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The Most Important Determinant of Investment
Returns
By Larry
Swedroe, Contributing Writer
Financial economists have demonstrated that the most important
determinant of a portfolio's return is its asset allocation - the
exposure to equity (and within equities the exposure to the risk
factors of size and value) and fixed income (and within fixed income
the exposure to the risk factors of duration and credit quality)
assets. However, the most important determinant of the return realized
by investors is most likely not the asset allocation decision, but
is instead the discipline to adhere to a well-thought-out investment
plan.
The noise of the market and human emotions often cause investors
to stray from the game plan, inevitably leading to investment mistakes
- typically buying high and selling low. During bull markets greed,
envy, overconfidence, and confusing skill with luck often cause
the loss of discipline. Investors also make the mistake of recency:
projecting the most recent past indefinitely into the future as
if it is preordained. Ignoring the complete historical record leads
investors to jump on the bandwagon of yesterday's winners (buying
high), and to abandon the ship of yesterday's losers (selling low).
Not exactly the best recipe for financial success.
The endless noise thrown off by the market is a very difficult thing
for most investors to ignore, be it the roar of the bull or the
growl of the bear. But the pain of bear markets is especially difficult
to ignore because the losses are real, compared to the "missed
opportunities" investors lament during bull markets.
Another common "human error" in investing is overconfidence.
It is my experience that most investors overstate their own tolerance
for risk and losses. These brash souls often have a higher equity
allocation than they really should. They believe they can stand
the pain of a fifty percent or more market decline, yet when it
actually happens they often find out too late that they don't have
the stomach for it. Even if they resist the panic enough not to
sell, portfolio losses can become a constant source of distraction
and worry. And life's too short to not enjoy it.
Another mistake that often leads to too much equity risk is treating
the highly unlikely as impossible. Though investors may know that
terrible bear markets caused huge losses in 1929 and again in 1973,
they simply treat the possibility of that type event occurring again
as so unlikely as to be impossible (so they ignore it). Even in
the face of the losses experienced by Japanese investors since 1989,
most U.S. investors were probably ignoring the possibility of the
kind of losses the Nasdaq has experienced since March 2000 - a seventy
percent drop. Treating the highly unlikely as impossible leads to
taking more equity risk than an investor can tolerate when the bear
inevitably emerges from hibernation. Again more sleepless nights,
ulcers - and unfortunately panic selling, usually at the absolute
worst time.
All strategists know a well-thought-out plan is a necessary condition
of success. The primary initial objectives in planning should be
a thorough consideration of: the ability to take risk (determined
by the length of the investment horizon and the stability of income),
the willingness to take risk (with care taken not to overestimate
the tolerance for risk), and the need to take risk (with a good
rule being to not take more risk than is necessary to achieve your
goals).
However, the best plan in the world means zilch unless an investor
has the discipline to ignore the noise of the market and the emotions
generated by that noise, to adhere to the plan, and only rebalance
and tax loss harvest as needed. Paying attention to the daily market
dramatics can cause our emotions to take over. There is an old saying
from sports that is particularly relevant here: The best trades
are often the ones you don't make.
08/23/2002
Larry Swedroe is the author of What Wall Street Doesn't Want
You to Know and The Only Guide To A Winning Investment Strategy
You Will Ever Need. His latest book, Rational
Investing In Irrational Times, How to Avoid the Costly Mistakes
Even Smart People Make Today, was published in June by St.
Martins Press. Larry is also the Director of Research for and a
Principal of both Buckingham Asset Management, Inc. and BAM Advisor
Services in St. Louis, Missouri. However, his opinions and comments
expressed within this column are his own, and may not accurately
reflect those of Buckingham Asset Management or BAM Advisor Services.
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