DO YOU MAKE THESE COMMON INVESTING MISTAKES?
With so much information available on the Internet and 24 hour-a-day business TV, the rallying cry from these media sources has been for investors to manage their own funds. Investing is easy, they say. Not to mention that if you pay very low fees, you can trade and trade and make lots of money. Well, if that is the case, why does study after study point to the fact that do-it-yourself investors continue to underperform the markets? What mistakes do individual investors commonly make and what can they do to prevent them?
Inside Information
Many individual investors believe that when they read an article about a particular company, they now possess information that is not widely known. They forget that the only reason they read about it in an article is because it is now public. Princeton’s Burton Malkiel has argued that markets are ‘efficient’. This means that all relevant information pertaining to a specific company is reflected in the company’s stock price. From this perspective, attempting to outperform the market is futile.
If this was entirely the case, then a stock’s price should never move, unless there is new news on the company. But in reality we see stock prices move day to day without any news coming out. Why? Because it’s not necessarily important that all the information is public or not. What is important is how investors continue to re-evaluate their analysis of the news.
It may be that the reason that individual investors continue to underperform is because the system favors large institutional investors and not regular ‘Joes’. According to Terrance Odean, a University of California Berkeley finance professor, “Even when the little guy thinks he’s in the know, he is often clueless about what’s going on behind the scenes. Not so the big guys.” He continues, “For an individual to not believe that he’s at an informational disadvantage when he’s trading against guys from Goldman Sachs is naïve. It’s like deciding to play one-on-one with a professional basketball player. You’re going to lose.”
Herd Mentality
Another mistake investors make is that they tend to buy the same stocks that everyone is buying. This can create a situation of buying once the stock has already moved up aggressively. The goal for an investor is to buy low and sell high. Not the other way around.
Forbes recently reported about a 2006 study in which Professor Odean found that “like children fighting over the same toy, investors are often attracted to stocks because others want them. In fact, individuals are much more likely to buy and sell the 10% of stocks mentioned in the news and ignore the other 90%. The problem with buying stocks when they’re popular rather than on the basis of fundamental value is that they tend to be expensive and susceptible to changes in investor sentiment. The day after a stock ranks among top performers, two-thirds of all trades by individual investors are buys (institutions, by contrast, tend to wait for dips in prices and trading volume). Over the following month these hot issues underperform the overall market by an average 1.6 percentage points.”
Over Trading
A third mistake investors tend to make is that they trade way too much. It’s very difficult to always be right when trading stocks actively. In fact, if you trade too much, instead of investing in a company, you are basically gambling as to which direction a stock will move. I can’t tell you how many people have told me that they trade ‘just to make a hundred dollars a day’. Inevitably, after about two weeks, they give up on that strategy. Why? Because it’s not successful for the overwhelming majority of individuals. If it really was so easy to make that kind of money every day, don’t you think everyone would do it?
Investors need to remember that there are no shortcuts when it comes to investing. There is virtually no way to get rich quick in investing. By staying focused and disciplined with your investment portfolio you have the potential to build wealth for the long term.
The information contained in this article reflects the opinion of the author and not necessarily the opinion of Portfolio Resources Group, Inc. or its affiliates.
Aaron Katsman is a licensed financial professional both in the United States and Israel, and helps people who open investment accounts in the United States. Securities are offered through Portfolio Resources Group, Inc. a registered broker dealer, Member FINRA, SIPC, MSRB, NFA, SIFMA. For more information, call (02) 624-0995, visit www.aaronkatsman.com or email aaron@lighthousecapital.co.il.