All posts by Financial Independence Hub

Where investors go astray

AmanRaina
Aman Raina

By Aman Raina, Sage Investors

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

It doesn’t matter how experienced you are with investing. We make lots of mistakes. Always have and always will. Investing is probably one of those disciplines where you literally have to “pay” your dues to make progress. It is an extremely humbling activity. It’s closest comparable in my mind is golf.

In the almost 20 years that I’ve been investing, I’ve made lots of mistakes. Some I’ve learned from and minimize and some I’m still a work in progress.

1.)     Lack of commitment to the cause (Passive and Active Management)

One of the first questions I ask every potential coaching candidate is how much time they are willing to learn and practice investing. The answer determines the type of learning program that I will develop for them. If they are willing to make the time to learn about the intricacies of investing in individual stocks, I will develop a more comprehensive program.

If you can’t be bothered with learning about all the elements of investing, but just want to obtain enough knowledge to passively get exposure to stocks via index funds or ETFs then the program will be different. Either way, whether you are investing actively or passively, you need to dedicate a certain amount of time to learn and engage in the investing process. Engagement can mean doing the analysis or research, reviewing financial plans, tracking performance.

In the book, The Millionaire Next Door, one of the common traits of wealthy investors is that they have always have a good handle of their finances. On average, these investors dedicate some time each month to review their portfolios. The more engaged in the process, the more opportunities you will have to be aware of your behaviours, actions, and opportunities around you and the less intimidating the activity will be. Investing for many people is viewed as a chore and not at the top of the priority list. This needs to change.

2.)     Lack of an ideology of how to create wealth

There’s a great school of thought that everyone needs to have some kind of financial plan that will map out how their savings will grow over the course of their life. It often contains lots of charts, graphs, and projections of their financial position at various life milestones. It’s always useful to have a bit of a window into the possibilities of the future. The problem with financial plans is they become immediately outdated when the ink dries.

Circumstances in our life and in the external environment will make that financial plan redundant pretty fast. Furthermore, even when a financial plan is created it is often adjusted and tweaked to reflect changes, which often do more harm to the portfolio.  What is more important before engaging on the journey is to have some fundamentals and first principles of how wealth is created and more importantly staying true to those principles and ideology. We live in a capitalist society and often we use the term loosely without understanding what it means.

Our goal as investors is to allocate our savings to ideas, people, and organization that have demonstrated it is capable of managing the scarce capital it has been entrusted to generate additional wealth. When we buy and sell stocks, we often frame our decisions without any thought to evaluating these qualities. Most of the time we invest on hope and a prayer that it will all work out. A better approach is developing some core principles of how you plan to invest and the qualities or criteria of an ideal investment opportunity. Conversely we also need to develop an ideology on when we will exit an investment. How much return do we need to obtain? What is the most we are willing to lose on an investment? When you develop your ideology, it then becomes about consistent execution and minimizing the tweaking of your ideology.

An ideology will stick with you thick and thin. An investment plan may not necessarily. If you believe in passive investing and holding a few Exchange Traded Funds and rebalancing periodically, then stick to that strategy and don’t stray away from it. If your ideology is to buy high quality companies at discounted prices, then stay true to that strategy and avoid the temptations to tweak it. Having an investing ideology and implementing it faithfully and consistently is a trait many successful investors adopt and is more powerful than any financial plan.

3.)    Not aware of their own or other people’s cognitive biases

I’ve written in the last while about how the greatest impediment for investors in making successful investment decisions is our behavioral biases that we are constantly fighting on a daily basis. While I spend a good part of my time teaching and coaching people on the mechanics of analyzing investments, I find over the years, I have been spending more time coaching people on becoming more aware of the emotional and behavioral side of investing. Ultimately I believe strongly that our ability to manage the emotions and biases will determine our financial success. At the same time, having an understanding of the psychology of how other investors behave can yield meaningful opportunities to leverage and become successful.

