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Practically Investing: Smart Investment Techniques Your Neighbour Doesn’T Know
Practically Investing: Smart Investment Techniques Your Neighbour Doesn’T Know
Practically Investing: Smart Investment Techniques Your Neighbour Doesn’T Know
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Practically Investing: Smart Investment Techniques Your Neighbour Doesn’T Know

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If the last financial crisis cost you money, you may be wondering whether you should continue investing in the market. After all, you have bills to pay and a job to keepand you cant spend all your free time crunching numbers.

With the help of an expert, you can control your financial future by making small shifts in what you are already doing. Author Coreen T. Sol, Chartered Financial Analyst, gives you the tools you need to

avoid mistakes that could cost you money;

find good alternative investments;

maximize the benefits of a retirement plan; and

write your own investment policy statement.

This guidebook provides bold-faced terms and a glossary, along with instructions that make understanding the market fun and easy. Youll have to do some homework, but you can start taking simple steps to accomplish your dreams with the guidance in Practically Investing.

LanguageEnglish
PublisheriUniverse
Release dateJan 29, 2014
ISBN9781491722039
Practically Investing: Smart Investment Techniques Your Neighbour Doesn’T Know
Author

Coreen T. Sol

Coreen T. Sol, CFA, is a portfolio manager with more than twenty years of experience in private wealth management. She has also been a teller at the Royal Bank of Canada; managed a bank branch in New Westminster, British Columbia; served as an investment adviser at RBC Dominion Securities; and managed portfolios through National Bank Financial and CIBC Wood Gundy. She lives in Kelowna with her three children.

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    Practically Investing - Coreen T. Sol

    Copyright © 2014 Coreen T. Sol, CFA.

    All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

    iUniverse books may be ordered through booksellers or by contacting:

    iUniverse

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    Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.

    Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Thinkstock are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.

    Certain stock imagery © Thinkstock.

    ISBN: 978-1-4917-2202-2 (sc)

    ISBN: 978-1-4917-2204-6 (hc)

    ISBN: 978-1-4917-2203-9 (e)

    Library of Congress Control Number: 2014901189

    iUniverse rev. date: 1/28/2014

    CONTENTS

    Acknowledgements

    Introduction Great Investing Isn’t Rocket Science

    1    Stop Making Investment Mistakes

    2    Stocks Will Fight Inflation

    3    Bonds, James Bond

    4    Alternative Investments: The New Frontier

    5    Be Careful With Mutual Funds And Other Pooled Products

    6    This Investment Account Will Change Your Life

    7    What’s Wrong With My Retirement Plan?

    8    Professionals Are Not Created Equally

    9    An Ips Will Save Your Bacon

    Conclusion Final Steps

    Glossary

    About The Author

    This book is dedicated to Jakob, Eiden and Sofia

    Mommy, are you done writing yet?

    prac·ti·cal·ly

    \’prak-ti-k( img01.png -)lē\

    adverb

    1. Virtually; almost

    2. In a practical manner; likely to succeed or be effective in real circumstances; feasible

    Merriam-Webster Dictionary ®

    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

    If it weren’t for the gaggle of compatriots and friends who contributed moral support, opinion and conjecture, this would never be a ready work. Thank you to the Women’s Investment Clubs and especially Mary, whom I’ve prevailed upon for content and review. I’m indebted to my fellow CFA® charterholders with whom I’ve happily spent a week each May for the last several years proliferating ideas over bar stools and coffee shop tables around the world. Many of them graciously offered to lend their voice to this project. Douglas for your sound advice and lastly, for the patience of my children who know how important this is to me, thank you.

    PRACTICALLY INVESTING

    Introduction

    Great Investing Isn’t Rocket Science

    Man’s mind and spirit grow with the space in which they are allowed to operate.

    —Krafft A. Ehricke, rocket-propulsion engineer

    There have been far too many investors over the years, who’ve slid their broken investment statement across my blotter, asking if I can fix it.

