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Navigate the Investment Jungle -  Douglas Stone

Navigate the Investment Jungle (eBook)

Seven Common Financial Traps and How to Sidestep Them
eBook Download: EPUB
2020 | 1. Auflage
126 Seiten
Lioncrest Publishing (Verlag)
978-1-5445-0829-0 (ISBN)
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Are you confident you're getting the best possible financial advice? You might have a few advisors, a CPA, and an estate attorney, all of whom you like, but you don't talk that often or feel an emotional connection with any of them. They've never drilled down to ask about what matters to you: your goals, values, relationships, or charitable interests. Too many advisors today focus on products, not people, and are more concerned with allocating capital than allocating risk. They build portfolios on faulty assumptions that lead to bad decisions and unnecessary market exposure. To protect what you've built, you need a better approach to wealth management. In Navigate the Investment Jungle, Douglas Stone points out seven financial traps you might have fallen into without even realizing it. Douglas shows how to climb out of any traps you find yourself in and equips you to sidestep them in the future. Once you know the real risk, you'll invest with more confidence knowing your assets are better protected.
Are you confident you're getting the best possible financial advice? You might have a few advisors, a CPA, and an estate attorney, all of whom you like, but you don't talk that often or feel an emotional connection with any of them. They've never drilled down to ask about what matters to you: your goals, values, relationships, or charitable interests. Too many advisors today focus on products, not people, and are more concerned with allocating capital than allocating risk. They build portfolios on faulty assumptions that lead to bad decisions and unnecessary market exposure. To protect what you've built, you need a better approach to wealth management. In Navigate the Investment Jungle, Douglas Stone points out seven financial traps you might have fallen into without even realizing it. Douglas shows how to climb out of any traps you find yourself in and equips you to sidestep them in the future. Once you know the real risk, you'll invest with more confidence knowing your assets are better protected.

Introduction


It was the year 2000. The tech bubble was growing fast and tech stocks were increasing rapidly in price—if not in value. The profits were out of this world. It was tempting to believe that they always would be.

Nonetheless, I was determined to stay grounded. As a registered investment advisor, I always seek to hedge against the downside of any investment. That’s simple due diligence. With the prices of tech stocks exploding into the stratosphere, I was looking for a way to hedge against volatility. If they crashed, how would I protect my clients from the worst of the downside?

While I was pondering this question, I heard a sales pitch from some mutual fund wholesalers. I liked their pitch and accepted what they told me—that mutual funds were a good way to hedge against market volatility.

Based on the information they gave me, I bought my clients into a range of their products. I had bond funds. I had high yield bond funds. I had corporate bond funds. When the market went down, those funds should have gone up, right? That was why I had them. Unfortunately, that didn’t happen. When the tech bubble burst, everything dropped through the floor at the same time. Something was wrong with my strategy.

A Question of Risk


As I reviewed my clients’ accounts, I realized that the makeup of their portfolios wasn’t working. They were exposed to too much market risk. My task as their financial advisor was to eliminate as much risk as possible, so the bursting of the tech bubble was a major wake-up call. One thing was clear: I needed a different approach, a new game plan.

The more I investigated my clients’ portfolios, the more obvious it became that they all suffered from a similar flaw: as long as markets were doing well, they yielded high levels of profit. When the markets went down, however, these same portfolios were poorly set up to minimize losses. I had been told that mutual funds would perform this role, but reality firmly disabused me of that notion. When the tech wave crashed against the shore, mutual funds had done little or nothing to limit the damage.

At that point, I took a step back. I started questioning the products I was using and did my own thorough research. I educated myself on the true purpose of mutual funds and discovered that in many cases they serve the seller, not the investor. It was an eye-opening realization that has reshaped my whole perspective on financial planning.

Nowadays, when I see other advisors using mutual funds, I suspect they haven’t done their due diligence. They know that if they add mutual funds to their clients’ accounts, they receive a commission, and that alone convinces them it’s the right thing to do. Often, it isn’t.

Please don’t think that I’m against advisors earning money. We work hard for our clients and we deserve to see solid profits. I firmly believe, however, that the financial success of an advisor should never come at the expense of a client’s best interests. We should always ask whether a particular product helps our clients achieve their goals. If it doesn’t, it’s not a good choice.

The mutual fund representative I’d spoken to assured me that the funds had a great track record. In a market that had shown consistent growth for years, they probably did. What the rep didn’t mention was how the same funds performed when the market dropped. He was more interested in telling me how much I could earn when clients used the products. When the tech bubble burst, I found out for myself how they performed in a downturn.