4.)     Desire to be on the winning team

One of our core human traits is a need to be part of something, whether that is a peer or social group or family. By being associated with a group, we feel a certain level of security, comfort, and safety. As humans we are constantly searching for groups to associate with and more specifically, groups that are perceived to be cool, hip, current, and share ideas and beliefs that are similar to ours. We’re all prone to want to be on the winning team.  Unfortunately, chasing winners and following what the herd is doing can often lead to poor returns.

5.)     High fees are a drag on returns … to a point

A mantra that is often chanted by financial wonks and other financial illuminati is to always be mindful of the fees and transaction that are being incurred. Keeping fees and costs low can lead to long term savings and preservation of capital which is very true. At the same time making investment decisions solely based on the costs of products can limiting.

Remember the reason why we invest is to take money. Keeping costs low preserves capital which is fine to a point. The reality is that we will need to spend money to make money. Investing by keeping costs low is equivalent of a company trying to increase profits through cost cutting. It works in the short term, but at some point the company needs to demonstrate it can sell its products and services at a price point that makes it profitable. At the end of the day, no one is going to parade you through the streets because your ETF has an Management Expense Ratio of 0.05%. They will parade you because the investments in that ETF were profitable and generated a significant amount of money.

6.)    Reaching for yield

A common strategy you will hear involves investing in dividend paying stocks. The premise is that companies that pay dividends that are continuously increasing are less risky than other investments. Unfortunately that premise lures people into a false sense of security as it implies that stocks are less risky, which is completely false. Stocks are among the riskiest assets and whether it pays a dividend is inconsequential. Any stock can still fall to zero. So getting a 3 per cent yield may seem appetizing, however if the stock falls 20 per cent will you feel any solace or comfort?

7.)   Deviation from the plan via tinkering

We spend enough time, energy, and money putting together wonderfully written financial plans that we hope will lead us to the promise land. The reality is over time we will subtly nudge and tweak the plan. We’ll hear about a new product that promises higher returns at a lower cost and will convince us that the new product will be complement the portfolio. A nudge here, a poke here and the next thing you know it that wonderful pristine financial plan you and your adviser developed looks nowhere anything like you started off with and chances are it is so fragmented that implementing it will be even harder. That plan will then gather dust. Successful investors develop an investment ideology and plan and stay very loyal to it in its implementation. Ideally, a financial adviser should be there to prevent you from getting in the way, however, advisers can be prone to enable the tinkering as new opportunities to churn for commission present itself.

8.)    Inability to control losses and turn the page

When we make investment decisions, we put a great deal of energy in identifying investments that hope will grow in value. We will do all the due diligence and analysis to ensure and convince ourselves that the investment will be successful. After all that there is still no guarantee that it will pan out. We will all definitely make decisions that will lose us money. When we get into that situation, we will be more likely to exhibit Loss Aversion behaviour and put more money into the investment. The key note is that if an investment falls 20 per cent, you need to make 25 per cent to get the investment back to break-even. If the investment falls 50 per cent, you need to make 100 per cent.

As your losses get larger, the ability to recoup becomes extremely difficult. This is why it is very important when you make an investment decision to establish a minimum gain you are striving for, you should also establish how much you are comfortable losing. By controlling the loss, you are preserving your savings and not subjecting putting more money at risk in an investment. The old throwing good money after bad analogy applies here. The reality is to be a successful investor, you will run into instances where some of your investments just won’t work out. When it doesn’t, we cannot get too emotional about it. We have to think like a goalie who just gave up a goal through the legs or a cornerback who just got burned for a touchdown. We need to turn the page very fast and not let the loss linger. The more we let it linger, the more it can cloud our judgement for future investment decisions.

9.)     Back to the Future: Equating past performance with future potential. The future is always uncertain

A behaviour we are all predisposed to involves extrapolating current events to the future. If our investment portfolio generated a return of 10 per cent, we will internally convince ourselves that we will continue to generate a similar return well into the future. This recency bias can really cloud our expectations because the reality is there is no way you can predict what returns you will generate in the future. It’s futile. Don’t even go there.