    As a whole, the experience of Canadian investors has been abysmal as if we weren’t really investing at all: as if we were practically investing, instead of investing practically. Over the last couple of decades, since I began managing money, the number of investors that I’ve met whose portfolios haven’t grown a penny beyond their own deposits, is staggering. More recently, through one of the most tumultuous investment cycles, complete with cold cloths and sleepless nights, couples have been driven to conflict and retirees back to the workforce. If the last financial crisis left your fingernails gnawed to the quick or forced you out of retirement, you’re in good company.

    As a whole, we are on the leading edge of really understanding our financial world. The recent development of behavioural finance is more evidence of that. This study of how people behave around money with alarming consistency, is teaching us that our markets are an extrapolation of collective human emotion, predictable in nature. Armed with this emerging information, the profession of investment analysis and forward motion in managing economics, the ebb and flow of money is more manageable and understandable than it has ever been. By harnessing these developments, you can use this awareness and these tools to make a small shift in the things you’re already doing and discover, with very little effort, how to make your money work effectively for you.

    For the last twenty-some-odd years, I’ve worked with hundreds of private wealth clients and institutional investors, successfully building and managing their investments. As a portfolio manager (PM), clients rely on my expertise and experience to handle all of their day-to-day financial decisions and the overall stewardship of their assets. Through this book, you will gain the years of experience that I offer my clients directly.

    I began this project by writing down a few truths about investing, only to find topics tumbling onto the pages haphazardly, as I burst at the seams. Eventually, that transitioned into organized chaos and finally, chronology. This introduction similarly evolved from versions of cathartic chastisement for the wrongs of the world, to the introspective, calm satisfaction of eventually finding a voice. I’ve written a dozen introductions, ranging from professional rants to motivational speeches but at the end of my exhaustion and an ever-closer release date, my indulgence is close to spent.

    The investment industry as a whole is evolving. Back in the early 1940s, great investment thinkers began a heated debate about whether security analysis was more art or science. During that time, investment pioneers, including Benjamin Graham, gave birth to the idea that financial analysts should form a profession. In order to do so, practitioners must be subject to a measurable testing program and structured, if not scientific, processes. According to The Gold Standard: A Fifty-Year History of the CFA Charter, the ensuing decades witnessed a myriad of constructive arguments among practitioners until June 1959, when financial analysts finally adopted a professional status. The proposal, led by Ezra Solomon of the University of Chicago, set out to certify financial analysts through a curriculum and written standards.

    Today, the CFA Institute continues to test investment professionals around the globe through a series of three post-graduate, self-study examinations focused on security analysis and ethics, in order to obtain the charter. The organization works to impact market integrity all over the world. With more than 115,000 professionals entitled to use the Chartered Financial Analyst® designation in more than 137 countries across every continent, the CFA Institute’s objectives are raising standards of professional excellence in the industry; championing ethical behaviour in investment markets; serving as a respected source of knowledge in investment markets; and creating a strong global community of investment professionals. I obtained my CFA® charter in 2002, an achievement that I hold in high esteem.

    Economic understanding and development is making great strides, as well. Never before have citizens seen such high correlations between asset classes and profound financial intervention worldwide than since the financial disaster of 2008. Fiscal and monetary policy makers are collaborating among countries and formulating decisions based on tried and untried economic policies founded on the lessons of the 1930’s economic depression. The moral hazard of this profound and consistent intervention is yet to unfold, but in the meantime, volatility has dropped to creepy levels encouraging risks in areas that may have offered less sure footing in the past. New opportunities for exploitation abound for the wise and fearless.

