My Investing Journey, Just Do It
I began contributing to an IRA in the 80s, buying certificates of deposit at the local bank. Pretty soon I began thinking about investments. I knew almost nothing about the stock market, still, I knew I needed to be in it. I remember watching the nightly news, where the anchors always reported what the DOW did that day, never a mention of that other thingy…. What was it called…. The S&P500?
I started reading up on the stock market, learning only enough to be dangerous to myself. The thought of investing was infesting me. At some point I was contacted by a smiling and dialing registered rep from IDS.
I soon rolled over my IRA CDs, all $3500 of them, into a mutual fund and an Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT). Soon after that Black Monday happened. My mutual fund was down hundreds of dollars. Was the world coming to an end? I felt I would throw up. Still, I held on and soon learned that what goes down, usually goes back up pretty quickly. As for the REIT, I watched it go down with every quarterly report. There was no secondary market for it, no buyer for several years. When I was finally able to dump it, I lost about 40%. No more REITs for me.
In the 90s I took over managing my own money. I spread my investments out in several managed mutual funds. I wish I had known Jonathan back then, because the hot managed funds I chose were nearly clones of each other. By the time the 2001 bear market came to an end, most of the stellar growth from the 90s had evaporated.
Around that time came a period when I became securities licensed. I briefly worked for a financial company that was owned by a large insurance company. We had an investment specialist, and he taught me much about analyzing mutual funds. He was, however, all about selling managed funds with front end loads and 12b1 fees, and seemed convinced that he could beat the indexes.
By the time the 2008 financial crisis rained down on the market, I was using either balanced funds or target date funds, still all were managed. They proved superior to my fund picking skills, largely because they dealt better with controlling allocations.
It’s only been in the last five or so years that I have switched most of our investments into index or ETFs. I stubbornly hang on to a few managed funds, but in total they represent less than 30% of our portfolio.
Earlier I posted about consolidating most accounts into Fidelity. That has worked out very well so far. I like the platform and find the website intuitive enough; their phone reps have been perfect whenever I needed them.
I leave about 20% of our assets with an advisor, whose referrals were a huge help when I was building my income tax practice. He does not charge me much, and uses ETFs in my account.
Over 40 or so years of saving/investing, I have made plenty of mistakes. Still, I kept plugging away, and although I surely could have made better decisions along the way, things turned out okay. The old Nike slogan comes to mind; Just Do It.
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