Elements of Investing Fof Your Financial_4

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Diversify if the stock market falls sharply and bonds rise in price, as was the experience of investors in 2008? What do you do then? The correct response is to make corrective changes in the mix of your portfolio. This is what we mean by “rebalancing.” It involves not letting the asset proportions in your portfolio stray too far from the ideal mix you have chosen as best for you. Suppose the equity portion of your portfolio is too high. You could direct all new allocations, as well as the dividends paid from your equity investments, into bond investments. (If the balance is severely out of whack, you can shift some of your money from the equity fund you hold into bond investments.) If the proportion of your investments in bonds has risen so that it exceeds your desired allocation, you can move money into equities. The right response to a fall in the price of one asset class is never to panic and sell out. Rather, you need the long-term discipline and personal fortitude to buy more. Remember: The lower stock prices go, the better the bargains if you are truly a long-term investor. Sharp market declines may make rebalancing appear a frustrating “way to lose even more money.” But in the 67 c03.indd 67 11/3/09 9:41:48 AM The Elements of Investing long run, investors who rebalance their portfolios in a disciplined way are well rewarded. When markets are very volatile, rebalancing can actually increase your rate of return and, at the same time, decrease your risk by reducing the volatility of your portfolio. The decade from 1996 through 2005 provides an excellent example. Suppose an investor’s chosen allocation is 60 percent in stocks and 40 percent in bonds. Let’s use a broad-based U.S. total stock market index fund for the equity portion of the portfolio and a total bond market index fund for the bonds to illustrate the advantages of rebalancing. The table on page 69 shows how rebalancing was able to increase the investor’s return while reducing risk, as measured by the quarterly volatility of return. If an investor had simply bought such a 60/40 portfolio at the start of the period and held on for 10 years, she would have earned an average rate of return of 8.08 percent per year. But if each year she rebalanced the portfolio to preserve the 60/40 mix, the return would have increased to almost 8 ½ percent. Moreover, the quarterly results would have been more stable, allowing the investor to sleep better at night. 68 c03.indd 68 11/3/09 9:41:48 AM Diversify During the decade January 1996 through December 2005, an annually rebalanced portfolio provided lower volatility and higher return. The Importance of Rebalancing Portfolio:a 60% Total Stock Market 40% Total Bond Market Annually rebalanced Never rebalanced Average Annual Return Risk (Volatility)b 8.46% 8.08% 9.28 10.05 a Stocks represented by a Russell 3000® total stock market fund. Bonds represented by a Lehman U.S. aggregate total bond market fund. b The variation of your portfolio’s annual return as measured by the standard deviation of return. Why did rebalancing work so well? Suppose the investor rebalanced once a year at the beginning of January. (Don’t be trigger-happy: Rebalance once a year.) During January 2000, near the top of the Internet craze, the stock portion of the portfolio rose well above 60 percent, 69 c03.indd 69 11/3/09 9:41:49 AM The Elements of Investing so some stocks were sold and the proceeds put into bonds that had been falling in price as interest rates rose. The investor did not know we were near a stock market peak (the actual peak was in March 2000). But she was able to lighten up on stocks when they were selling at very high prices. When the rebalancing was done in January 2003, the situation was different. Stocks had fallen sharply (the low of the market occurred in October 2002) and bonds had risen in price as interest rates were reduced by the Federal Reserve. So money was taken from the bond part of the portfolio and invested in equities at what turned out to be quite favorable prices. Rebalancing will not always increase returns. But it will always reduce the riskiness of the portfolio and it will always ensure that your actual allocation stays consistent with the right allocation for your needs and temperament. Rebalancing will not always increase returns. But it will always reduce the riskiness of the portfolio and it will always ensure that your actual allocation stays consistent with the right allocation for your needs and temperament. 70 c03.indd 70 11/3/09 9:41:49 AM Diversify Investors will also want to consider rebalancing to change their portfolio’s asset mix as they age. For most people, a more and more conservative asset mix that has a deliberately reduced equity component will provide less stress as they approach and then enter retirement. 71 c03.indd 71 11/3/09 9:41:49 AM c03.indd 72 11/3/09 9:41:49 AM IV AVOID BLUNDERS You, far more than the market or the economy, are the most important factor in your long-term investment success. We’re both in our seventies. So is America’s favorite investor, Warren Buffett. The main difference between his spectacular results and our good results is not the economy and not the market, but the man from Omaha. He is simply a better investor than just about any other 73 c04.indd 73 10/31/09 1:37:01 PM The Elements of Investing investor in the world, amateur or professional. Brilliant, consistently rational, and blessed with a superb mind for business, he concentrates more time and effort on being a better investor and is more disciplined. One of the major reasons for Buffett’s success is that he has managed to avoid the major mistakes that have crushed so many portfolios. Let’s look at two examples. In early 2000, many observers declared that Buffett had somehow lost his touch. His Berkshire Hathaway portfolio had underperformed the popular high-tech funds that enjoyed spectacular returns by loading up on stocks of technology companies and Internet startups. Buffett avoided all tech stocks. He told his investors that he refused to invest in any company whose business he did not fully understand—and he didn’t claim to understand the complicated, fast-changing technology business—or where he could not figure out how the business model would sustain a growing stream of earnings. Some said he was passé, a fuddyduddy. Buffett had the last laugh when Internet-related stocks came crashing back to earth. In 2005 and 2006, Buffett largely avoided the popular complex mortgage-backed securities and the derivatives that found their way into many investment portfolios. 74 c04.indd 74 10/31/09 1:37:01 PM Avoid Blunders Again, his view was that they were too complex and opaque. He called them “financial weapons of mass destruction.” When in 2007 they brought down many a financial institution (and ravaged our entire financial system), Berkshire Hathaway avoided the worst of the financial meltdown. Avoiding serious trouble, particularly troubles that come from incurring unnecessary risks, is one of the great secrets to investment success. Investors all too often beat themselves by making serious—and completely unnecessary—investment mistakes. In this chapter, we highlight the common investment mistakes that can prevent you from realizing your goals. As in so many human endeavors, the secrets to success are patience, persistence, and minimizing mistakes. As in so many human endeavors, the secrets to success are patience, persistence, and minimizing mistakes. In driving, it’s having no serious accidents; in tennis, the key is getting the ball back; and in investing, it’s indexing—to avoid the expenses and mistakes that do so much harm to so many investors. 75 c04.indd 75 10/31/09 1:37:01 PM The Elements of Investing OVERCONFIDENCE In recent years, a group of behavioral psychologists and financial economists have created the important new field of behavioral finance. Their research shows that we are not always rational and that in investing, we are often our worst enemies. We tend to be overconfident, harbor illusions of control, and get stampeded by the crowd. To be forewarned is to be forearmed. At our two favorite universities, Yale and Princeton, psychologists are fond of giving students questionnaires asking how they compare with their classmates in respect to different skills. For example, students are asked: “Are you a more skillful driver than your average classmate?” Invariably, the overwhelming majority answer that they are above-average drivers compared with their classmates. Even when asked about their athletic ability, where one would think it was more difficult to delude oneself, students generally think of themselves as above-average athletes, and they see themselves as above-average dancers, conservationists, friends, and so on. And so it is with investing. If we do make a successful investment, we confuse luck with skill. It was easy in early 2000 to delude yourself that you were an investment 76 c04.indd 76 10/31/09 1:37:01 PM
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