Resources

Investors, Listen to Einstein: Stop Repeating These Mistakes

US News

If insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results, investors are insane. The way many investors manage their money seems to perfectly describe Albert Einstein’s definition of insanity: Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. Here’s what isn’t working: trying to predict when to enter…

Learning to Shun the Instagram Life

New York Times

“We should just move to the country and live in a tent.” I mention this idea to my wife every time I’m confronted with one of the realities of living in Park City, Utah. It seems like almost everyone here is an athlete of some sort, and they take their sports seriously. From mountain biking…

Small Value Funds Not Equal, Part II

ETF

Smart investors begin their journey by developing an investment plan, or investment policy statement, that includes an asset allocation table. After the plan has been prepared, the next step is to select proper investment vehicles for providing the appropriate exposure to the desired asset classes. A common error among investors who follow a “passive” investment…

Listen to Your Brain to Sense a Market Correction

Huffington Post

The financial media continues to stoke anxiety and fear — and trading — with “news” about a coming market correction. On its list of “must reads” for July 16, Yahoo Finance featured these articles: “Investors haven’t been this optimistic since 1987. Here’s why that’s bad.” “This could be a big problem for stocks.” Sometimes these…

How to Be Happier in Retirement

US News

Much of what is written about retirement planning focuses on investing. I am guilty of contributing to the volume of that literature. My book, “The Smartest Retirement Book You’ll Ever Read,” discusses how to invest intelligently so that you can retire with dignity. I certainly don’t mean to trivialize the importance of careful financial planning. Without such…

Is ‘Momentum’ Faltering? Part I

ETF

For the decade from 2004-2013, the momentum premium—as measured by the Fama-French momentum factor—experienced a negative compound return of -1.2 percent per year. (This number was calculated using the monthly momentum premium figures from the Fama-French data series. Note that returns on factors are generally expressed as annual averages, not annualized returns, and during this decade…

Avoid this mistake about global diversification

CBS News

Don’t get stuck in your own backyard. Investors should consider building globally diversified equity portfolios that avoid the persistent and worldwide phenomenon of home-country bias. That’s when you allocate a greater weight to your home-country stocks than their percentage of total global market capitalization. Among the reasons investors around the world exhibit this bias is…

Is ‘Momentum’ Faltering? Part II

ETF

Earlier this week, we took a look at some of the historical evidence on the persistence of the Fama-French momentum factor. Today we’ll examine the momentum premium’s out-of-sample record, as well as its uses in portfolio diversification. The authors of the 2013 study, “212 Years of Price Momentum,” concluded that the most recent decade-long underperformance…

The Top 10 Places Your Next Dollar Should Go

There is no shortage of receptacles clamoring for your money each day. No matter how much money you have or make, it could never keep up with all the seemingly urgent invitations to part with it. Separating true financial priorities from flash impulses is an increasing challenge, even when you’re trying to do the right…

When Competition Obscures Financial Goals

New York Times

Years ago, a friend with an incredibly successful career as a sales representative shared a story about what she and her brother called their W-2 Derby. It’s exactly what it sounds like. At the end of each year, they’d pull out their W-2s and compare who had the higher income. There were even rules for…

An Eye to the Past Can Help Guide the Future

New York Times

Over time, we’ve come to accept the concept that knowledge is power. In theory, when we have more knowledge, we can make better decisions. But for many of us, there can be a disconnect between knowing something and acting wisely on that knowledge. As you probably know from experience, it happens often with money. Last…

The 3 Keys to Surviving Major Life Transitions

You might think that the most important work a financial advisor can do is related to allocating a client’s investment portfolio, or perhaps helping secure a timely insurance policy or drafting the optimal estate plan. In fact, their most important work is done when clients are in the midst of navigating life’s major transitions. I…

Small Value Vs Midcap Value

ETF

My column from July 14 on the persistence of the small-value premium resulted in some interesting discussions on the subject. I thought it would be informative to share one of them. One reader pointed out that in the past 20 years, midcap value stocks had outperformed small-value stocks. For the period from July 1994 to June 2014,…

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