Ten
Common Investment Errors: Stocks, Bonds, & Management
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Investment
mistakes happen for a multitude of reasons, including the fact that decisions
are made under conditions of uncertainty that are irresponsibly downplayed by
market gurus and institutional spokespersons. Losing money on an investment may not be
the result of a mistake, and not all mistakes result in monetary losses. But
errors occur when judgment is unduly influenced by emotions, when the basic
principles of investing are misunderstood, and when misconceptions exist about
how securities react to varying economic, political, and hysterical
circumstances. Avoid these ten common errors to improve your
performance:
1.
Investment decisions should be made within a clearly defined Investment Plan.
Investing is a goal-orientated activity that should include considerations of
time, risk-tolerance, and future income... think about where you are going
before you start moving in what may be 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. The
distinction between Asset Allocation and Diversification is often clouded. Asset Allocation is the planned
division of the portfolio between Equity and Income securities. Diversification
is a risk minimization strategy used to assure that the size of individual
portfolio positions does not become excessive in terms of various measurements.
Neither are "hedges" against anything or Market Timing devices. Neither can be
done with Mutual Funds or within a single Mutual Fund. Both are handled most
easily using Cost Basis analysis as defined in the Working Capital
Model.
3.
Investors become bored with their Plan too quickly, change direction too
frequently, and make drastic rather than gradual adjustments. Although investing
is always referred to as "long term", it is rarely dealt with as such by
investors who would be hard pressed to explain simple peak-to-peak analysis.
Short-term Market Value movements are routinely compared with various
un-portfolio related indices and averages to evaluate performance. There is no
index that compares with your portfolio, and calendar divisions have no
relationship whatever to market or interest rate cycles.
4.
Investors tend to fall in love with securities that rise in price and forget to
take profits, particularly when the company was once their employer. It's
alarming how often accounting and other professionals refuse to fix these
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. Diversification rules, like Mother Nature, must
not be messed with.
5.
Investors often overdose on information, causing a constant state of "analysis
paralysis". Such investors are likely to be confused and tend to become
hindsightful and indecisive. Neither portends well for the portfolio.
Compounding this issue is the 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. But do avoid future
predictors.
6.
Investors are constantly in search of a short cut or gimmick that will provide
instant success with minimum effort. Consequently, they initiate a feeding
frenzy for every new, product and service that the Institutions produce. Their
portfolios become a hodgepodge of Mutual Funds, iShares, Index Funds,
Partnerships, Penny Stocks, Hedge Funds, Funds of Funds, Commodities, Options,
etc. This obsession with Product underlines how Wall Street has made it
impossible for financial professionals to survive without them. Remember:
Consumers buy products; Investors select securities.
7.
Investors just don't understand the nature of Interest Rate Sensitive Securities
and can't deal appropriately with changes in Market Value... in either
direction. Operationally, the income portion of a portfolio must be looked at
separately from the growth portion. A simple assessment of bottom line Market
Value for structural and/or directional decision-making is one of the most
far-reaching errors that investors make. Fixed Income must not connote Fixed
Value and most investors rarely experience the full benefit of this portion of
their portfolio.
8. Many
investors either ignore or discount the cyclical nature of the investment
markets and wind up buying the most popular securities/sectors/funds at their
highest ever prices. Illogically, they interpret a current trend in such areas
as a new dynamic and tend to overdo their involvement. At the same time, they
quickly abandon whatever their previous hot spot happened to be, not realizing
that they are creating a Buy High, Sell Low cycle all their
own.
9. Many
investment errors will involve some form of unrealistic time horizon, or Apples
to Oranges form of performance comparison. Somehow, somewhere, the get rich
slowly path to investment success has become overgrown and abandoned. Successful portfolio development is
rarely a straight up arrow and comparisons with dissimilar products,
commodities, or strategies simply produce detours that speed progress away from
original portfolio goals.
10. The
"cheaper is better" mentality weakens decision making capabilities and leads
investors to dangerous assumptions and short cuts that only appear to be
effective. Do discount brokers seek "best execution"? Can new issue preferred
stocks be purchased without cost? Is a no load fund a freebie? Is a WRAP Account
individually managed? When cheap is
an investor's primary concern, what he gets will generally be worth the
price.
Compounding the
problems that investors have managing their investment portfolios is the
sideshowesque sensationalism that the media brings to the process. Investing has
become a competitive event for service providers and investors alike. This
development alone will lead many of you to the self-destructive decision making
errors that are described above. Investing is a personal project where
individual/family goals and objectives must dictate portfolio structure,
management strategy, and performance evaluation techniques. Is it difficult to
manage a portfolio in an environment that encourages instant gratification,
supports all forms of "uncaveated" speculation, and that rewards short term and
shortsighted reports, reactions, and achievements?
Yup, it sure
is.
Steve
Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.com
http://www.valuestockbuylistprogram.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"