The best you can do to leverage history is take a much larger data set. If we go back over 150 years, on average stock prices rise 6 to 8 per cent annually. If you’re anywhere near that range on a regular basis that it is pretty extraordinary. Another reality is that we all will have down years, especially after what we think is a good year, so it is always better to temper expectations, especially after a solid year of performance because the stock market has a funny way of bringing your feet back to the ground.

10.)  A bad case of the Short Term’isms

As our society and pace of life continues to speed up, our decision making framework is also getting shorter and shorter. Investing involves making decisions on allocating money to assets we think are going to generate superior returns over a long period of time, which traditionally has been 3 to 5 years. Unfortunately the time frame appears to be getting shorter and shorter. Wall Street and Bay Street are so incredibly short term focussed on their expectations.

They are seeking immediate gratification constantly. Decisions and companies are valued on a quarterly basis and this pressure to meet quarterly profit estimate has forced companies to take a more short term approach to how they allocate and invest shareholder capital. Sometimes the pressure is so large that companies will resort to outright manipulation of numbers to meet analyst expectations. Investing has slowly been evolving into trading and gambling. Taking a short term view of investing decisions can make you susceptible to extreme swings in the stock market and can trigger emotions that may force you to prematurely make decisions that will further impair your portfolio.

11.)  Not allowing compounding to work for you

One of the great gifts of the universe is the magic of compounding. When you take a number and roll it over and over that number can rise very fast over a long period of time. Bringing this into investing, the simple act of reinvesting the dividends, interest income, and capital gains generated by your investments consistently over the long term can take your portfolio to whole new level. I myself have been guilty of not leveraging this enough especially in my younger years. The beauty of compounding is that doesn’t require an intense level of saving, but instead requiring a large segment of time and strict adherence to an investment ideology (See #2).

12.)  Understanding where the messages are coming from and the agenda behind them

Investors have a gold mine of information resources at their fingertips thanks to the disruption of the internet and 24-hour news cycles. The problem with having a mountain of information and data points to consume as it gets pretty easy to overlook the sources of the information. A lot of times there is an agenda behind them. Money managers don’t go on CNBC to give recommendations and prognostications because they have nothing better to do. They go on because they have a company and business to promote. I have done the same. Analyst reports can often be skewed or sanitized depending on if the bank has a relationship with the company. Blogs posts can be sponsored to project certain selling points of an investment product. Even though information resources have exponentially increased, it is even more important now to understand where the information is coming from, the players behind it and what are their agendas for putting out the content. Investors are having difficulty filtering out the noise and it can have an adverse impact on their portfolios.

13)  You and your behaviours are your own worst enemy

At the end of the day, the biggest road that is preventing us from becoming better investors is not the banks, or financial advisers or the Government or BNN or CNBC or Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment nor is it a lack of financial literacy. It is us. It is the stuff between our ears and how it makes us behave and reacts and perceives the actions, events, and behaviours that will drive our investment proficiency.

A lot of what I do as an investment coach revolves around improving people’s behaviours to avoid or at the very least manage these mistakes. When I started coaching, I spent more time on teaching people the mechanics of investing (i.e. reading/analyzing financial statements, interpreting economic activity, valuing companies). As my practice has evolved, I find myself spending more time working people to develop and manage their behaviours towards money and investing. I spend more time instilling a level of commitment and discipline in people and taking a longer term, strategic view when framing their investment decisions. I feel very strongly that these elements are the secret sauce that can push people over the top.

Aman Raina, MBA is an Investment Coach and founder of Sage Investors, an independent practice specializing in investment coaching and portfolio analysis services. This blog was originally published on his web site and is reproduced  here with permission. 

 

The Real Cost Of Personal Debt

MarieEngen
Marie Engen, Boomer & Echo

By Marie Engen, Boomer & Echo

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

We are constantly reminded about the rising level of outstanding personal debt carried by Canadians. Every few months we hear about the perils of rising interest rates that may leave many in financial difficulty.

The reality is – debt is not all bad. Most of us wouldn’t have been able to purchase our homes without a mortgage, or buy a car, or pursue secondary education. Even credit cards are not evil in and of themselves no matter how they are often portrayed.

