Picking individual stocks is highly risky and often unsuccessful, even for professionals. 80-90% of mutual fund managers fail to outperform the overall market. For casual investors, attempting to pick stocks is essentially a fool's errand, as they lack the expertise and resources to compete with professionals.
The biggest mistake is performance chasing—buying investments that have recently gone up and selling those that have gone down. This strategy doesn't work mathematically and often leads to poor investment outcomes.
Selling stocks during a market crash locks in losses and prevents recovery when the market rebounds. Historically, the market has always recovered, so staying invested allows you to benefit from the eventual upswing.
David Swenson recommends a diversified portfolio: 30% in U.S. stocks, 15% in developed international markets (e.g., Germany, France, Japan), 5% in emerging markets (e.g., China, India, Brazil), 20% in U.S. real estate, 15% in U.S. Treasury bonds, and 15% in U.S. Treasury inflation-protected securities.
Fees can significantly erode investment returns. For example, a 1% fee on a 5% return eats up 20% of your earnings, while a 2% fee consumes 40%. Over time, high fees compound and drastically reduce the growth of your portfolio.
Index funds are passively managed and designed to mimic market returns at a low cost. They avoid the high fees and poor performance associated with actively managed funds, where 80-90% of managers fail to beat the market. Index funds provide broad market exposure and are a more reliable long-term investment strategy.
Vanguard is structured as a nonprofit and focuses on providing low-cost index funds and advice in the customer's best interest. Its founder, Jack Bogle, pioneered the low-cost index fund revolution, making Vanguard a trusted choice for sensible, low-fee investing.
Investors should rebalance their portfolios at least once a year or after significant market movements. Rebalancing involves selling assets that have increased in value and buying those that have decreased, ensuring the portfolio stays aligned with its target allocation.
Investors should compartmentalize their investments—set up a well-diversified portfolio, rebalance periodically, and avoid obsessing over short-term market fluctuations. Emotional decision-making often leads to counterproductive actions, so it's best to let the portfolio grow over time.
Investing doesn't have to be hard. We explain how to grow a nice nest egg and avoid that four-letter word that starts with F ... fees. Here's what to remember:- Don't pick your own stocks. - Don't sell stocks if the market crashes.- Diversify your portfolio. - Don't pay too much in fees.- Invest in index funds, not actively managed funds.- Rebalance your portfolio every year — then leave it alone.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices)NPR Privacy Policy)