12 Investment Sins
John Lim | Jan 15, 2020
WANT TO IMPROVE your investment results? The deadly sins below are not only among the most serious financial transgressions, but also they’re among the most common. I firmly believe that, if you eradicate these 12 sins from your financial life, you’ll have a better-performing portfolio. 1. Pride: Thinking you can beat the market by picking individual stocks, selecting actively managed funds or timing the market. Antidote: Humility. By humbly accepting “average” returns through low-cost index funds, you will—paradoxically—outperform the majority of investors. 2. Greed: Having an overly aggressive asset allocation. Antidote: Moderation. Follow the great Benjamin Graham’s advice and keep no more than 75% of your portfolio in stocks. Once you determine your asset allocation, doggedly maintain it through thick and thin by rebalancing periodically. 3. Lust: Being addicted to financial pornography. Financial pornography—think CNBC and Fox Business—may be entertaining, but it has no lasting value and is actually harmful to your financial health by promoting short-termism. Antidote: Turn off financial media and delete financial apps from your smartphone. 4. Envy: Chasing performance. This sin trips up more investors than any other. It ultimately leads to the cardinal sin of “buying high and selling low.” Antidote: Stop comparing your investment performance to that of others. Success is not measured by relative performance, but by whether you meet your own financial goals. 5. Gluttony: Failing to save. You may be a financial saint in every other respect, but—if you fail to save—it’s game over. You can’t invest what you haven’t saved. Antidote: Start saving something today. Slowly raise your savings rate over time. 6. Impatience: Lacking investing stamina has dire consequences. Patience in financial markets is measured in years, sometimes decades. The first decade of the 21st century was not kind to U.S. stock investors, who lost a cumulative 9%. If…
Read more » How to Bear It
John Lim | May 14, 2022
INVESTING MAY BE simple, but it’s far from easy. Our mettle is tested during market extremes, whether it’s bubbles or bear markets. Today, both U.S. and international stocks are close to bear market territory. Amazingly, even major bond market segments are sporting double-digit losses, with Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF (symbol: BND) down almost 10% in 2022. What makes years like this one so difficult is our deep aversion to losses. Successful investing is about balancing risk and reward. But because of loss aversion, most of us place a premium on minimizing losses. For instance, many folks will only bet on a coin toss when the reward for winning is at least twice as great as the potential loss. The stock market is a favorable bet over the long run. Even on a daily basis, it rises on slightly more days than it falls. But in the short term, the potential upside is nowhere close to double the downside. Result: We often play it too safe, avoiding the stock market “casino” and keeping too much in bonds and cash. Stanford University researchers Brian Knutson and Camelia Kuhnen used functional MRI scans of brain activity to show that recent losses lead to greater loss aversion and reduced risk-taking. Their study corroborates what we already know about behavior during bear markets: Many investors retreat from stocks at the worst possible moment. While loss aversion may have conferred survival advantages to our nomadic ancestors, it’s downright counterproductive when it comes to investing. The savviest investors understand this. They learn to conquer their emotions and go against the grain, using fear as a contrarian indicator, and becoming more aggressive when they and others are most afraid. How can we manage our innate loss aversion more intelligently? A dose of cognitive psychology may help. If…
Read more » Evasive Action
John Lim | Nov 23, 2020
DEAR FAMILY, YOU KNOW I don’t typically give unsolicited investment advice. But today, I’m breaking that rule, because I don’t want you to get hurt financially. I can’t promise that, by following my advice, you’ll be better off in the short run. But I firmly believe that you’ll be better off in the long run, by which I mean in the next five to 10 years. Please take this letter for what it is, simply a warning and food for thought. Ultimately, you must make your own decision. 1. If you’re fortunate enough to have large gains in growth stocks such as Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Microsoft, Netflix, Tesla and Zoom, I urge you to take some profits. At a minimum, I recommend selling an amount equal to your cost basis—what you paid for these stocks. If you have great conviction in these companies, hold whatever remains after selling your cost basis. That way, you cannot lose. If these stocks drop dramatically—I’m not necessarily predicting that—you’ll still have a profit because you’ve sold your cost basis. These stocks are selling at extremely lofty valuations. History is clear: Trees do not grow to the sky, and nor do growth stocks. 2. If you’re overweight U.S. stocks and underweight international stocks, rebalance into international. The U.S. market has trounced international stocks since 2009, with the S&P 500 up 261%, versus 37% for developed international markets and 86% for emerging markets (excluding dividends). How much should you have in international stocks? I advocate allocating at least 30% of a stock portfolio to international. But if you’re like most people, you’ve given up on international stocks and are overweight U.S. shares. This is exactly the wrong time to take such a position. Valuations matter. There’s simply no question that the U.S. is among the world’s most…
