little by little,
at lower prices and avoid the typical investor's buy high, sell
low frustration.
9. Step
away from calendar year, market value thinking. Most investment
errors involve unrealistic time horizon, and/or "apples
to oranges" performance comparisons. The get rich slowly
path is a more reliable investment road that Wall Street has
allowed to become overgrown, if not abandoned. Portfolio growth
is rarely a straight-up arrow and short-term comparisons with
unrelated indices, averages or strategies simply produce detours
that speed progress away from original portfolio goals.
10. Avoid
the cheap, the easy, the confusing, the most popular, the future
knowing, and the one-size-fits-all. There are no freebies or
sure things on Wall Street, and the further you stray from conventional
stocks and bonds, the more risk you are adding to your portfolio.
When cheap is an investor's primary concern, what he gets will
generally be worth the price.
Compounding
the problems that investors face managing their investment portfolios
is the sensationalism that the media brings to the process.
Step away from calendar year, market value thinking. Investing
is a personal project where individual/family goals and objectives
must dictate portfolio structure, management strategy, and performance
evaluation techniques.
Do most
individual investors have difficulty in an environment that
encourages instant gratification, supports all forms of speculation,
and gets off on shortsighted reports, reactions, and achievements?
Yup.
Steve Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.com
http://www.investmentmanagementbooks.com
Professional Portfolio Management since 1979
Author of: "The Brainwashing of the American Investor:
The Book that Wall Street Does Not Want YOU to Read", and
"A Millionaire's Secret Investment Strategy"
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