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Updated 27 Dec, 2015 11:27am

How to become a better investor

NEW YORK: It’s that time of year when the media is filled with all manner of terrible investing advice:

“10 ETFs to own in 2016!”

“Give up lattes to get your budget in order.”

“The stocks/sectors/countries you MUST invest in!”

“Who was the best mutual fund manager of the year?”

And that’s before we even get into the forecasts by some guru who is purporting to tell you where the market and economy and Apple and oil and gold and your favourite stock will be next year. How did following that guy’s advice work out last year — not so great, right?

I offer you none of that: no stock picks, no predictions, no economic analysis.

Note I am not going to tell you to “buy this, sell that.” I can’t for the simple reason I have no idea who you are, what your financial goals are, what taxes you owe, what you earn, how much you have saved and how old you are. Without knowing those factors (and other relevant information), how can anyone tell you what is right for you?

Instead, I am going to share 10 ideas with you. Follow them, and you will be a better all-around investor. Bonus: Everything on this list is broadly applicable to other endeavours.

  1. Write out your investment philosophy: How can you put your money at risk in the capital markets if you do not have a philosophy you can articulate? It should be short and easily understood. You would be surprised at how many investors don’t have one.

I’ll give you a start with my own investment philosophy: I own a broadly diversified portfolio of low-cost global indices in various asset classes and I rebalance them regularly.

That’s the short version; the longer version explains the advantages of indexing, why keeping costs low and diversification are important, etc.

Now you try.

  1. History teaches us: What has the market done? How long do bull and bear markets usually last? How far can they go? How do they begin and end?

We spend a lot of time around the office looking at historical data, running regression analyses to see what the past has looked like: What happened when rates rose from very low levels with low inflation? What is the actual average valuation across time? What happens when markets become narrow with fewer stocks participating? What does a bad year in the bond market look like?

Very often, the market behaviour that people seem to think is unique is really quite ordinary.

  1. How can you better understand money? Over the years I have come to think of money as a tool; it allows me to buy the necessities, as well as security, comfort, memories and the occasional toy.

I obtain money by trading for it with my time, which is a (very) finite resource. Many people do not seem to understand what money can and cannot buy for you. Some do not realize how expensive it is to buy money with their time.

  1. What am I getting wrong? Simple fact: You will be wrong, quite often and, occasionally, quite spectacularly.

The key to being wrong well is to not waste it.

Ask yourself three questions: What do I not realize I am wrong about? What ways can I identify errors and avoid blind spots in the future? And, perhaps most important of all: What can I learn from my mistakes?

Do these three things and you will be smarter than 90 per cent of the people you meet over the next year.

  1. Become comfortable with basic math and statistics: You cannot be an investor and not have a basic facility with numbers. You have to be able to review your own investment returns, understand what is owed to you via dividends and bonds, review your quarterly statements, and be able to discern how well or poorly you are doing.

You have to be able to calculate how much money you are going to need to live on once you stop working. You need to figure out compounded returns, discount the effects of inflation and determine a percentage annual draw off of that nest egg.

  1. How many books did I read last year? Which books should I read?

Think about the 10 people you would like to learn from; then go read their books in 2016. Or, alternatively, try this: Ask 10 people you admire what the best book they read last year was, and that’s your annual reading list. (I’ll give you a head start. My favorite in 2015 was “Last Ape Standing: The Seven-Million-Year Story of How and Why We Survived” by Chip Walter.)

  1. Understand human psychology: Speaking of which, the myriad ways in which people react to external and internal stimuli help to explain why the markets have been topsy-turvy.

By arrangement with The Washington Post

Published in Dawn, December 27th, 2015

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