Read more » Six Principles
John Lim | Nov 15, 2021
MEET AMERICA’S retirement savings vehicle: the 401(k) plan. Perhaps, instead, you know one of its close cousins: the 403(b), 457 or federal government’s Thrift Savings Plan. These are called defined contribution plans because employees must decide how much to contribute. On top of that, employees are responsible for choosing which investments to buy. This is a daunting challenge—with high stakes. These decisions determine how much folks will have when they retire. How can you make the most of these plans? There’s plenty of good advice available on how to pick the right investments. But if I was going to strip it down to the essentials, I’d offer these six guiding principles: 1. Don’t chase performance. This is probably the most common mistake investors make. Too often, they choose funds based solely on past performance. Such rearview mirror investing often disappoints, as the best-performing funds in one period are rarely the best performing in the next. This behavior is especially dangerous during market bubbles, such as the technology stock bubble of the late 1990s, which burst in early 2000, hurting many investors. 2. Beware company stock. If your employer’s stock is one of the investment options, it should comprise no more than 10% of your total 401(k) allocation. This is because a single stock is far riskier than a diversified mutual fund. For employees, holding company stock is worth an average 42% less than its stated value, once you adjust for the much higher risk involved, according to estimates by economist Lisa Meulbroek. By owning shares of the company where you work, both your livelihood and your retirement savings will be at risk should your company go bust. Never forget the lessons of Enron and Lehman Brothers. 3. Gravitate toward target-date funds. If your 401(k) offers target-date funds—also called lifecycle or…
Read more » Paying for Aging
John Lim | Mar 10, 2022
HERE’S A SOBERING statistic: It’s estimated that 50% to 60% of 65-year-olds will require long-term care at some point in their lives. This is defined as assistance with activities of daily living—things like taking a bath, dressing oneself, and maintaining bowel and bladder continence. How’s that for something to look forward to? Such care isn’t cheap. By some estimates, the average 65-year-old can expect to incur $138,000 in long-term-care (LTC) expenses, with half of that cost borne by families. Mind you, this is just the average, which includes those who will never need long-term care. For those who do shell out, the average lifetime cost is closer to $266,000. Long-term care is a classic example of what retirement expert Wade Pfau has referred to as a spending shock. If you don’t account for such spending shocks, they could easily derail an otherwise well-planned retirement. Without delving into too much detail, the following are the primary ways retirees deal with LTC expenses: Self-funding followed by Medicaid. Once personal assets are spent, Medicaid picks up the expense. This is the default option and also the most common approach in the U.S. Traditional long-term-care insurance. Unsurprisingly, LTC insurance is expensive. Policies are not standardized and can be quite complicated. While the history of LTC insurance is blighted, this is clearly one option. Hybrid policies. These life insurance or tax-deferred annuity policies include the ability to withdraw funds for LTC expenses. This is another option—but a complex one. You’ll need to read the fine print carefully. I propose a fourth option, which is far simpler than the second and third options above. It also addresses another major risk—perhaps the risk—in retirement, namely longevity risk. My proposal centers on deferred income annuities (DIAs), also known as longevity insurance or—if purchased with retirement account money—as a…
Read more » Fill ’Er Up
John Lim | Dec 6, 2021
I OWN JUST TWO individual stocks. One is Wells Fargo, which I’ve discussed before. The other is Total, recently renamed TotalEnergies, a major oil company headquartered in France. I was initially attracted to Total by its generous dividend and enormous underperformance in 2020. Yes, great underperformance—not outperformance—often piques my interest. Of course, declining stock prices and generous dividend yields go hand in hand. As the price of oil stocks cratered in 2020, their dividend yields soared. How bad was the carnage? The energy sector performed so poorly that it shrank last year to become the S&P 500’s smallest component. Here’s another bit of market trivia: In 2020, the market cap of tech upstart Zoom Video Communications briefly eclipsed that of Exxon Mobil. Update: Exxon’s market cap is now more than quadruple that of Zoom. So much for the efficient market hypothesis. Both Exxon and Total sported dividend yields well north of 10% in 2020. In fact, Total’s dividend yield briefly topped 12%. While unusually rich dividend yields can be a red flag, I decided that the world would need oil for a while longer, so I made an investment in the energy patch. I went with the oil major that had the cleanest balance sheet and one of the highest dividend yields—Total. While it’s been a good investment thus far, I realize it’s too early to declare victory. Still, here are five reasons I’ll likely be a long-term investor in Total: 1. Still-generous dividends. Even after a rebound in its stock price (symbol: TTE), Total has a dividend yield of 6.5%. That’s almost five times the yield of the 10-year Treasury note. Put another way, the price-to-dividend ratio is 15 for Total, versus 74 for the 10-year note. And unlike Treasury coupons, Total’s cash dividend payments are likely to increase…
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