    From the perspective of real people who are working, raising children, saving, investing and living, what really matters is whether enough meat and potatoes are on the table, whether our children can fulfill their dreams and that there is relative calm and predictability in our retirement years. The lessons taught in the plethora of self-help financial planning books have been all-for-not, if our squirrelling away results in nothing but vapid reserves with barely enough to squeak by on in retirement. How could it be that savings diligence didn’t pay off over the last couple of decades? Too many investors are wallowing in directionless portfolios, hoping for a strike of good luck. And yet, this isn’t rocket science. Investing should be easier and more rewarding. If you have the keen sense to tuck some money away, it’s time for you to start reaping the rewards for that.

    Most of my clients are professionals, retirees and business people who have already been saving for several years. From a content perspective, this book covers a wide range of topics: some technical in nature and some anecdotal. In the same way that I speak to my clients, I offer the straight-up facts and then follow it up with examples and stories to make it more approachable and useable. So, if at first you don’t quite grasp the jargon, read on. You will.

    Also, the chapters are each broken up into sub-categories and stories, some of which may be more or less applicable to your life. Ultimately, you will either want to know the most effective ways to select and work with a professional advisor or how to effectively invest on your own. In every case, you will discover how a simple Investment Policy Statement (IPS) can save your bacon.

    Although this book serves out a generous helping of the knowledge I have gained from working in the investment industry for over 20 years, the information contained within is not investment advice, nor is it capable of taking into account your own specific circumstances. One thing you are about to learn from Practically Investing is that you have to do your homework. If, by the end of the book, any of the products or strategies you have read about sound appealing, I urge you to seek out an investment professional who can help you explore whether those products and strategies are right for you.

    Also, the organizations that I work with now and in the past represent a wide body of individuals and opinions. I’d like to point out that the views set out in this book are well-researched from sources that I believe are credible and reliable, and that the conclusions of my work may not be those held by the respected organizations that I work with now or those that I have worked with in the past.

    Note: Words set in bold are defined in the glossary at the back of the book.

    Chapter 1

    Stop Making Investment Mistakes

    It was when I found out I could make mistakes that I knew I was on to something.

    —Ornette Coleman

    Not Quite a 12-Step Program

    We all make mistakes and, as with every hangover, we emphatically and fruitlessly vow never to do it again. But I promise that you will. The end.

    Just kidding.

    Innate human tendencies were meant to help us survive the wilderness, not make investment decisions. And yet, those are the tools we rely on today for complicated reasoning. No wonder investing hasn’t been seamless. Not totally wrong, but not totally right either. Recognition and acknowledgement are the first steps in any 12-step program for change. You don’t know what you don’t know, and if you aren’t aware in the first place, you can’t make a decision to affect change. If you soberly knew a way to make intelligent investment decisions, you would. If it only took a bit of understanding to be more profitable, you’d do that too.

    This is not a book telling you to spend less and save more, but one that provides all smart things to do while you are saving and once you have a nest egg. Whether you read it cover to cover or you select individual sections that will help you when you need them most, I hope you will keep a well-worn copy next to your investment account statements.

    Play it Again, Sam

    Both men and women harbour cognitive biases that influence our behaviour. The way each of us reacts is alarmingly predictable and consistent. Predictable and consistent. The good news is that you’re not alone. The propensity to make errors with money and investing is well documented through a growing body of study called behavioural finance.

    Luckily, cognitive biases are nothing more than tricks and shortcuts that our brains use to help us make quick decisions and be more efficient in our lives. Unfortunately, these pre-fab decision trees don’t necessarily add value to the financial outcomes at hand.

    Decision errors are made and repeated with great regularity. Rational financial decisions are much easier once you understand the reasoning behind these biases and you are able to recognize the predispositions.

    The plight of the human condition leaves no one behind. Over the years, these biases have taken hold regardless of race, education, gender or socioeconomic status. Decision errors are made and repeated with great regularity. Rational financial decisions are much easier to make once you understand the reasoning behind these biases and are able to recognize the predispositions. If you’re already entrenched in the belief that each of us operates as a free decision maker, you won’t need convincing that experience is the sum of mistakes that we don’t need to repeat. Ultimately, it would be ideal to enhance your financial situation with the least amount of effort on your part. To do that, we need to lay out some groundwork.

