The Individual Investor’s Plight: Trust Your Equipment
Last week, I had to chaperone my son’s sixth-grade class on a trip to an environmental learning center. One of the activities was climbing 30 feet in the air and navigating a ropes course amongst the treetops. Finishing with a zip line was exhilarating. But before we even went up, the instructor spent a lot of time on our safety equipment. He wanted the kids to feel safe and trust their equipment so that they could forget about that part and focus on overcoming their fears. It struck me that all of us need to trust our equipment a little more in life.
We all listen to reports about how Wall Street, hedge funds, big investors or even endowments invest their money. The assumption is that they know what they are doing, so we should follow their lead. Carl Richards recently talked about why individual investors should not invest like Harvard, pointing out that each of us does not have $32 billion and cannot invest 10% ($3 billion) to alternative categories that require that level of capital to access. Most important, individuals do not have the same research and resources as Harvard (or any big investor).
Getting caught up in the excitement of a story should not be the reason to make an investment. Most people will not spend the time and money necessary to research investments. Nor are they able to call the CFO of a company and ask him pointed questions. That is okay; individual investors should be willing to accept that there are certain investments that they should just not worry about. Once you accept that there are many investments that you should not be in, usually because you fundamentally don’t understand them, then you can move on to the thin slice of investing that you can understand.
I am not suggesting that one size fits all when it comes to investing. I know plenty of people who invest in individual stocks and eschew mutual funds because they have the time for the research (and the reverse is also true). Others might really understand the underlying assumptions of a particular annuity contract or hedge fund and how that helps them in their goals, while many will not. The key is to understand which of these people you are. I would argue that simplifying is a better answer than adding complexity. But once you understand how much work you really want to put into the investing equation, it is time to trust your equipment.
Trusting your equipment is the hard part because we are prone to second guessing. Yet questioning your equipment when you are 30 feet in the air is the wrong time to do it. The biggest mistake I see people make is buying an investment today for a well-thought-out goal milestone b requirements years down the road, and then second guessing that investment in a month when some short-term news comes out that shakes their confidence. Good equipment should always be checked when you are …