Harsh Reminder
DURING THE RECENT bull market, I fell off the wagon and bought some technology companies, once again trying my hand at stock picking. I���m talking about companies like Spotify��Technology, MercadoLibre and Roblox. It was a small percentage of my portfolio, but I felt the pain.
I���d tried picking individual stocks when I was younger. I thought I had a better chance now. After all, I was more educated and knew more about researching companies. I convinced myself that if I put in more time���listening to all the earnings calls, reading all the research reports and slide decks, and looking at all the SEC filings���I���d get better results.
Wrong.
The reality: I was just as driven by market euphoria as everyone else. I put my hand in the fire and I got burned���again.��If it were the first time, I wouldn���t have been so hard on myself. But the truth is, I knew better.
I knew the research says 90% of active fund managers fail to beat their benchmark index over the long haul, and yet I opted to be a more active investor. I knew that 90% of the long-term variation in a portfolio���s return is explained by asset allocation, and yet I decided to pick individual stocks. I knew that sticking to evidence-based investing, keeping costs low and diversifying are what I should focus on, rather than dabbling in whatever highflying stocks or sectors were in vogue at the time. I knew the history of bubbles and manias, including railroads in the 1800s, the Nifty Fifty stocks during the 1960s, Japan in the 1980s and the dot-com mania of the 1990s. I knew about all these, and yet I didn���t see the bubble right in front of me.
I knew all this, and yet I did it anyway. This was my first mania, and I feel as though I failed the test.
I wasn���t the only one to get caught up in the recent bull market run and lose money. An estimated 10 million new brokerage accounts were opened in 2020 alone. According to S&P Global, retail trading was 47% higher in 2021 compared to pre-2020 levels. Much of that volume was in meme stocks. If you���d been invested in anything related to cryptocurrencies (symbol: BITW, -65% over the past 12 months), cloud computing (WCLD, -47%), e-commerce (IBUY, -65%), special purpose acquisition companies (SPAK, -46%) or any other highflier that crashed over the past year, you might be feeling the pain, too.
But my investment education has taught me something else: fleeing from investing altogether would be a mistake. I know about loss aversion, and the fact that we experience portfolio losses more than twice as acutely as we experience portfolio gains. I also know that, over the long term, my investments should fare well as long as I stick to my plan and always focus on my financial goals.
If I���m being honest with myself, picking individual stocks was not part of that plan, and it doesn���t align with my financial goals and with what makes me feel fulfilled. My losses may be painful now, but that���ll pass and I���ll always remember what this past year felt like. It will help me stay on the path to better investing. It will help me utilize the knowledge I���ve gained over time. It will help me stick to a boring and coldly efficient investing plan. And that���s the way it should be.

The post Harsh Reminder appeared first on HumbleDollar.