Investing as a young adult holds the promise of paying off big for decades to come if you know what you’re doing. This Cheat Sheet highlights important beliefs that can help guide you in your investment journey. When you understand your investing goals and beliefs, you can build your knowledge, do research, and make good choices that make the most of your money and investments.
Copyright © 2013 Eric Tyson All rights reserved.
Developing and Testing Your Investing Beliefs
What are your investing beliefs? Most investors haven’t taken the time to consider that question, let alone to answer it. During the sharp stock market slide in 2008, some investors started following particular gurus who claimed to have predicted the financial crisis. These investors wanted to believe that someone out there could predict important financial events and tell folks how to time their investments to benefit from what was about to unfold.Such market timing is a fool’s errand. It sounds possible, and we’d like to believe that it is possible, but it’s not possible on the scale various charlatans would have you believe. Furthermore, many of those who boast the loudest about their market-timing ability are worse than average at it.
It’s challenging to work with someone on his investments when he has little in the way of background and beliefs. As someone seeking to educate themselves about investing, you may have a better idea of your investment beliefs than other investors do. To help you along in this process, here are some beliefs for you to consider:
·
Your own personal comfort matters. A wide
range of investments are available to you, including stocks, exchange-traded
funds (ETFs), mutual funds, real estate, and small business. Some folks are
simply more comfortable with particular investments, so you shouldn’t force
yourself into a portfolio that’s recommended as being best for you. Consider
the value of your time and your investing skills and desires. Investing in
stocks and other securities via the best mutual funds and ETFs is both
time-efficient and profitable. Real estate investing and running a small
business are the most time-intensive investments.
·
Costs matter. The more you pay in
commissions and management fees on your investments, the greater the drag on
your returns. And don’t fall prey to thinking that you get what you pay for.
Take advantage of tax-deductible retirement accounts, and understand the effect
of your tax bracket when investing outside tax-sheltered retirement accounts.
Minimize your trading. The more you trade, the more likely you are to make
mistakes. Also, you suffer increased transaction costs and higher taxes for
non-retirement-account investments.
·
Market timing is much harder to predict than
folks realize. Don’t bail when things look bleak. The hardest time,
psychologically, to hold on to your investments is when they’re down. Even the
best investments go through depressed periods, which is the worst possible time
to sell. Don’t sell when there’s a sale going on; if anything, consider buying
more. Ignore soothsayers and prognosticators. Predicting the future is nearly
impossible.
·
There are better times than others to sell.
When you’re really feeling good about an asset class like stocks, and those
assets have had a multiple-year run and are getting widespread accolades,
that’s a good time to lighten up if you have other good reasons for doing so.
By contrast, you can bump up your stock allocation if you’re comfortable doing
so after a major market decline.
·
Think long-term. Because ownership
investments like stocks, real estate, and small business are more volatile, you
must keep your long-term perspective when investing in them. Don’t invest money
in such investments unless you plan to hold them for a minimum of five years
and preferably for a decade or longer.
·
Diversify. Diversification is a powerful
investment concept that helps you reduce the risk of holding more-aggressive
investments. Diversifying simply means that you hold a variety of investments
that don’t move in tandem in different market environments. When investing in
stocks, for example, invest worldwide. You can diversify further by investing
in real estate.
·
Emphasize value. Over the long term,
value-oriented investments tend to produce higher returns with less volatility
than do pure growth-oriented investments.
·
Ignore the minutiae. Don’t feel mystified
by or feel the need to follow the short-term gyrations of the financial
markets. Ultimately, the prices of stocks, bonds, and other financial
instruments are determined by supply and demand, which are influenced by
thousands of external issues, including millions of investors’ expectations and
fears.
·
You are what you read and listen to.
Don’t pollute your mind with bad investing strategies and philosophies. The
quality of what you read and listen to is far more important than the quantity
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