To never (ever) borrow money is to live in the land of the already rich, or to always be a renter. At the other extreme, using other people’s money to fully finance your lifestyle is ridiculous and precarious.

Most of us don’t fall into these extreme circumstances. We hold a reasonable amount of debt, make our payments on time and have good, to very good, credit ratings. That being said, most people fail to optimize their overall debt management strategies to pay the least amount of interest.

Consolidating debts

We no longer hear about the “all-in-one” mortgages offered by financial institutions such as the Manulife ONE and National Bank All-in-One. These accounts combine chequing, savings, and borrowing into one account. If used properly, consumers could simplify their debt and lower their overall interest paid.

These won’t work for most people because they like to keep all their accounts separate. They have multiple liabilities at different interest rates:

  • Home mortgage
  • Car loan
  • Line of Credit
  • Student loan
  • Credit card to use for discounts at your favourite store
  • Credit card for other rewards.

When I worked in banking, I gave out many consolidation loans. I confiscated and cut up credit cards, cancelled overdraft protection, and closed out other loans and lines of credit. Invariably, within a couple of months, more than half of these clients would reapply for their credit cards, reinstate ODP, and sneak off to a different branch to get another line of credit.

More personal debt mismanagement

Here are some other ways people don’t think clearly about managing their personal debt.

  • Mike and Molly are determined to pay off their mortgage (2.7%) in less than 10 years. They put every available dollar towards the principal. They also have two car loans at 4.5% and 8% and purchased a “don’t-pay-for-six-months” entertainment system. It makes more sense to address these debts first.
  • When their mortgage came up for renewal, Fred and Ethel rolled the balance into a new Home Equity Line of Credit. However, they continue to finance their lavish life style with their credit cards. They pay off the cards each month from the HELOC on which they make the required minimum payment of accrued interest. After all, they have a huge balance still available to them. They think they are managing their debt well by paying off “bad” credit card debt and having “good” mortgage debt.
  • Jess went to her favourite home décor store to purchase some sheets. There was a store promotion that gave 20% off purchases when opening a new store credit card. Excited by the discount, Jess picked out a whole bedding set from duvet to accent cushions. The balance is too high to pay when the bill arrives so she makes minimum monthly payments while incurring interest charges of 29.9%. Meanwhile, she has enough money in her low-interest savings account to pay the entire bill, but chooses not to.
  • Leonard works on commission and his paycheque amounts vary. He makes up the difference in lean months with his overdraft protection at 24%. Until he learns how to budget for his irregular income, he should use his credit card for purchases, even if he carries a balance for a month or two.
  • Ross receives a credit card offer with a “teaser” 0% interest on balance transfers. He transfers the balance from his high interest rate card and cancels it. He uses his new card for future purchases, not realizing that the 0% only applies to the amount of the transfer. His payments go to the new purchases he made which carry a much higher rate. He would have been better off to continue using his old card for his occasional new purchases, pay the monthly balance in full, and avoid using the new card at all.
  • Barney and Betty have a systematic plan to pay off all their debt. They are using the “snowball” method popularized by author Dave Ramsey, which states that it is psychologically satisfying to first rid yourself of the smallest debts first, regardless of interest rates. The reasoning is they would be better prepared – and more enthusiastic – to stick with the strategy. But, once the small debts were done they took their foot off the gas and paid random amounts on the higher debts whenever the inclination hit them.  

Final thoughts

Instead of speculating about the direction of future interest rates, we should be examining our own habits.

Take a look at how you think about – and manage – your personal debt and see if you can minimize your borrowing costs.

Also read:

Marie Engen is the “Boomer” half of Boomer & Echo. In addition to being co-author of the website, Marie is a fee-only financial planner based in Kelowna, B.C. This article originally ran at the Boomer & Echo site on Feb. 9, 2016 and is republished here with permission.

 

FWB Video: Should Stock investors rotate between different industries?

 The latest video from FWB TV’s Evidence Based Investor Video blogs has been posted: Should stock investors rotate between different industries?

