How To Become A Terrible Investor

Published in Investing Strategy on 3 February 2010

Seven things that'll guarantee you end up on the poor farm.

In a commencement address years ago, Berkshire Hathaway co-chairman Charlie Munger evoked the late US comedian Johnny Carson, noting that Carson "couldn't tell the graduating class how to be happy, but he could tell them from personal experience how to guarantee misery."

This theme -- studying failure rather than success -- is common for Munger. His past talks have recommended avoiding cocaine, "AIDS situations," venereal disease, ingesting chemicals, and racing trains to the track as ways to gain happiness. All great advice, but of little use here.

Investors are inundated with advice on how to effortlessly become wealthy and successful. Much of it is nonsense. Studying what makes investors fail miserably will likely be far more informative, prescient, and timeless.

In no order of importance, here are seven things you can do to guarantee you'll become a terrible investor.

1. Use lots of leverage

Mae West said, "Too much of a good thing can be wonderful." Some investors look at her advice and think, hey, if I've found a great investment, why not leverage up and get two, three, or four times the goodness?

I'll go out on a limb and say that the only individual investors who consistently profit with leverage do so through pure chance.

For one thing, margin debt (money borrowed from a broker to buy investments) comes with a very high cost of capital -- typically 7%-10% -- which, not surprisingly, is at or above the average market return.

Second, margin holds you hostage to time and temperament. If you leverage a margin account 2-to-1, a 50% drop will wipe you out. Game over. Insert more pound coins. 

And as we learned over the past two years, even high-profile names like Barclays (LSE: BARC), Punch Taverns (LSE: PUB), and William Hill (LSE: WMH) can fall 50% or more in horrifyingly short periods of time.

2. Hire a commissioned financial advisor

A good friend used to invest on her own. But after she lost interest, she hired a commissioned financial advisor instead. That's an admirable step in humility, but a dangerous one nonetheless.

She asked me to look at her new, post-advisor portfolio. Not surprisingly, it now consists exclusively of front-end-loaded funds, churned on a pretty regular basis. Some funds command front-end fees of 5%, on top of annual management fees of 1%-2%.

The only person who wins in this situation is the broker. To quote Munger again, "Most stockbrokers are a disaster waiting to happen."

3. Surround yourself with people who agree with you

Munger likes to emphasise the work method of Charles Darwin, who spent a better part of his life trying to prove himself wrong. As Munger notes, "He always gave priority attention to evidence tending to disconfirm whatever cherished and hard-won theory he already had." Most investors can't say the same.

If you want to guarantee you'll learn precisely nothing, converse with people who share your same views and agree with everything you say. That'll do it. If you read about the executive culture at companies like Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns, and Royal Bank of Scotland (LSE: RBS), you'll find that hubris and undue self-confidence were huge causes of their downfalls.

Before making an investment, one of the smartest things you can do is find someone who thinks you're absolutely nuts, and hear him or her out with an open mind.

4. Follow the herd

At every second of every day in every market, there's a trend du jour. Sometimes it's megabullish. Sometimes it's end-of-the-world bearish. Sometimes it's oil. Sometimes it's gold. Sometimes it's Avatar and Susan Boyle.

In any case, if it's extremely popular, it's probably dangerous. One of the most ironclad rules of the world is that an investment's future return is inversely correlated to its current popularity.

Take gold right now. Bullish investors are throwing out forecasts of $2,000, $5,000, even $8,000 an ounce. I have no idea whether they're right (nor do they), but it wouldn't surprise me. Markets do extraordinary things.

But I will guarantee with 100% certainty that most gold investors will end up losing big time. Why? Because most will pile in near the top, right at the peak of exuberance.

That's when investing feels the best. That's when your bullish thoughts have been vindicated. That's when everyone you know is buying. That's when you know you can't be wrong. But it's a false sense of security, and it always ends in tears. The history of bubbles proves this over and over and over again.

5. Assume you're invincible

Tell yourself you're the next Warren Buffett. Tell yourself you're a genius. Assume your predictions can't be off, and that you're the seer of all things financial. 

