Allan Roth

The Irrational Investor
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Investors: Ignore Your Instincts

By Allan Roth | Jun 15, 2009 |

We all use guidelines to make our way through life. They serve us well most of the time, but can serve our heads on a platter when it comes to investing. Let’s delve deeper into three of these rules of thumb that have hardened into head-serving myth for many investors.

Myth #1: Follow your instincts

How many times in our lives have we said, “I knew this didn’t seem right?” I know there have been countless times where an outcome caused me to regret that I didn’t listen to that inner voice. My instincts have typically proven to be a good thing, whether being presented with a deal that seemed too good to be true, or whether there was something about an individual that I just didn’t trust.

As is always the case with “Monday morning quarterbacking,” most investors can look back at the stock market last summer and say they knew the credit crisis was predictable and the crash was inevitable. It was the only possible outcome to Wall Street lending money to millions of people with  the net worth of your average paper boy and nary a prayer of paying it back.

Unfortunately, during the height of the easy credit bull market, investors weren’t employing that logic, but rather were investing based on their instincts at the time. And their instincts at that time were telling them that real estate not only wouldn’t go down in price, but couldn’t. Hence money continued to pour into the market in 2007. Now that the crash is here, hindsight tells us something quite different.

Hindsight tells me that if I invested according to how my instincts made me feel, I’d have a standing reservation at the poor house. During a bull market, greed has me wishing I had a greater proportion of my portfolio in stocks and I feel like increasing it. In a bear market like last March, my stomach sinks with every dollar my portfolio goes down and I feel fear and want to sell. Of course the market gurus and the media only compound the problem by pandering to these feelings.

Listening to those talking heads, or my own knee-jerk feelings, would have me buying after the market has gone up and selling after it has dropped. I’d have an E ticket on that roller coaster ride of buying a hot stock or mutual fund after it had skyrocketed and selling it when it started circling the drain. Wheee!  Unfortunately, that’s just what most investors do, and how they end up in buy high/sell low land.

Since it’s pretty close to impossible to turn off an emotion in only one aspect of your life, I recommend investing exactly the opposite of how you feel.  Instead, pick an overall stock, bond, and cash allocation, rebalancing periodically.  Yes, I know it’s a bitter pill to swallow, but rebalancing means selling some of your stocks after the market has gone up, and buying some after the market has dropped. Wrong as it feels to say goodbye to a winner and hello to a loser, boy does it work.

Stay tuned, and on Wednesday, I’ll show you why being proactive with your portfolio sounds rational but doesn’t work either.

 
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  •  
    1

    rickkahler

    06/18/09 | Report as spam

    Rick Kahler

    Allan,

    This is spot on, and so very, very difficult to do. The problem is our cerebrum (right and left brains) are battling with our limbic system (lower brain) and the cerebrum loses every time the limbic system feels threatened. When that happens, logic goes out the window.

    As an advisor, I am finding if I can help clients maintain the status quo during times of irrational exuberance or panic, I've done well. I didn't have one client increase their allocations to equities at the market bottom, while 23% of them decreased their allocations to equities on or about March 9th.

  •  
    2

    Allan Roth

    06/22/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Investors: Ignore Your Instincts

    Rick,

    What an insightful comment - thanks. We know rebalancing is logical but logic has little to do with how we act. Instincts that work so well to keep us alive, fail us miserably in investing.

  •  
    3

    nicegift

    06/23/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Investors: Ignore Your Instincts

    Very good article.

    In my opinion, using a market timing system to trade the
    market can make much better returns that just buy and hold.

    Take as an example http://invetrics.com

    Its Dow Jones timing signals are up 43% while the Dow is up
    just 29% off its March lows.

    Following a market timing system works!

  •  
    4

    Allan Roth

    06/25/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Investors: Ignore Your Instincts

    Thanks for the comment.

    Finding market timing systems that worked in the past are easy. If I developed 100 random market timing systems and tracked them for 10 years, one would be stellar and that would be the one I touted and sold.

    There is one market timing system I think works - rebalancing. That means selling some of your winners and buying some of your losers. It goes against every human instinct which is why it truly is a contrarian strategy. It's simple but it's not very easy.

  •  
    5

    Allan Roth

    07/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Investors: Ignore Your Instincts

    Rick,

    As I often say, "investing is simple, not easy!"

    The more money means to us, the harder investing becomes.

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Allan Roth

Allan S. Roth is the founder of Wealth Logic, an hourly based financial planning and investment advisory firm that advises clients with portfolios ranging from $10,000 to $50 million. He is mocked on a semi-regular basis by some financial professionals for his hourly fee model and its obvious inability to make him rich.

Roth is also the author of How A Second Grader Beats Wall Street. He teaches behavioral finance at the University of Denver and is an adjunct faculty member at Colorado College.

Allan Roth

Allan Roth has a lot of credentials (CFP, CPA, MBA) and business experience (McKinsey consulting and officers of mega-billion dollar companies). But he insists that said credentials and business experience do not interfere with his ability to keep investing simple.

Roth has worked with many a lawyer over the years, so he feels compelled to note that his columns are not meant as specific investment advice, especially since any such advice would need to take into account such things as each reader’s willingness and need to take risk, which can vary significantly. His columns will specifically avoid such foolishness as predicting the next “hot stock” or what the stock market will do next month. Roth’s goal is never to be confused with Jim Cramer.

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