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How To Avoid Dumb Investment Mistakes
By: Stephen Nelson
Smart people sometimes make dumb mistakes when it comes to investing. Part of
the reason for this, I guess, is that most people don’t have the time to learn
what they need to know to make good decisions. Another reason is that oftentimes
when you make a dumb mistake, somebody else—an investment salesperson, for
example—makes money. Fortunately, you can save yourself lots of money and a
bunch of headaches by not making bad investment decisions.
Don’t Forget to Diversify
The average stock market return is 10 percent or so, but to earn 10 percent you
need to own a broad range of stocks. In other words, you need to diversify.
Everybody who thinks about this for more than a few minutes realizes that it is
true, but it’s amazing how many people don’t diversify. For example, some people
hold huge chunks of their employer’s stock but little else. Or they own a
handful of stocks in the same industry.
To make money on the stock market, you need around 15 to 20 stocks in a variety
of industries. (I didn’t just make up these figures; the 15 to 20 number comes
from a statistical calculation that many upper-division and graduate finance
textbooks explain.) With fewer than 10 to 20 stocks, your portfolio’s returns
will very likely be something greater or less than the stock market average. Of
course, you don’t care if your portfolio’s return is greater than the stock
market average, but you do care if your portfolio’s return is less than the
stock market average.
By the way, to be fair I should tell you that some very bright people disagree
with me on this business of holding 15 to 20 stocks. For example, Peter Lynch,
the outrageously successful former manager of the Fidelity Magellan mutual fund,
suggests that individual investors hold 4 to 6 stocks that they understand well.
His feeling, which he shares in his books, is that by following this strategy,
an individual investor can beat the stock market average. Mr. Lynch knows more
about picking stocks than I ever will, but I nonetheless respectfully disagree
with him for two reasons.
First, I think that Peter Lynch is one of those modest geniuses who
underestimate their intellectual prowess. I wonder if he underestimates the
powerful analytical skills he brings to his stock picking. Second, I think that
most individual investors lack the accounting knowledge to accurately make use
of the quarterly and annual financial statements that publicly held companies
provide in the ways that Mr. Lynch suggests.
Have Patience
The stock market and other securities markets bounce around on a daily, weekly,
and even yearly basis, but the general trend over extended periods of time has
always been up. Since World War II, the worst one-year return has been –26.5
percent. The worst ten-year return in recent history was 1.2 percent. Those
numbers are pretty scary, but things look much better if you look longer term.
The worst 25-year return was 7.9 percent annually.
It’s important for investors to have patience. There will be many bad years.
Many times, one bad year is followed by another bad year. But over time, the
good years outnumber the bad. They compensate for the bad years too. Patient
investors who stay in the market in both the good and bad years almost always do
better than people who try to follow every fad or buy last year’s hot stock.
Invest Regularly
You may already know about dollar-average investing. Instead of purchasing a set
number of shares at regular intervals, you purchase a regular dollar amount,
such as $100. If the share price is $10, you purchase ten shares. If the share
price is $20, you purchase five shares. If the share price is $5, you purchase
twenty shares.
Dollar-average investing offers two advantages. The biggest is that you
regularly invest—in both good markets and bad markets. If you buy $100 of stock
at the beginning of every month, for example, you don’t stop buying stock when
the market is way down and every financial journalist in the world is working to
fan the fires of fear.
The other advantage of dollar-average investing is that you buy more shares when
the price is low and fewer shares when the price is high. As a result, you don’t
get carried away on a tide of optimism and end up buying most of the stock when
the market or the stock is up. In the same way, you also don’t get scared away
and stop buying a stock when the market or the stock is down.
One of the easiest ways to implement a dollar-average investing program is by
participating in something like an employer-sponsored 401(k) plan or deferred
compensation plan. With these plans, you effectively invest each time money is
withheld from your paycheck.
To make dollar-average investing work with individual stocks, you need to
dollar-average each stock. In other words, if you’re buying stock in IBM, you
need to buy a set dollar amount of IBM stock each month, each quarter, or
whatever.
Don’t Ignore Investment Expenses
Investment expenses can add up quickly. Small differences in expense ratios,
costly investment newsletter subscriptions, online financial services (including
Quicken Quotes!), and income taxes can easily subtract hundreds of thousands of
dollars from your net worth over a lifetime of investing.
To show you what I mean, here are a couple of quick examples. Let’s say that
you’re saving $7,000 per year of 401(k) money in a couple of mutual funds that
track the Standard & Poor’s 500 index. One fund charges a 0.25 percent annual
expense ratio, and the other fund charges a 1 percent annual expense ratio. In
35 years, you’ll have about $900,000 in the fund with the 0.25 percent expense
ratio and about $750,000 in the fund with the 1 percent ratio.
Here’s another example: Let’s say that you don’t spend $500 a year on a special
investment newsletter, but you instead stick the money in a tax-deductible
investment such as an IRA. Let’s say you also stick your tax savings in the
tax-deductible investment. After 35 years, you’ll accumulate roughly $200,000.
Investment expenses can add up to really big numbers when you realize that you
could have invested the money and earned interest and dividends for years.
Don’t Get Greedy
I wish there was some risk-free way to earn 15 or 20 percent annually. I really,
really do. But, alas, there isn’t. The stock market’s average return is
somewhere between 9 and 10 percent, depending on how many decades you go back.
The significantly more risky small company stocks have done slightly better. On
average, they return annual profits of 12 to 13 percent. Fortunately, you can
get rich earning 9 percent returns. You just need to take your time. But no
risk-free investments consistently return annual profits significantly above the
stock market’s long-run averages.
I mention this for a simple reason: People make all sorts of foolish investment
decisions when they get greedy and pursue returns that are out of line with the
average annual returns of the stock market. If someone tells you that he has a
sure-thing investment or investment strategy that pays, say, 15 percent, don’t
believe it. And, for Pete’s sake, don’t buy investments or investment advice
from that person.
If someone really did have a sure-thing method of producing annual returns of,
say, 18 percent, that person would soon be the richest person in the world. With
solid year-in, year-out returns like that, the person could run a $20 billion
investment fund and earn $500 million a year. The moral is: There is no such
thing as a sure thing in investing.
Don’t Get Fancy
For years now, I’ve made the better part of my living by analyzing complex
investments. Nevertheless, I think that it makes most sense for investors to
stick with simple investments: mutual funds, individual stocks, government and
corporate bonds, and so on.
As a practical matter, it’s very difficult for people who haven’t been trained
in financial analysis to analyze complex investments such as real estate
partnership units, derivatives, and cash-value life insurance. You need to
understand how to construct accurate cash-flow forecasts. You need to know how
to calculate things like internal rates of return and net present values with
the data from cash-flow forecasts. Financial analysis is nowhere near as complex
as rocket science. Still, it’s not something you can do without a degree in
accounting or finance, a computer, and a spreadsheet program (like Microsoft
Excel or Lotus 1-2-3).
About the Author:
Stephen L. Nelson CPA has written more than 150 books. His bestselling book is
Quicken for Dummies, which sold more than 1,000,000 copies. His books have sold
more than 4,000,000 copies in English and have been translated into more than a
dozen other languages. His web site is http://www.stephenlnelson.com
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