The Denver Post

Investors need a positive outlook of the future to succeed

- By Steve Booren Steve Booren is the founder of Prosperion Financial Advisors in Greenwood Village. He is the author of “Intelligen­t Investing: Your Guide to a Growing Retirement Income,” published in March 2019.

Pessimism is poison for investors. Following national headlines would have you believe we are moments away from catastroph­e, teetering on the edge of sheer doom. It’s an easy narrative in which to engage, especially when we hear it every minute of every day. The problem is that repetition often convinces people, and once convinced, people tend to ignore logic. That is poisonous for investors.

If you’ve been following this column, you understand just how damaging emotions can be when it comes to investing. Emotions cloud judgment, muddy decision making, and create stressful situations. Now I’m not going to tell you everything in our world is great, but the reality is things are pretty good. Our world is arguably better than it has ever been.

When you think about it, being an investor requires a positive mindset. It necessitat­es the belief that the future will be better. After all, the reason you are willing to take some of your hardearned

cash and invest it in something means you are optimistic about the future prospects of that something. Combine this belief with the patience required to be a long-term investor, and the investment tends to pay off. Actually, on a long enough time horizon, it has always paid off.

The market is far higher today thanitwas2­0,50,or100years ago.

Over long periods, things are unquestion­ably getting better. According to Our World in Data, across six significan­t areas of health and social progress, our world has improved by leaps and bounds. As a society, we are healthier, wealthier and smarter than we have ever been. So, what’s up with all the negativity?

Ask yourself this: How has literacy changed over the past day? Week? Month? Frankly, the “good” in society is much more difficult to measure over a short time than the “bad.” When bad things happen, they usually unfold pretty quickly. This makes them newsworthy, which is how they end up in your ear, day in and day out. This constant negativity makes it easy to extrapolat­e and assume, which are two more behaviors we are continuall­y fighting.

As a result of these negative stories we extrapolat­e, “All I hear is bad news, the world must be falling apart.” But extrapolat­ion without data is an assumption, and assumption­s are often false.

“Factfulnes­s” by Hans Rosling is an excellent book on how a negative bias creates instincts that shade our viewpoint. This, in turn, causes us to develop beliefs in our minds that defy historical facts, which in turn cause us to behave in ways that are not necessaril­y good for our future.

This dispositio­n hits people hard, both in their portfolios and mental well-being. Pick a poll, and the conclusion is the same: Despite progress in so many areas, people in America are generally “less happy” than they have been. I’m not sure how we go about improving happiness or changing people’s interpreta­tion of negative news, but it is essential to recognize the effects this may have on your decision making and therefore your finances.

The best thing investors can do is look at the future in a balanced, positive viewpoint. Having an optimistic view is the only realism. It is the only worldview that squares with the historical record.

All you need to do is look around and consider how much better we are today, even though nostalgia is one heck of a drug. And yes, things will continue to get better — that is what happens when you have free markets, incentives to create value and success for others. It is a pretty remarkable system.

Understand that focusing on your portfolio is not necessaril­y healthy. There will always be something wrong with a company on any given day. Every crisis can create opportunit­y. The current “Trade War pullback” has people selling stock based on the news of the day. Instead, consider that the pullback creates opportunit­ies to buy great companies at lower prices. Who doesn’t like that?

Take the long view and improve your investor results. This is how companies manage their businesses. They don’t make daily changes in their direction, their initiative­s, or their products. Why should you? Financial providers make activity or transactio­ns far too easy, allowing you to jump in and out of investment­s, transformi­ng people from being investors to speculator­s.

Turn off the noise. Headlines sensationa­lize nearly everything, even the weather. What happens moment by moment every day is more random than real. The media must continuous­ly provide a narrative to explain the randomness. The noise then reprograms you from being an investor to a short-term speculator. You are motivated to react, which often means advertiser­s win and you lose.

Being persistent­ly optimistic about the future keeps you invested and rewarded. As investors, that’s what we are after.

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