Buy and Hold: How to
Perpetuate Your Investment Losses
By Ulli G. Niemann
A recent cartoon in my
daily newspaper showed two guys sitting in a bar. One is saying to the
other: “I did learn something from my broker...how to diversify my
investment losses.”
While this struck me as
funny, there is certainly an element of truth to it judging by the
number of tragic e-mails and phone calls I have received over the past
couple of years.
This was brought home
even more so by a reader who responded with strong disagreement to one
of my articles. I advocate a methodical, disciplined approach to
investing in no-load mutual funds. It keeps me invested during up
markets and on the sidelines during down markets. It was exactly this
approach that got me and my clients out of the market in October, 2000
and put us back in to take advantage of the April, 2003 upswing.
Judging from the
reader’s e-mail it appears that he works for a major bank and is
adamant about Buy & Hold and Dollar Cost Averaging. Maybe it's the
approach he has chosen and he doesn't like hearing that the emperor is
wearing no clothes. Nothing personal, honestly, but I find it
incomprehensible that anyone, after the bear market and the financial
disasters most people experienced, can even consider such theories.
The results are just too black & white.
Here are his three main
points:
1. "There is no
real feasible way to know whether the market is going to be up or down
and when exactly to invest.
2. "The only
logical way for an investor to make money is through the buy and hold
approach. This method is used by Warren Buffett and he has
consistently beaten the best with an average annual return of 29%.
3. "Dollar cost
average helps to hedge against the ups and downs of the market;
moreover, one should have been buying up stocks during the last 3
years, though I do agree with your cashing out at in 2000. I do not
wish to insult you, but that seems to me more luck than
intuition."
It appears that the only
thing that I can agree with him on is, as he says, there is no
reasonable way to "know" whether the market is going to be
up or down. However, this statement also underscores that he is not
familiar with trend tracking methodologies and the idea that one does
not need to "know" or "predict" in order to make
profitable investment decisions.
I've put together the
composite for my trend tracking index in the 80s and it has
consistently served me and my clients well by getting us into and out
of the markets in a timely manner.
The reader cites Warren
Buffett's success. Sure, he is legendary, but remember that he made
most of his fortune during one of the greatest bull markets. He is
probably now considered beyond good and evil. But what about the
numerous stories in the press over the past 3 years of the heavy
losses he sustained in Coca Cola and other stocks, by stubbornly
holding on to this positions. When you have enough money invested in a
wide range of holdings, you become almost bullet proof. Do you fit in
that category?
Furthermore, Buffet has
resources available that the investing public simply does not have.
Saying that he is successful only because of his buy and hold
approach, and everyone following this technique will be too, is an
oversimplification and does not factor in all the issues.
How many
non-millionaires have enough spare capital to keep buying and holding
and buying some more while stocks plummet? How long can they wait for
the upswing when their cost-averaged holdings will start to show a
profit? Do the math! Yes, the market will eventually turn up. But will
it recover enough fast enough to reverse your losses in time to do you
any real good? If you're 20, then maybe. If you're 60, who knows?
I have received
countless e-mails and phone calls from individuals who have been led
astray by brokers, financial planners and others using buy-and-hold
and dollar cost averaging. Stories abound of retirees having to go
back to work just because someone told them that "the market
can't go any lower" or "let's dollar cost average."
As for his last point,
when I gave the signal to cash out on October 13, 2000, it had nothing
to do with either luck or intuition. I had no clue how good of a call
that would be; I simply let my indicators be my guide. They pointed to
a sell, we considered, and then followed through based on our
experience. We held true to our philosophy and kept our emotions,
speculations, fears or greed out of the equation. This disciplined
approach is what I advocate.
This year it has led us
to buy back into the market on 4/29/03. And my detailed analysis and
evaluation of a range of funds led us to select some of the best; my
top fund being up some 50%.
So, not to be cynical,
but to me dollar cost averaging is just a way to spread the pain over
a longer period of time and to cloud the obvious with the hope the
market will turn around tomorrow. After all, it can't go any lower.
Can it?
© Ulli G. Niemann