Why Amateurs Should & Shouldn't Invest in Common Stocks

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#1
Why Amateurs Should Invest in Common Stocks
by David Merkel

There is a benefit to investing directly in common stocks as an individual. I’ll let Buffett help me explain this:

“I am a better investor because I am a businessman and I am a better businessman because I am an investor.”

My own life is one of having been an amateur investor, and became a professional investor over time. My mother is an excellent amateur investor, one whose record would put 90%+ of professionals to shame. I know some great amateur investors, but they are not the norm. If they were the norm, we would not have lots of financial intermediaries trolling for business.

After yesterday’s piece, I want to say that though most amateur investors do not beat index funds, there is still one big reason to buy individual common stocks: it can make you a better businessman.

As an example, I had never worked in a marketing department in my life, but because of my investing, and study of marketing on the side, I was able to lead a revamp of a marketing department, leading to a threefold increase in sales in five years. Return on equity went from 10% to 50%, aided by the booming stock market of the ’90s, but that was only a help.

Technical specialists have to ask, “Do I want to remain a technical specialist, assuming that I have that option, or do I want to broaden my skill set and learn the economics of the business that I serve?” Those that invest in stocks, and study them carefully learn practical economics. You may earn money or you may not. You may beat the market or you may not. But you will become a more valuable employee, because you will grasp more and more about what makes your company tick economically.

I can tell you that while I was in insurance, the brightest move I made was investing in stocks privately, and studying equity and bond investment intensively. It made me more valuable to my bosses, and helped me understand my own company better. It made me better in interviews as well. Questions that were designed to see if I could think beyond my narrow specialty became easier for me.

Now, some of the successes came with failures. For a while, I told my kids never to mention the name “Caldor” to me. Yeh, Michael Price may have lost a billion on that one, but I more than took my licks. Until you lose a decent amount, you don’t really understand how the market works. You can call it market tuition, but like tuition at college, you don’t know how much value you will get out of what you have paid.

I encourage new investors to paper-trade. I did that when I was young. It allows you to experiment and learn about what you think works in the market, without consequences. I think it helps ease the transition into investing. When you start investing, your emotions will be a lot higher, but it helps a lot to have a guiding theory going into it, it helps control the emotions that will come. It took me 5-10 years to discipline my emotions, and think about markets rationally, not emotionally.

So, there are benefits to investing in individual common stocks, but they may not be the ones you expected. It will help you understand your business better, your industry better, and perhaps even your nation and the world.

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But, this is not to say that if you act as a bettor, rather than an investor, that you will benefit. Think of Buffett’s quote above — business and investing go together. Inside a corporation, one of the highest levels of what is done is the investing. Buffett looks for businesses that will throw off gross profits well in excess of financing costs — that is different than most investors think, because Buffett is a businessman.

For budding businessmen, you could ask where business value is growing the most rapidly relative to the price that you pay — Earnings relative to price helps but there are sometimes aspects of businesses where growth in value does not reflect in the earnings statement.

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And, all of this is not to say that professionals do better than amateurs. Professionals don’t do well, and they add on fees.

There is one area where professionals seem to do better, but I could be wrong. If I am wrong, could someone send me some research? As I pointed out yesterday, amateur investors tend to become greedy and fearful at the wrong times. Professionals seem to be less prone to this problem, perhaps because of discipline.

As Baruch commented at my blog:

I think it is also something you can learn, because so much of investing skill is not innate, in my opinion, rather it really comes from an attitude, and an act of will. Discipline comes from will. The rest comes from a basic knowledge of accounting, markets and finance which anyone with a university education is capable of grasping. A lot of people without a university education are as well.

To which I will agree — it’s not that you need a high IQ, but a lot of general learning, wisdom on accounting, markets, and finance, and common sense. Read stuff by Charlie Munger, the man is under-rated in the shadow of Buffett, but at least he has written a book. Would that Buffett would do the same. There are many that interpret him, but I would like to hear how he views investments in theory in full, so that the rest of us could benefit. In many ways he has surpassed his teachers, Ben Graham and Phil Fisher.

So Warren, could you give us the 21st century version of “The Intelligent Investor?” That could be an invaluable legacy that many would thank you for, as much as they do for Ben Graham today.

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Final note — if you invest in common stocks, it is likely you will underperform the major averages until you gain wisdom and discipline.

Posted in Personal Finance, Portfolio Management, Speculation, Stocks, Value Investing | 7 Comments
04
May
Most People are not Better off Buying Common Stocks on their own
by David Merkel

Human nature is not changeable. If people do significantly less well managing defined contribution assets on average than a comparable index fund, then they should not be managing their own assets, much less concentrating into a small number of stocks. I don’t care what Baruch says (whoever he is), or what my friend Josh says. Markets are complex, and investing is hard, not easy.

Just as I believe that most people don’t have the capacity to run their own businesses, the same is true of investing. Both require a lot of discipline, and most people do not have a lot of discipline.

It takes time to learn how to analyze investments. I think of people taking the CFA courses/exams, and I say to myself, “”Yes, better than nothing, but we need practical experience to truly train them.”

As an aside, when I went to take CFA exam level one, a few younger people snickered at me and said, “Who’s the old guy?” (Note: I was 34 at the time; the beard probably didn’t help, and I sometimes let it grow longish back then.) I turned to them and said, “I am an actuary. I have already been through a set of ten-plus exams far more difficult than the CFA exams. I am skilled in compound interest, accounting, statistics, economics, modern portfolio theory, and mathematics to a degree that AIMR does not consider. I am battle-tested in exams more difficult than this, where we had to read far more, and wonder whether we would be tested on minutiae such that AIMR would never consider for CFA candidates. Further, I have lived under an ethics code for ten years, so I get the AIMR code. Do you get it?” After an uncomfortable silence they looked away, and I did too.

My portfolios are concentrated by industry, but diversified within industries. I have worked hard at my theories for around 18 years now, with my current strategy running for 10+ years.

It is not easy to do well in investing. First, you may not understand the basics of valuation. Second, you may not understand what factors can drive stock prices. Third, you may not understand how industries move a groups. Fourth, you may not understand how changes in the economy may affect your investments. ANd there is more.

What’s that, you say? You don’t need to know those things because you can read a chart? Okay, good. Momentum tends to work, but chart-reading after momentum may not work. Yes, things that have gone up tend to go up further, because of disbelief among investors. Here’s the test — how often have you made money buying negative momentum, or selling positive momentum? My guess is that momentum incorporates most of technical analysis, and that most of the detailed technical analysis ideas are empty. Test: show your technical analysis idea to technicians of a different flavor, and see what they say. It’s like Evolution versus Special Creation — Evolutionists trash Creationism, but they don’t agree among themselves to any significant degree. There are few, if any ideas, that all Evolutionists agree on except the negative, “Not Creation.” (I had a more offensive version using Canadians and Americans. I passed.)

I incorporate momentum into my fundamental investing. It helps to erase the problem of value investors always being early.

Most people that I have known that have ventured into individual stocks gave up because they lost money, or didn’t make much money. Skilled amateur investors are few. This is my razor: if they can’t manage owning an S&P 500 index fund, what makes us think that they can manage a more volatile portfolio of common stocks?

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