I hold my hands up and admit that I, like most everyone else in my profession, drank the Kool-Aid. In the midst of the tech boom, optimism was high. I believed what I was told, trusting that the mutual funds I purchased would provide sufficient protection against market pain. It was only when the results didn’t meet my expectations that I seriously questioned the information I had received.

Naturally, the reps rushed to tell me that I was looking at the situation incorrectly. I might have bought their slick presentations earlier, but now those presentations were belied by reality. Of course, reality is the best indicator of any strategy’s success. Reality was hitting hard, and I could clearly see that the strategy I’d been pursuing wasn’t working.

In good times, it’s easy to be lulled into inattention. We assume that the future will be like the past. If things are good, and have been good for a while, we may conclude that they will always be good. But this can lead to complacency and a loss of focus. There’s a disconnect. The problem with this approach is that when things go bad, we’re unprepared, we’re taken by surprise and we panic.

The only way to head off panic is to understand the risks of a course of action. When the tech bubble burst and I saw that hedging against mutual funds wasn’t counteracting the losses, I realized how much of the advice I had received in my career was predicated on good times, with little understanding of the risks. That was when I understood how much more there was to learn. The fruits of this learning process are the subject of this book.

Pitfalls of the Retail Investment Model


As an investor, you want to trust that your financial advisor has your best interests at heart. You also want to trust that your advisor has the knowledge to serve those interests. If either of those pieces is missing, you’re in trouble!

Over the years, it’s become increasingly obvious to me that many advisors are constructing portfolios based on a model I call the “retail model.” They’re investing like individuals. And just like individuals, they’re vulnerable to the emotional swings and roundabouts of the market.

Early in my career, I followed the retail model and fell into many of the traps in this book. I learned from mentors who showed me how to construct a portfolio based on the principles of that model. When I was unsure which investments to prefer, they guided me to a list of mutual funds recommended by the firm where I was working.

Naturally, I picked from the menu I was given. Naïvely, I imagined that the funds on that menu were chosen because they offered the best performance. That wasn’t necessarily the case. It turned out that many of the recommended funds were the ones offering brokers the highest commission. I wasn’t encouraged to ask a lot of questions, and being young and new to the business, I followed the examples set by more senior members of the practice.

I can still remember the first time my belief in the rightness of this approach was dented. A very conservative client of mine sat down with me for a meeting and began to ask pointed questions about his investments. Although this man was heavily invested in treasury bills and government bonds, he also had a portion of his portfolio in mutual funds. My firm was responsible for managing that part of his investments. At the time, the mutual funds weren’t performing well.

As he began to ask me questions, I started to recognize the gaps in my knowledge. For example, he found an abbreviation in his quarterly report that read “FFO.” What did FFO mean? To my chagrin, I had to admit that I didn’t know. It wasn’t until later that I learned it referred to funds from operations.

At the time, that conversation wasn’t enough to shake my faith significantly. Nonetheless, it must have made quite an impact because I still remember it decades later. My inability to answer that client’s questions or explain the performance of his investments was a clue to the limitations of the retail model.

When retail tactics yield poor results, brokers are taught to offer justifications, such as explaining that the market is volatile. In tough times, this is usually true, but it’s only part of the story. Some investors—specifically institutional investors—understand how to set up their portfolios so that they limit their exposure to market volatility. We’ll discuss the institutional model in the following section.

The retail investment model is centered on a buy-and-hold strategy. It’s an incredibly common approach, practiced by some of the largest money managers in the world. Indeed, the two largest investment managers, in terms of amount of money managed, Barclays Global Investors and State Street Corporation, utilize this strategy.

Wikipedia defines a buy-and-hold strategy as:

“An investment strategy where the investor buys stocks and holds them for a long time, with the goal that stocks will gradually increase in value over a long period of time. This is based on the view that in the long run, financial markets give a good rate of return, even while taking into account a degree of volatility.”1

Buy and hold is based on the belief that investors will never see good returns if they bail out following a decline, so the smartest approach is to hold on to their assets and wait for the market to bounce back. It’s a passive strategy, not a proactive way to manage money. It’s also a strategy that works for financial professionals regardless of what happens. If the investor holds...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 16.6.2020
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Wirtschaft Betriebswirtschaft / Management Finanzierung
ISBN-10 1-5445-0829-8 / 1544508298
ISBN-13 978-1-5445-0829-0 / 9781544508290
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