    Possibly the most important piece to understand is the notion that investment markets are efficient. This idea gained popularity in the 1950s. To be brief, the efficient market hypothesis maintains that stock market prices are random and fair. Essentially, it contends that there are enough rational people buying and selling stocks and other securities that the market will determine a fair price simply through the buying and selling of the securities. If the price are too high, no rational person would buy. If it’s too low, no one would sell.

    When stock prices get out of whack, sellers eagerly dump overpriced securities, driving prices down, and buyers then snap up underpriced ones with earnest, forcing fair values. Imagine a passerby frantically rapping on your door, offering to purchase the gargoyle peering over your eaves for twice what you bought it for. You’d be a fool not to sell it. The passerby must have different information about the value of the statue of course, or she rationally would not purchase the ugly beast against her financial best interest. If there were a crowd outside your home, some selling gargoyles and some buying, you could reasonably assume that the average agreeable price of the transactions represents a fair market value for the statues.

    The second part of the efficient market hypothesis (you’ll have a few great phrases to throw around the coffee shop by the last chapter!) is that the prices of stocks and bonds reflect all information that buyers and sellers have. For example, when a company announces its earnings, the investing public analyzes the new information (very quickly!) to determine the fair market value of the shares. Assume that the company’s reported earnings came in lower than expected. Obviously, investors who value the share price relative to the earnings would sell the shares at current levels. You’d be as much a fool as the homeowner with the gargoyle not to. In turn, the sheer interest in selling the shares at the inflated levels and the diminished interest in buying the relatively high priced shares drives the share prices lower on the market. Once the shares are at the fair market value, the opportunity to profit on the difference no longer exists.

    For every transaction, there is someone willing to buy and someone willing to sell at an agreed price, both believing that it’s good value and that the counterparty is a little crazy.

    This oversimplification is to illustrate what drives market prices up or down. In practice, there are multiple facets affecting the perceived value of any stock, bond or gargoyle, much of which is disputed among market participants. For every transaction, there’s someone willing to buy and someone willing to sell at an agreed price, both believing that it’s good value and that the counterparty is a little crazy. That’s what’s fun about this. The differences of opinion are what keep markets humming and prices continually adjusting to find the fair value. It’s been said that it’s only a fair trade when both parties consider the other to have received the better deal.

    What the efficient market hypothesis doesn’t account for is that people are not always rational. Just ask any divorce lawyer.

    In real life, it’s more complicated than just analyzing new earnings information every 3 months. Consider the influences of global economic growth, new competitors, interest rates and changes in the price of supplies or wages that can fluctuate minute by minute. Beyond the hard data, subjective factors equally influence the prices of everything. The complexity of analysis is as thick and deep as there are opinions. There are at least two opposing viewpoints every time a transaction happens. Sometimes a stock will trade at a price that is 10 times the value of the earnings per share and sometimes at a price that is 16 times. It’s the aggregate opinion that determines who is right and who is less right.

    At first glance, the theory makes sense, but what the efficient market hypothesis doesn’t account for is the fact that people are not always rational. Just ask any divorce lawyer. Despite this fissure, the theory’s premise doesn’t need to be thrown out with the bathwater. It’s a reminder that we do not operate like machines. You can’t simply install an update to fix a programming bug.

    The cycle of optimism and euphoria leading to greed, fear and capitulation, giving way to hope and building back to optimism, drives the expansion and contraction of our financial world in a market cycle of collective human emotion.

    Since people are at the helm of these trading decisions, the market itself is subject to collective human errors. This notion can be extrapolated to entire economies. In general, economic cycles are built on stages of cumulative human errors. When people collectively feel exuberant or fearful, or they do something in concert the way a cohort (like the baby boomers) might, the economy follows. When everyday folks feel wealthy as their bonus rolls in higher than expected, their annual house assessment jumps, their RRSP statement climbs again this month or their high-flier stock doubles, jubilance spills over into spending habits. If the majority of people feel this way and behave this way, the economy expands or continues expanding.

