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One thing I have noticed repeatedly over the years about successful investors is
that they have a clear sense of their goals and how they are going to reach those goals.
But investors who are confused about what they are doing experience stress, uncertainty
and emotional strains that sometimes lead them into decisions that are, at best,
unproductive-and often disastrous.
One dictionary definition of investing is the act of committing money
or effort in order to gain future profit or interest. That's a good
start, but it's so broad that it covers just about anything you could
do with money, including the purchase of lottery tickets (which I would
classify as gambling rather than investing). When most of us use the
word investing, we think of making a long-term commitment in order to
achieve a long-term gain. That's different from speculating, which
implies short-term commitment for short-term gain.
To use an example from my home town of Seattle, if tomorrow morning you
call your broker and buy 200 shares of stock in Boeing because you
believe it will go up $4 or $5 a share next week when profits or new
airline orders are announced, you are speculating. But what if you call
your broker tomorrow and buy 200 shares of Boeing stock because you
believe the company's management and products will outperform those of
the competition over the next decade? In that case, you are clearly an
investor. Notice that the action is exactly the same: buying 200 shares
of Boeing stock. But the dynamics of the transactions are entirely
different. These two buyers have different goals, different
expectations, different tolerance for stock volatility and different
levels of interest in what the company is or is not doing.
Now let's suppose a third person calls a broker tomorrow and buys 200
shares of Boeing because he notices the stock is rising and he intends
to stick with it as long as the upward movement continues. But he also
plans to dump the stock as soon as it starts going down, and maybe
he'll get back in later when Boeing stock is in an uptrend again. Would
you call this third buyer a speculator? I wouldn't. I'd call this a
case of an investor using a strategy akin to market timing.
IS MARKET TIMING AN INVESTMENT?
Some people think market timers are speculators instead of
investors, and in a way they are right. If being a long-term investor
means committing money to a particular fund or stock and leaving it
there through thick and thin, then market timers don't fit the
definition. Most of us think of investing as acquiring a stake in the
future of something, whether it's a company, a mutual fund or an
economy like that of the United States.
If that is your picture of an investor, then buying something on Monday
and selling it on Friday creates some understandable confusion. Buying
a stock or a fund with the intention of keeping it for the long haul
regardless of the ups and downs along the way is a relatively passive
approach. Once your decision is made, there's not much left to do.
But when you start timing the markets, you are not passive at all. You
might buy a fund one week and sell it the next, only to buy it back two
weeks later. You may have made a long-term commitment to invest in the
U.S. equity market, but if your plan includes timing to enhance your
returns and protect yourself from losses, your actions may not look or
feel much like those of a long-term investor. Personally, I think
investing with market timing is quite a bit like running a business.
A TALE OF TWO BROTHERS
Imagine two brothers who each inherit $400,000 on the same day. The
first brother has a passion for art. He has carefully studied the art
market and thinks he has a good eye for choosing pieces that will
eventually become much more valuable as their attributes are
recognized. One by one, this brother acquires such pieces of art,
intending to hold onto them for as long as necessary to achieve what he
sees as their true potential value. This behavior could certainly be
called investing, and it is similar to a real buy-and-hold strategy.
Now imagine the second brother using his $400,000 to buy new inventory
for his clothing store. (You could think of this brother having the
last name Nordstrom if you like!) Brother #2 buys pants and shirts and
shoes, as an investment according to our dictionary definition, but
intending to mark them up and sell them for quick profits. If some of
the merchandise doesn't sell, what will he do? Will he put those unsold
shoes and pants into a warehouse hoping that someday they will become
fashionable? No, at least not if he's a good enough businessman to be
worthy of the name Nordstrom! He'll mark those goods down and move them
out one way or another to make room for something new.
These two brothers could both be called investors. Each has committed
money to something he believes he can sell at a higher price. Each (we
shall assume) has made his decisions wisely, not recklessly. But the
two brothers will have very different concerns and needs as investors.
The brother who bought pieces of art does not need to be concerned
about day-by-day fluctuations in the art market. He may watch the
trends and keep up on what buyers and sellers are doing. He will
probably watch for news of sales or releases of other works by the
artists whose pieces he has purchased. But he does not need to receive
this news every day or even every week and certainly not every hour.
This brother's concerns will be more long-term in nature. For instance,
he will want to make certain his works of art are properly stored and
insured. And he will want to monitor and perhaps even nurture the
reputations of the artists whose works he owns.
The brother who runs a store, on the other hand, is affected by the
market and the competition every day. If the store down the street puts
the same (or very similar) clothing on special, he needs to know about
it immediately. If sales of these styles suddenly go up or down, he
will need to react very quickly to maximize his profits and avoid being
stuck with racks filled with yesterday's fashions or to avoid running
out of hot-selling merchandise just when demand reaches a fever pitch.
So this brother's need for information is much different.
The brothers' different needs mean they can tolerate different
mistakes. The art collector cannot afford to make many mistakes in
choosing his collection. If he buys 50 or 60 pieces over a long period
of time, each one carries a relatively heavy burden of the weight of
his whole portfolio. However, once his major concerns such as storage
and insurance are addressed, he can afford to neglect his investments
for awhile because he is not relying on daily or weekly market
activity. The store owner can afford to make a few more mistakes in
selecting and pricing his merchandise, because his inventory will turn
over (he hopes) rapidly and clothing can always be marked down for
quick liquidation. However, he cannot afford any lapse in his knowledge
of what his competitors, customers and suppliers are doing. He needs
information on a daily basis and sometimes even more often than that.
