The Media: Friend or Foe?

The media can be a major detriment to your investment success. Every day investors are inundated with all the latest news from fast talking commentators like Jim Cramer and major financial magazines such as Fortune and BusinessWeek. Unfortunately, listening to what these sources have to say and adopting their recommendations could have a damaging effect to your long term wealth. Only […]

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2014: Patience Pays Off

Forecasters often cite a figure of 8% to 10% as a likely outcome for stock market performance in the year ahead, and 2014 was no exception. As sensible as this may sound, it is worth pointing out that over the past 89 years, the S&P 500 Index and its predecessors have never delivered a total return between 8% and 10% […]

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Hindsight Bias: Don’t Look Back

How often do you look back at something and believe that you could have predicted it, or that the event seemed so obvious only after it has actually happened? If you fall into this line of thinking, you may display what is known in psychology as hindsight bias, a potential decision making killer. Perhaps the most common occurrences of hindsight […]

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The Case for Owning International Stocks in 2015

I’ve had a few questions from my clients about why we own international stocks when they are underperforming U.S. stocks.  For those clients who started in 2008 or later, you probably do not remember the time when international stock returns were much higher than U.S. stock returns.   I have included a chart from our January 2008 quarterly letter that shows how different international returns were […]

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The Devil Wears Nada

The global fashion industry is fickle by nature, pushing and then pulling trends to keep hapless consumers forever turning over their wardrobes. Much of the financial services industry works the same way. Fashion designers, manufacturers, and media operate by telling consumers what’s in vogue this year, thus artificially creating demand where none previously existed. What turns up in the boutiques […]

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Buying High And Selling Low: The Investor’s Dilemma

Research released by Dalbar presents a grim evaluation of individual investors. The study reveals that over the 20 year period from 1982-2012, the average equity fund investor has earned an annualized return of 4.25%, while the S&P 500 has an annualized 8.22% return. This begs the question: Why is the individual investor losing nearly 4% annually? Behavioral finance offers some […]

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Living with Volatility, Again

Volatility is back. Just as many people were starting to think markets only ever move in one direction, the pendulum has swung the other way. Anxiety is a completely natural response to these events. Acting on those emotions, though, can end up doing us more harm than good. There are a number of tidy-sounding theories about why markets have become […]

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The Google Effect?

What can’t Google do? Free email, customized searches, maps, apps, browsers, video—the list goes on. Now researchers claim to have found a link between Google searches and future stock market movements. Researchers at Warwick Business School in the UK and Boston University in the US say they have developed a method that identifies historical links between searches related to business and politics […]

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A Spoon full of costs makes the returns go down

In “Close Encounters with the Market Timers,” I discussed why having your portfolio managed actively may have serious consequences on your returns in the long run. As mentioned previously, actively managed funds generally fail to beat their target benchmarks over long periods of time. There are many reasons for this, but the principal reasons are high fees and costs. These […]

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