In the 3.5-minute video Cambridge stock market historian Elroy Dimson (pictured left) observes that  Investors (and consumers) have a tendency to be attracted to the latest “hot” technology, such as driverless cars or 3D printing.

That might be fine for purchasing cell phones and flat screen television sets but it is not necessarily the best course of action when it comes to investing choices.

Sometimes the emerging “Hot” industry can be a money loser, as occurred early in the 20th century when many auto manufacturers went bankrupt. On the other hand, the “old” staid industry of railways actually performed well for many investors.

Dimson concludes that simply rotating from one hot industry to another is a bad idea for most investors, arguing instead for diversifying both across industries as well as across various regions of the global economy.

After watching the video if you want to learn more, download the free guide, 12 Essential Ideas For Building Wealth

 

Building Your Financial “Stop Doing” List:  Stop Chasing Dividends

 

stevelowrie
Steve Lowrie

By Steve Lowrie, Lowrie Financial

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

During the 20+ years I’ve been a financial advisor, I’ve noticed how often the market keeps playing the same devilish tricks, each time in a guise that differs just enough to fool us all over again.

Today’s “Stop Doing” post exposes one of these more common tricks of the trade: Investors who are seeking a reliable income stream for retirement should STOP building their investment strategy around dividend-paying stocks (or higher-interest-yielding bonds) in isolation, without considering them in the context of their total wealth management.

Speaking of devilish acts, let’s revisit the Wall Street Journal columnist Jason Zweig’s “The Devil’s Financial Dictionary” (emphasis is ours):

Continue Reading…

Why you should be wary of index-linked GICs


patmckeough
Patrick McKeough

By Patrick McKeough, TSINetwork.ca

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

Index-linked GICs (Guaranteed Investment Certificates) provide the buyer with a return that is “linked” to the direction of the stock market in a given period. A quick look at the rules on these deals may give you the impression that the investor can profit substantially with little risk. However, the link depends on a formula or set of rules that is buried in the fine print.

These investments are marketed as offering all of the advantages of stock-market investing with none of the risk. But banks and insurance companies aren’t in the business of giving customers something for nothing. The capital gain that holders get depends on an ingenious formula which is cleverly designed to sound generous while minimizing the potential payout.

Index-linked GICs fail to offer the big tax advantages of stock investing

Another drawback is that returns on index-linked GICs are taxed as interest. That’s because you’re not actually investing in the stock indexes themselves; you’re just getting paid interest based on the change in the indexes. That’s a drawback because interest is the highest taxed of all investment returns.

Usually, stock-market investing produces capital gains and dividend income, both of which are taxed at a much lower rate than interest. (Of course, if you hold the GICs in an RRSP, all income is tax deferred.)

These GICs do protect your principal. But few investors if any make a good return on index-linked GICs. Most make less (at times substantially less) in index-linked GICs than they would have made in old-fashioned GICs.

If safety is your primary concern, you’d be better off with “plain vanilla” stocks and bonds. If you already own index-linked GICs, our advice is to cash them in at the earliest opportunity. If you don’t own them, we recommend that you stay out.

No matter what kind of stocks you invest in, you should take care to spread your money out across the five main economic sectors: Finance, Utilities, Consumer, Resources & Commodities, and Manufacturing & Industry.

By diversifying across most if not all of the five sectors, you avoid overloading yourself with stocks that are about to slump simply because of industry conditions or investor fashion.

You also increase your chances of stumbling upon a market superstar—a stock that does two to three or more times better than the market average.

Our three-part Successful Investor strategy:

  1. Invest mainly in well-established companies
  2. Spread your money out across most if not all of the five main economic sectors (Finance, Utilities, Consumer, Resources & Commodities, and Manufacturing & Industry.)
  3. Downplay or avoid stocks in the broker/media limelight.

Note: This article was originally published in 2012 and has been updated. Here is the most recent version that ran at TSINetwork.caPermalink: http://www.tsinetwork.ca/?p=53526

Pat McKeough has been one of Canada’s most respected investment advisors for over three decades. He is the founder and senior editor of TSI Network and the founder of Successful Investor Wealth Management. He is also the author of several acclaimed investment books.