Many investors fail to learn lessons about risky investments
Thursday, February 28th, 2008My dog got hit by a car Wednesday night. He is going to survive, but he is very sore today. He has about 20 stitches in his head and lots of bruises but no broken bones. I got very little sleep last night because I had to monitor his IV fluids. Toby is an 18-month-old Brittany that spends most of his time in the house. But he loves to be outside and he took advantage of a momentary lapse in vigilance, snuck out and got into trouble.
This is not Toby’s first misadventure with a vehicle. Six months ago he was struck by a trailer and broke his femur. That incident required three surgeries and many weeks of recuperation. He still has a rod, plate, and several screws in his left hind leg. Although he is a smart dog about most things, when it comes to staying away from huge moving objects, he struggles to learn his lesson.
This is relevant to investing because I see many investors who exhibit similar behavior. One of the first times I witnessed this behavior was back in the late 1980s when a client with a managed account decided to cancel his account and put all his money in gold. Gold was at a record high of more than $800 at the time. Unfortunately, over the next couple of years gold dropped sharply and this gentleman lost a lot of money. Eventually he got out of gold at a huge loss and reopened a much smaller managed account.
Over the first few years of the 1990s, we earned him respectable double-digit annual returns. Then the day came when he told us he was closing his account and investing everything in Fidelity Select Energy Services (FSESX), a fund that had more than doubled in less than two years. Against our advice, he went ahead with his plan and FSESX dropped by more than 70% over the next six months. Fortunately or unfortunately, depending on your viewpoint, his wife maintained a separate account with us. He failed to discuss any of this with her and when she eventually found out, she was very unhappy that the bulk of their retirement savings had disappeared in such a short time.
Just like my Toby can’t seem to remember that moving vehicles can be deadly, there are plenty of people who never seem to learn that speculative investments always carry high risk.
The next lesson came in 2001. Many investors had witnessed huge gains in the technology sector and moved the bulk of their assets into tech stocks and funds. When the technology bubble burst, We personally witnessed individual who lost more than 90% of their investment portfolio value.
Fast forward a couple of years and many of those investors vowed that they would never be so foolish again. Many told us they had learned their lesson about the risk of market investment and instead were opting for the security of real estate. Many of these folks stripped all of the equity from their homes so they could buy additional highly leveraged property they hoped would quickly increase in value. Today many of these folks are relearning the lesson they forgot in 2001. The Utah Department of Consumer Protection noted that in 2007, seven of the 10 most common frauds involved some sort of real estate scam.
It doesn’t matter whether the fast moving object is a truck or a car, it still hurts when it hits. Similarly, a speculative investment is dangerous, whether it involves the stock market, real estate, currency trading, oil futures, precious metals, etc.
Today, I don’t know where the next speculative bubble will appear. What I do know is that there are thousands of people working very hard to come up with speculative schemes that appear to be low risk because that increases the chance that they can separate greedy investors from their money.
F.S.
You requested this Dental Dollars free e-newsletter. Please add support@dentaldollars.net to your e-mail address book to ensure prompt delivery.