BACK TO INVESTING
I think there's a strong parallel here with investing. In many ways,
true buy-and-hold investors are like the art collector. They spend a
lot of time choosing what they will own, and they stick with their
choices through thick and thin. They cannot afford to make many
mistakes in selection. But if they choose well, give their investments
lots of time and don't let interim market fluctuations pressure them
into abandoning their plans, they have a high probability of eventual
success. While they would be wise to keep an eye on their investments,
they do not need to check the prices every day or even every week.
Ideally, they combine thoughtful and careful selection with patience
and a long-term view that is at least somewhat immune to the emotional
swings of the market. In some ways, they could be called agrarian, with
the attitudes of farmers who plant carefully, tend their crops and wait
for the harvest.
Market timers, on the other hand, are more like the store owner who
buys 1,000 pairs of pants and hopes to turn them over quickly to eager
customers. These investors have to watch the market daily (some watch
it by the minute, but our systems, thank goodness, require pricing
information only once a day). They must be nimble and quick, without
any emotional attachment to the buying decisions they have made. Like
the store owner, they must be willing to part with those pants
instantly or to buy more, depending on the dictates of the market.
Investors who use market timing, in other words, are in the business of
actively buying and selling assets as market conditions change.
WHY THIS MATTERS
This difference is important because which camp you are in
determines what you need to worry about and what you don't. The store
owner would be foolish to worry about whether the pants and shirts in
his inventory will deteriorate in quality if left in his unheated
warehouse for 10 years. However, that would be a vital concern to an
art collector. Likewise, the art collector would be wasting his time
following every daily blip in the prices collectors are paying for art;
if he has chosen well, he can be confident that the pieces he owns will
eventually be worth substantially more than he paid for them. He will
make relatively few decisions, but each one will be extremely
important.
If you're an investor, you'll be much more likely to succeed if you
know which camp you are in. If you're a buy-and-hold type, you'll
attach much less urgency to the information you get and the decisions
you make. You won't worry much about every economic or market forecast.
And you'll be able to ignore the inordinate attention that the media
pays to the Dow Jones Industrial average. But if you're a market timer,
you'll know that every day your portfolio is on the line, and you'll be
ready to either sell out or buy more. You will make lots of decisions,
and make them often. You will know in advance that many of your
decisions will probably turn out to be the wrong decisions; but you are
confident that you'll be able to recover from your mistakes and that
your good decisions will overcome your bad ones.
IS MARKET TIMING MORAL?
If you are a buy-and-hold investor, you may believe you are
investing in a company or a national or regional economy, expressing
your confidence in it while you help it grow. Even though that is
rarely the case, the thought is satisfying to many investors who feel
they are achieving some moral high ground by "investing in America,"
helping create jobs or loyally "rewarding a company" for its products,
service or environmental practices.
But market timers can't afford any such thoughts of loyalty. They can't
afford to care about the underlying businesses they own. They believe
there are periods when the markets advance and other periods when the
markets decline-and their job is simply to find ways to exploit those
periods at the expense of other investors who are less astute.
I have seen many investors try market timing only to find they dislike
the stress of a daily discipline. While a buy-and-hold investor makes
few decisions, the market timer makes a new decision every day to
either get in or get out. Even what looks like no decision at all-doing
nothing-is really a decision to stay in or stay out.
I have seen just as many people who think they are buy-and-hold
investors make buying and selling decisions at market extremes. They
often buy near market peaks and sell at or near the market bottoms. The
former activity is driven by greed, the latter by fear. Both of those
emotions have their place...but they usually lead investors in exactly
the wrong direction. You can watch for the signs of a frantic market
when supposedly long-term investors start paying a lot of attention to
daily activity.
DO YOU HEAR A SIGNAL, OR JUST NOISE?
Every day, an enormous amount of information and data is available
to us, each piece seeming to scream for our attention. But one person
can absorb only so much and we have to screen much of it before we can
even process it. If you know what "business" you are in as an investor,
it's not hard to figure out what to pay attention to and what to filter
out as "noise." But if you're confused about what you have undertaken,
you'll have trouble distinguishing the signal from the noise.
If you are a long-term investor with a buy-and-hold approach, the daily
headlines and the hourly fluctuations in the markets are primarily
noise that you should filter out. You can and should keep your eyes and
ears open, of course, because when your money is invested you can't
afford to completely neglect it. But for you, the really important
"signals" are longer-term trends in the economy, society and the
industries or companies in which you have invested.
But if you are a market timer, you must keep your ear to the ground
every day. The longer-term trends may be interesting, but they will
rarely have an impact on your investment decisions. For you, the very
long-term trends in the economy are mostly noise, and you can safely
pay little attention to them. For you, the "signal" to watch for is
daily activity, especially daily changes in prices of securities and
funds.
I am convinced that one reason so many people fail at being market
timers is that they don't have the temperament for it, and they don't
understand that they are engaged in an active business of buying and
selling goods. And I'm equally convinced that many people fail at
buy-and-hold investing because they don't understand it. They try to
time their investments using emotions and hunches and tips, instead of
simply doing what a buy-and-hold investor should do: buy and hold.
KNOW THE RULES
The rules for these two kinds of investing are quite different. If
you get confused and try to play by two sets of rules, you're likely to
find that investing is a hard, confusing-and often
unprofitable-occupation. But if you know what you're doing and keep the
rules straight, you're likely to succeed, whichever path you take. And
you'll sleep better too, knowing how to deal with the barrage of
information, choices and advice you face constantly.
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