by Michael Antonelli, Market Strategist, Baird
What they said, what they bought, when they sold, how they did it.
âTheyâ could be a friend, a neighbor, a co-worker, or a buddy at the club. Whoever they are, they can be one of the biggest obstacles to success for financial advisors and their clients.
âThey are doing better than meâ
âThey are sitting in cash while the market sells offâ
âThey are making so much money in sectors Iâm not inâ
If you hear about a financial win while youâre struggling, itâs going to drive you crazy.
Never mind the fact that you have no idea what that personâs goals are, or what their risk tolerance is, or how many losses they have.
If any of this sounds familiar, youâre dealing with the absolute worst of the deadly sins, envy. It can infect anyone from time to time, even the wisest people.
Let me push back against whoever âtheyâ are in your life by dispelling a few notions.
- They wonât always make the right call. Say that person did go to cash at the start of 2022âŠwas it luck? Have they been in and out of stocks the past decade trying to avoid scary headlines and missing out on huge returns?
- They donât have a magic bullet.They arenât running some magic system no one knows about. They havenât cracked the secrets to outperforming that 160,000 CFAs and 22,000 hedge funds mysteriously havenât discovered yet.
- They probably arenât telling you about their losses. You probably wonât hear about the time they bought XYZ and it went down 50%. Whenâs the last time you heard âIâm making so much money but letâs talk about my losses too!â Iâll wait.
- They canât avoid all losses and neither can you. If you told your advisor to sell every time the market drops 5%, youâd be sellingâon averageâ3 times a year. If you told them to sell every time the market drops 10%, youâd basically be doing it every single year. Warren Buffet, Mike Antonelli, and Peter Lynch all lost money while investing (can you believe I put myself in there?).
- They arenât you and you arenât them. Who you are as an investor has been shaped by your journey. The way you view risk and reward, the way you view politics and markets, the kind of investments you are willing to put your hard-earned money into, what allows you to sleep at night. All of that is unique to you and the life lessons that have brought you this far. It will NEVER match up to those around you.
Now Iâm not saying that friends and family canât have great advice, or that what they are doing couldnât help you out at times. If âtheyâ are doing well be happy for them, karma smiles on those who celebrate the success of others.
But before you make a change, I implore you to talk it through with someone (your advisor is the prime candidate). Donât abandon your plan because of a surface-level conversation thatâs not even about you.
We all just went through a horrible year where most investors lost money. Allow yourself some grace. Maybe you bought a stock and it went down, maybe you bought the dip and stocks continued to fall, maybe you thought you could handle more risk and found out you couldnât.
None of that makes what âtheyâ are doing the answer for you. The answer is learning to cope with setbacks as they arise and to not let them overwhelm you, for therein lies the wisdom of the ages.
When it comes to your money focus on whatâs right for YOU and continue marching down the path of life with your head held high, for one day soon the winds of fortune will once again fill your sails.
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