- not having a plan and knowing where you want to go;
- understanding market volatility;
- failing to diversify;
- (and several more!)
Wealth Management
Discussing the world of finance
Friday, December 29, 2017
Avoiding Common Investment Mistakes
If your intend to invest, mistakes will occur! The slide share presentation below is an update of the previous post and covers some of the more common mistakes, Including:
Monday, December 17, 2012
Ten investing Mistakes to Avoid
Everyone has a list, and well, I have quite a few including the ten mental errors of investing that few can afford to make. We all make mistakes showing great insight at times, but at other points may lapse into 'less than bright'. Today's topic includes a few of the 'less than bright'.
Overconfidence is also a major factor in trading too frequently for the retail investor. Round trip (a buy & sell) trading costs that include broker fees and the bid/ask spread are expensive but only part of the problem. Even more importantly is the temptation to time the market, and may result in missing out on big moves.
We also tend to rely too much on our familiarity with one or more companies only to find out that its a great company, but a poor choice for an investment. We've worked at Company ABC for years, and it really is a good company to work for, but maybe not so much to overload in our portfolio.
Over Confidence
Forecasting errors often begin with an over confidence in our own abilities, experiences, and what we qualify as knowledge. And of all the mental errors, overconfidence is perhaps the most deadly. We are just sure we can pick a bottom, catch a falling knife, or just know that Company ABC is the next great winner.
And sometimes it is, but then, if we were to take a room of 5,000 people, have each flip a coin 5 times in a row, we're going to have 'winners' who can hit heads every time. In fact I should have approximately (5,000)(.5)^(5) or ...a lot! The result is that we may be chasing ghosts/coin tosses that represent little more than a random walk through a lot of noise and events.
Similarly, studies of physicians and how well they predict their score on upcoming medical exams, drivers in Sweden of which the majority believe they are better than average, and how we score out our 'looks' all hold the same key element -- we are too confident. My favorite is to ask a room of people to write down on a scale of 1-10 how attractive they are. Psst -- the average score is 7!
Overconfidence is also a major factor in trading too frequently for the retail investor. Round trip (a buy & sell) trading costs that include broker fees and the bid/ask spread are expensive but only part of the problem. Even more importantly is the temptation to time the market, and may result in missing out on big moves.
We also tend to rely too much on our familiarity with one or more companies only to find out that its a great company, but a poor choice for an investment. We've worked at Company ABC for years, and it really is a good company to work for, but maybe not so much to overload in our portfolio.
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