    I trust that you’ve already made the leap to see that the reverse is also true. When you hear nothing but solemn news reports of financial collapse and economic deterioration, or the value of your RRSP has been chopped in half and you can’t sell your real estate, people naturally start reigning in spending. With all that depressing news, who feels like a shopping spree anyway?

    The cycle of optimism and euphoria leads to greed, fear and capitulation, giving way to hope and building back to optimism. It drives the expansion and contraction of our financial world in a market cycle of collective human emotion.

    Your actions and your neighbours’ actions send a ripple effect throughout your community, city and province, compounding the issue. If you own a business, you may find yourself cutting costs, reducing marketing efforts and inventories, and possibly laying off staff. And so, we have market cycles driven by waves of human behaviour, some of which is rational and some of which is emotional.

    Takes One to Know One

    The following illustrations set out several common cognitive biases that have been working against you all of these years and the reasons that our hardwiring is naturally and irrationally applied to how we look at money. The reasons for why your attempts haven’t worked in the past are not shocking. Simply by being aware of where the trouble lies and understanding some very interesting and goofy things that people do consistently, you suddenly become able to approach money differently than you have in the past. By realizing what can go wrong, you are in a position to impact your financial successes.

    Hindsight is Not Foresight

    Of course, anybody could have predicted the collapse of the fourth-largest U.S. investment bank, Lehman Brothers, which reported assets of $635 billion when it filed for bankruptcy protection, and Merrill Lynch & Co. agreed to be sold to Bank of America Corp. a week after the U.S. government bailed out other major U.S. financial institutions, on September 10, 2008. Mollenkamp, C. et all. (2008, Sept. 16). Lehman Files for Bankruptcy, Merrill Sold, AIG Seeks Cash. Wall Street Journal. Weren’t your assets all cashed in before that happened? Your financial advisor must have known that it was going to happen! Why didn’t he sell out your account beforehand? Or at least once the bankruptcy was announced?

    The truth is that no one knows until they know. Once they know, so does everyone else. (If I start sounding too much like Dr. Seuss, just kick me under the table.)

    With the speed of information today, share prices are affected almost immediately. Moreover, the initial correction is often overdone. When dramatic news is first released, there is often an overreaction resulting in a sell-off that may be more than warranted. In this case, the price drop is followed by a rebound as cooler heads prevail. If you want to see how accurate your foresight is, there’s a simple way to find out. I told you this was going to be easy, didn’t I?

    Grab a small piece of paper and pen or pencil. Write down the closing value of the Canadian stock market index (S&P/TSX) for this Friday. You can find today’s value by visiting www.tmx.com.

    Simple!

    Over a short period of time, surely you can tell where the market is going. If you don’t know by how much, you’ll at least know the direction with some certainty! (Note the sarcasm.)

    Ah, but you’re not a professional, you say.

    Interestingly, Chartered Financial Analyst® societies all over the globe hold an annual Forecast Dinner. I’ve been involved with these events in Kelowna, B.C., as a board member since 2003. Every year, pre-eminent investment professionals are invited from all over North America to our little community of 125,000 people. They are asked to foretell the level of the S&P/TSX, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), a long stock and a short stock (which we will cover in chapter 2) on the upcoming December 31. The following year they’re invited back to defend their predictions in a roast format usually reserved for comedians or retiring guests of honour. It’s an obviously impossible task for the incumbents and a great deal of fun for everyone else.

    Instead of using your intuition about the direction of the market, step back, take a deep breath and dust off your good ol’ Investment Policy Statement (IPS) that you wrote in more sober times. An IPS is a document that you will hear much about over the pages ahead, outlining how your investment decisions will unfold. If you haven’t done so yet, there are wagers out that you’ll have something in writing before you finish the last chapter. Realize that your appetite for risk (a.k.a. volatility) will change during different market conditions so it’s important to write your IPS during times of stability in your life, when no major changes are on the table and when markets are relatively steady. Then stick to it.

