While there are no real, sure-fire ways to ensure your investments make you money, there are certainly some sure-fire ways to increase the odds of losing it.
1. Constantly switch from the fund you are in to the latest number one
At the root of this kind of behaviour is the
regret of having missed out on last year’s winner. Investors often feel
compelled to switch to the most recent top performing fund in order to
neutralise their sense of loss. The dilemma is that some top performing funds
do indeed continue performing for many years. However, almost all funds with
excellent long term track records have at some point experienced periods of
underperformance, sometimes for a year or longer.
The investors who stuck it out would have been
well off in the long run, and avoided a capital gains tax event which would
have eroded their capital base unnecessarily.
2. Focus on short-term performance
With unit trust funds pricing daily and a
constant drip-feed of information coming our way, it is easy to forget that the
more short-term and regular the information is, the more randomness and noise
it contains. Performance should only be assessed over the appropriate measurement
periods, which means you have to have a financial plan that takes into account
your own horizon and match that to the funds you are invested in.
3. Sell out of your long-term investment in the middle of a market correction
Often investors sell out of an investment when the market is going or has gone down. This provides a short term sense of relief, but can also lead to losses being locked in. Remember, until you actually sell your investment your losses are only on paper.
If you and your adviser are genuinely concerned
about markets, there are other ways to manage the risk of a temporary market
setback. If you have many years of monthly contributions ahead of you, this in
itself will reduce the impact of market volatility on your investment over
time. So you can either continue taking this measured approach, or you can
invest future flows, at least for a while, into something less volatile such as
a stable fund.
4. Try to time the markets
Despite so much evidence to the contrary, many
investors believe that they can time the market. A sure way to lose out on the
effect of the long-term compounding of your returns that results from d time in
growth assets is to keep a lump sum aside waiting for the mythical “right time”
to invest. Make sure you have a plan, and consider phasing in gradually when
things are uncertain.
These are four ways in which the average
investor can be pretty sure of losing money in their investment portfolios. On
the other hand, by avoiding these common mistakes the odds will increase
considerably that you will have better returns over the long-term. Get the odds
in your favour.