Personal
portfolio management is not a competitive sport. It is, instead, an important
individualized effort to achieve some predetermined financial goal by balancing
one’s risk-tolerance level with the desire to enhance capital wealth. Good
investment management practices are complex and time consuming, requiring
discipline, patience, and consistency of application. Too many investors fail
to follow some simple, time-tested tenets that improve the odds of achieving
success and, at the same time, reduce the anxiety naturally associated with an
uncertain undertaking.
Some advice lines….
A fool and his money are soon parted.
Investment capital becomes a perishable commodity if not handled properly. Be
serious. Pay attention to your financial affairs. Take an active, intensive
interest. If you don’t, why should anyone else?
There is no free lunch. Risk and return are
interrelated. Set reasonable objectives using history as a guide. All returns
relate to inflation. Better to be safe than sorry. Never up, never in. Most
investors underestimate the stress of a high-risk portfolio on the way down.
Don’t put all your eggs in one basket.
Diversify. Asset allocation determines the rate of return. Stocks beat bonds
over time.
Never overreach for yield. Remember, leverage
works both ways. More money has been lost searching for yield than at the point
of a gun.
Spend interest, never principal, If at all
possible, take out less than comes in. Then a portfolio grows in value and
lasts forever. The other way around, it can be diminished quite rapidly.
You cannot eat relative performance. Measure
results on a total return, portfolio basis against your own objectives, not
someone else’s.
Don’t be afraid to take a loss. Mistakes are
part of the game. The cost price of a security is a matter of historical
insignificance, of interest only to the IRS. Averaging down, which is different
from dollar cost averaging, means the first decision was a mistake. It is a
technique used to avoid admitting a mistake or to recover a loss against the
odds. When in doubt, get out. The first loss is not only the best but is also
usually the smallest.
Watch out for fads. Hula hoops and bowling
alleys (among others) didn’t last. There are no permanent shortages (or
oversupplies). Every trend creates its own countervailing force. Expect the
unexpected.
Act. Make decisions. No amount of information
can remove all uncertainty. Have confidence in your moves. Better to be
approximately right than precisely wrong.
Take the long view. Don’t panic under
short-term transitory developments. Stick to your plan. Prevent emotion from
overtaking reason. Market timing generally doesn’t work. Recognize the rhythm
of events.
Remember the value of common sense. No system
works all of the time. History is a guide,
not a template.
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