The long-running Dalbar Financial Services study shows that funds routinely deliver bigger returns than investors actually get, because individuals only buy after a rise or sell after a decline. (MarketWatch)
What would also make an interesting study is to see how these decisions are correlated with the financial press headlines. True financial journalism is rare with most mainstream news happy to pump the market up and wish for better times when it dives. There is rarely any real analysis, especially on TV - you have to look online to find that.
All of this is in the context of the current market rally. Is this time to get back in? The simple answer is that, if you haven't done so already, then don't do it now! The S&P 500 is now sandwiched between its 200-day and 50-day moving averages. As the two indicators move towards each other there will come a crunch point. Is this a sucker's rally or the real thing? That will be the time to tell. Don't add to Dalbar's statistics. This is perhaps a good time to sit down and think of a real investment strategy. There are many strategies that work, you just have to find the one that's right for you, your level of assets and your time commitments. The worst strategy is to follow the news!
11 Apr 2009
Avoid the News, Find an Investment Strategy
10 Apr 2009
Ruff Rides the Rally with Caution
Ruff Times, edited by veteran Howard Ruff, is up 20.4% over the year to date through March, according to the Hulbert Financial Digest's count, compared to a negative 10.56% for the dividend-reinvested Dow Jones Wilshire 5000.
Ruff wrote recently: "The stock market has made a dead-cat bounce, even though the returns are spectacular for short-term investors, which I am not. The long-term problem with the stock market is two-fold: 1) its earnings will decline as business sags deeper and deeper into this recession which will depress stock-market prices; and 2) the price/earnings ratio (PE) is still way above the typical PE at the bottom of bear markets. The stock market will have its ups and downs and literally suck Wall Street investors into short-term rallies as they try to pick 'the bottom.'" (MarketWatch)
Ruff's conclusion: "Sell into these rallies. The stock market is toxic and will be for several years."
Well there's confidence for you! And this from a guy who's made 20% during the last year.