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Change Your Thinking, Classic Fallacies And Delusions Surround Investing E-mail
Wednesday, 01 August 2007
Rogan.jul06

by Michael Rogan

Special to Tropical Breeze

When it comes to investing, misconceptions abound. More often than not, these mistaken beliefs are fueled by someone’s profit motive, but sometimes we need to look to history to explain how we ever developed such wrongheaded thinking. In this column, I will endeavor to list many of the classic fallacies and delusions surrounding investing and attempt to help you reframe your thoughts.

“I’m a short-term investor.”

You can either be a short-term trader, or a long-term investor. The reverse is not possible. Every study ever done has shown a negative correlation between trading and investment performance. That is, the more you trade, the worse you do.

“I don’t want to sell this stock now because: 1) I have so much profit, I’ll owe too much in capital gains or 2) I’m at such a loss, and I already have enough loss carry-forwards for as long as I’ll live.”

It is a very common mistake to let tax consequences dictate your investment decisions. But that is letting the tail wag the dog. Not that tax consequences are irrelevant, but they should never be paramount. If you wouldn’t buy the investment today, you shouldn’t continue to hold it, regardless of the taxes.

“I know you shouldn’t put all your eggs in one basket but my company’s stock (or any company’s stock) has done very well for years. I won’t sell it ever.”

There’s an old adage about investing in stocks. It goes, “while it is possible to get rich by not diversifying, you can’t stay rich without diversifying.” Just because you have owned a high flyer for a while doesn’t mean it will continue to do well. In fact, because a stock (and the underlying company) has done well for a long time might be exactly the reason it won’t outperform in the future. Throughout time, and specifically my career, the correct advice has always been to encourage people to diversify. I’ve had clients with huge portions of their investments in WorldCom, Home Depot, Merck, Apple, Wal-Mart, Cisco, Oracle, Coca-Cola and many others. This list includes companies whose stock prices imploded due to scandal, competition, or sometimes, as in the case of Wal-Mart, as a victim of its own success. Of course, the current local favorite in this category is Publix. Please note, individual stocks do not rise dramatically forever like magic. This is not an indictment of any of the companies mentioned or their management or employees. Many are great companies. But if you are loaded up in your employer’s stock, ask yourself if it is really wise to bet both your career and your retirement on the same company.

“I’m a conservative investor; I can’t afford to lose any money.”

I hear this from virtually everyone who nears retirement. This is usually said to me by people who want me to invest their money in investments with absolute guarantees like CDs or fixed annuities, so their nest egg will be “safe.” All of their lives, they were warned that the stock market was “risky” and you can’t afford to be risky in retirement.

Someone retiring today at age 62 was born in 1945. If someone had invested $1,000 upon their birth in an investment that simply performed as well as the stock market during their 62 years, that $1,000 would today be worth $1 million. From $1000 to $1 million without adding any money. (Incidentally, adjusting for inflation, that $1,000 would cost about $6,600 today.)

So how did we come to think of the stock market as risky? The answer lies in history. The current generation of retirees was raised by people who endured the horrors of the Great Depression. Those of us born after that time cannot really imagine an economy so bad that more than one in four workers could not find a job. Or an economy where a dollar was worth more next year than this year due to deflation (1931-1932). Out of love, the parents of today’s retirees hammered home the point that the stock market was not to be trusted. Never mind that the Depression was caused by the teenaged Federal Reserve or that we have never since experienced anything like that (nor are we likely to again).

Today’s retirees by and large don’t have the robust pensions their parents did. Few have company paid health care. On average, their parents had a 10- to 12-year life expectancy in retirement; today’s retirees may well be looking at a 25- to 30-year retirement, where the ravages of constantly rising prices will take a major toll on their lifestyle. The only investment asset class in the history of this country that can provide a sufficient average return to keep up with inflation and allow withdrawals of around 5% of the nest egg annually, without depleting principal, is equities. That’s not a recommendation, just a math-based fact.

It’s been said that we don’t really know what we’re thinking until we hear what we’re saying. Perhaps it’s time to listen to ourselves and reconsider some of the “facts.”

 

Michael Rogan is president of Rogan & Associates Financial Planners, a locally-owned financial planning brokerage firm based in Safety Harbor. He brings nearly two decades of financial expertise to the local airwaves on the radio show, Financial Planning for Life, heard at 11 a.m. weekdays on AM 1250 WHNZ. For more information, call 727-712-3400 or visit www.RoganFinancial.com.

 
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