Set up your portfolio so that every one of your assumptions must come true, but take comfort in knowing that being wrong is doubtful. 

Assume markets are predictable and move in clear, coherent ways. Brag a lot. Look in the mirror constantly. You'll become a terrible investor in no time.

6. Have a concentrated portfolio

Warren Buffett has said, "Diversification is a protection against ignorance." This is true if you're Warren Buffett, but potentially lethal for investors with less aptitude or those who take his comment to the extreme.

Now, not everyone should be in index tracking funds that mimic the market. Individual investors can find good shares -- that's what The Motley Fool is all about.

But overconfidence, combined with a manic market, combined with over-allocation, is a brutal trifecta. Factors beyond your control or above your understanding can, and will, trash what look like great investments.

BT Group (LSE: BT-A) is a good example. Most people equate BT with the most conservative, tried-and-true blue chip that Grandma could hold forever. Ditto for British Airways (LSE: BAY). And Marks & Spencer (LSE: MKS). Then the financial crisis hit, and snap ... all three fell around 50%.

Bad things happen to good companies, and investors with extreme concentration in any investment are setting themselves up for misery.

7. Don't invest

Stay in cash your entire life because you're afraid of the market. This is the easiest way to become a terrible investor and watch your purchasing power slowly vanish before your eyes.

Moving on

Becoming a terrible investor is easy. Learning from your mistakes is the hard part, but if you can master that, you can master the incredibly rewarding art of investing.

More on the economy and the markets:

> If you're in the market for buying shares, consider opening an online broker account with The Motley Fool's Share Dealing Service. You can buy and sell shares in real time for a flat rate of just £10. Click here to find out how you can open an account for free today. There is no obligation to trade.

> A version of this article, written by Morgan Housel, was originally published on Fool.com. It has been updated by Bruce Jackson, who has an interest in Berkshire Hathaway.

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Comments

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lotontech 03 Feb 2010 , 10:02am

I agree with 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7, but not necessarily with 1 and 6. I have a few constructive comments to make...

(1) Use Lots of Leverage

The leveraged spread betting firm(s) I use typically charge LIBOR + 3% for overnight financing, which therefore isn't 7%-10% as stated.

"Chance" is an important factor in trading whether leveraged or not. With only 50-50 luck you can still make a profit as long as each winning trade is bigger than each losing trade, which leads me on to...

A good leveraged trader would never hold on for a 50% decline. With a well-placed Stop Order you can reduce your downside risk while still benefitting from the 2x leverage (or higher) on the upside.

Quote: "And as we learned over the past two years, even high-profile names like Barclays (LSE: BARC), Punch Taverns (LSE: PUB), and William Hill (LSE: WMH) can fall 50% or more in horrifyingly short periods of time."

Should not have held on to them then! And as we also learned in the past two years, companies like those can rise by 100%+ in horrifyingly short periods of time ;-) Imagine having leveraged those gains!!!!

You are right to point out that LEVERAGE CAN BE DANGEROUS, but so can CARS... if you don't know how to drive.

(6) Have a concentrated portfolio

It may be ok to "have all your eggs in one basket" -- if you watch the basket carefully! Which doesn't mean sitting at a computer screen as long you have those Stop Orders in place.

By placing all our money in a FTSE index tracker, we are in a sense putting all our eggs in one basket anyway because we can't separately lock-in the gains on the individual constituents. We can only buy or sell the whole thing. The indexing strategy should protect against a total wipeout, but will severly limit gains unless we employ an element of "market timing" rather than holding blindly forever.

-- Well, I've tried to be constructive.

Iniq 04 Feb 2010 , 4:01pm

Outside the world of finance, item 3 also applies to eco-fundamentalist campaigners like Friends of Green Earthpiece, who (in contrast to Charles Dawin, a consummate scientist), instead of welcoming a challenge to their viewpoint as an opportunity to consolidate their research, try to shout down any dissenting voices.

rober00 04 Feb 2010 , 5:14pm

Iniq - Could not agree with you more!! However the consequence seems to be that their chickens are finally coming home to roost.

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