    The details of an IPS is explained in detail in chapter 9, dedicated to establishing one, why and what it contains. In the meantime, it’s suffice to say that when markets become volatile, emotions often get in the way of a good plan. Treat them as lagging indicators. A lagging indicator is something that tells you what is going to happen after it already happened. Ironically, not kidding.

    "Rebalancing and Investment Policy Statements—that is the key: IPSs written in calmer, rational times which dictate the frequency and timing of rebalancing is paramount. Buying equities after a major market decline is often the toughest exercise for retail clients but inevitably is the best thing to do. Having an IPS that you review annually with your Investment Professional is a crucial document. Sign and date this together to make it ‘official.’ Humans have an innate tendency to have their actions match their words. What actions will I take if the market declines by 20%? Figure this out before it happens."

    —John Stubbs, Director, Wealth Management,

    Richardson GMP Ltd.

    IPSs work. Write what you believe and how you wish to invest in black and white. Revisit it often.

    Like shampoo instructions: lather, rinse and repeat.

    Unleashing the Dogs

    I love my family, but sometimes, personal relationships get in the way of asserting professional philosophies. When my father insists on holding a stock position, who am I to say no?

    I now practice discretionary portfolio management for a bucket full of reasons, but a main motivation is to eliminate entry-level biases. Having discretion means that in addition to saving people from their biases and emotions, I can act quickly and efficiently during times of volatility. Instead of calling each client to convince them of the current course of action, I’m able to pull the switch and act in accordance with their IPSs and the prevailing market conditions.

    A ‘dog’ is a beloved term used to describe a bad investment, as in, this portfolio has gone to the dogs. It’s an alarmingly common belief that if you don’t sell anything that is down, you aren’t really losing money! While this logic is rewarded when you own good quality, suitable investments during temporary drops in the overall market, it’s never rewarded when you hold onto a bad investment that continues to drop in value or one that has no hope of recompensing you. Trying to convince someone who grips this notion with white knuckles and the strength of an army is like blowing out an electric light bulb. No one is better for the effort. If an investor only sells the stocks that appreciate in value and refuses to sell those that drop, eventually the investor has nothing left but a portfolio dogs. I’ve seen these beauties.

    Behavioural finance researchers have also labeled this problem. Anchoring is when you assign a value to something based on information that is irrelevant or even random. Prudent investors build decisions on whether to buy, hold or sell a security based on the relevant economic information, their investment objectives and suitability of the position within those parameters. Past information and irrelevant facts, including a historic price for the security, are not part of the process. With the error of anchoring, people have an inclination to consider either the price paid for an investment in the past, the price at which it peaked (regretting not selling it) or some other irrelevant information. These are powerful motivators to keep the stock for completely irrational reasons.

    "There is nothing more destructive to a portfolio than allowing deteriorating companies to grow into outsized losses. Have the fortitude to admit mistakes early, move on and reallocate your capital to better investments. Be able to also recognize when your biggest winners have run their course and despite still being great companies are no longer great investments. Simply, have a well-defined sell discipline and follow it. It’s the difference between having a successful investment strategy and one that is not."

    —Clark Linton, CFA, Portfolio Manager,

    Raymond James Ltd.

    If you’re still not convinced, just remember that it never matters what you paid for an investment. If it no longer fits your investment strategy, it has deteriorated in quality or there are better opportunities for that capital, forward-looking investors will sell. Period. Whether it’s up, down or equal to the price originally paid should never be a determining factor in whether to continue owning an investment. Your original investment price only matters when you’re calculating the tax on the investment. Nothing more.

    If you need an emotional firewall between you and your biases, hire a discretionary Portfolio Manager (PM) to take control of these decisions. Discretionary portfolio management, where the manager makes all of the daily

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