Monday, August 13, 2007

Good Advice, Bad Advice.

The Financial Markets took it on the chin this week. However, while everyone around you is in full panic, it's important to keep your head. Those of you in our year-long Stock Market game (it's still not to late to jump on in), probably have experienced first hand the perils of day-to-day monitoring and trading in such a volatile market. This CNN Finance article provides some sound insight on the importance of investing a few nuggets, especially for you who hold 401(k) portfolios:


Fluctuations in the market shouldn't get to the 401(k) investor. Keep in mind your time horizon - most of us are going to be invested in the market until we retire, often decades from now.

On average, stocks move higher - their long term average gain is 10.8 percent each year, according to Hugh Johnson of Johnson Illington Advisors.

Over those long time horizons, stocks will move up and down. It will be nearly impossible for you to call the highs and lows. If you sell now, you run the risk of missing gains and paying fees to re-invest in the market.

Here's an example of how damaging moving your money around can be:

If you sold your stocks at the market bottom in September of 1998 when the Dow was at 7539.07, you would have missed out on portfolio gains of 21.8 percent by the end of that year.



Amen to that. Main point here--trust the long-term returns of the market, and shun the emotion to sell off your investments, especially if you have established, blue chip companies or sound value stocks in your folder.


ON the flip side:

Sometimes, conventional wisdom and common sense coincide. The problem is, people often times cannot find this part of the Venn Diagram of Realistic Thinking. This young unfortunate soul, who actually works for a company that gives out investment advice (although he apparently was not hired on much merit) encourages shunning Personal Responsibility and instead bumming off of your friends, family, and Credit Card companies.

No really--I'm not kidding:
To wit:

What happens if your car breaks down and you need money to get it running again? What happens if you lose your job and need to support yourself? What happens if you get arrested and need to bail yourself out of jail?

If you get in trouble and need to bail yourself out, the last thing you want is to spend your own money. The best way to avoid that is to make sure you can't afford to fix whatever the problem is. Young people are better positioned to pass off the cost of emergencies than any other group...

Every financial hardship is an opportunity -- an opportunity for your parents to show you how much they love you. Nobody's going to label you a parasite if you ask for help when you're in trouble -- that's the beauty of it.

Yikes!

If you're wondering what Estate this sheltered young man came from, understand that he is a Harvard Grad. (Not the common-sense Harvard Grad, but the stodgy, trust-fund, stereotypical kind you see on TV.)


So what do you guys think? Am I misjudging here? Perhaps up is down, and bad advice is the new good advice (and vice-versa). I'm sticking with my guns, and hoping this guy is just trying to build an audience to give real advice. Let me know if I'm missing something.

Also, what more would you like to see from our site?

See you next week.

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