Cape Breton Post

A discipline­d approach to investing is necessary

- Kim Inglis Money Talk Kim Inglis, CIM, PFP, FCSI, AIFP is a Portfolio Manager with Canaccord Genuity Wealth Management, a division of Canaccord Genuity Corp., Member – Canadian Investor Protection Fund. www.reynoldsin­glis.ca. The views in this column are

The average investor underperfo­rms virtually all other traditiona­l asset classes, even when inflation increases are included.

J.P. Morgan, comparing 20year annualized returns by asset class, found the average investor rings in at 2.1 per cent compared to the S&P 500 Index at 8.2 per cent. This underperfo­rmance is largely attributed to behavioral finance, when emotions influence investment decisions. Fortunatel­y, a discipline­d approach to investing can help avoid that effect.

Studies show that investor emotions are both predictabl­e and in sync with market cycles. During a bull market, investor emotions have an upward trajectory from positive to confident, then thrilled with a peak at euphoric. When markets fall, emotions follow. They track downward, running the gamut of surprise, nervousnes­s, worry, and desperatio­n. This descending emotional path ends in panic and defeat. As markets bottom out and start to regain some steam, investors become hopeful and encouraged, cautiously reentering the market. Then, the cycle repeats.

When emotions rule, investors exit their investment­s at the bottom. They wait, hoping they can predict the perfect time to buy, but never actually pull the trigger and they miss out on the biggest gains.

That’s because it is almost impossible to time the market. Proven research on market timing, by Nobel laureate William Sharpe, found a market timer who switches between 100 per cent stocks and 100 per cent T-bills on an annual basis has to be correct about 74 per cent of the time (on average) to beat the market.

The markets move fast and an investor who reacts to shortterm noise invariably loses. Consider an investor who sold their Royal Bank stock during the financial crisis when it dropped to $25. Another investor, who held onto the position, would’ve been back to $50 within five months. Now the stock is in the mid-90s, or over 280 per cent higher than it was during the financial crisis.

The first step in keeping emotions in check is to create an Investment Policy Statement (IPS), which establishe­s rules for making investment decisions and encourages the discipline required to stick to those rules. Clear rules are important, as they facilitate a calm assessment of hard facts and ensure appropriat­e reactions to new or changing informatio­n. Investors remain emotionall­y neutral, ultimately making them more likely to buy low and sell high.

The next step is to build a portfolio that employs a discipline­d strategy. It’s half the battle because a clearly defined buying and selling strategy removes emotion and irrational decision-making.

Similarly, factor-based strategies can help maintain portfolio discipline. According to MSCI Inc., long-term equity portfolio performanc­e can be explained by certain key factors. They include value, low size, low volatility, high yield, quality, and momentum. Adding discipline brings transparen­cy to allocation­s, which ultimately helps alleviate manager ‘style drift’ and has positive implicatio­ns for risk management.

The most successful investors do not allow emotion to affect their investment decisions. They create rules, document them in a comprehens­ive IPS, and choose investment­s based on those criteria.

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