by winston » Fri Jul 06, 2012 8:07 pm
Grow Your Wealth for Decades without a Single Losing Year By Mark Ford
Maybe I'm lucky. Or maybe it's just common sense.
I've been involved in the investment advisory business for 30 years. And except for a few early mistakes buying real estate, the big financial hoaxes and bubbles that devastated so many investors never burned me.
That made a huge difference over time. It allowed me to grow my net worth year after year without a single year of loss.
In this essay, I want to identify several lessons I learned and how to avoid the biggest mistakes average investors make.
The financial life of the typical investor is marked by a plethora of hopeful speculations. Only a few dozen, at best, achieve their promise. My investment history is less exciting but more profitable.
I get into trends only after they are proven, I get out as soon as they don't make sense, and I turn my back on nine out of 10 opportunities that come my way.
For example, in the 1980s, penny stocks were the rage. The financial press was full of stories about investors who got rich by buying little-known companies at $0.50 a share. My boss invested in one and tried to convince me to do the same. I was tempted. But something inside of me told me to let this bus pass me by.
I'm glad I did. My boss, a very savvy investor, lost 100% of his money on that deal. It turned out to be a scam. I remember thinking that if a sophisticated investor can be fooled by one of these cheap stock deals, I'd stand no chance.
Or take the recent real-estate bubble. By that time, I had been investing in real estate for more than 10 years. I knew the game. I had made a lot of money.
But by 2006, the houses I had been buying were selling for 20 times their yearly rentals. I knew it was time to get out. I stopped buying and advised my friends to do the same. They thought I was crazy. I'm sure they wish they had listened to me now.
I'm telling you these stories not to brag, but to illustrate an important point: You don't have to be a sophisticated investor to avoid making big investment mistakes. You can do so by applying a little bit of common sense.
What follows is a list of the five biggest mistakes most ordinary investors make:
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"