The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Playing the market is a bad idea, especially now

- Liz Weston Nerd Wallet

The current day trading boom will end as these frenzies always do: in tears. While we wait for the inevitable crash, let’s review not only why day traders are doomed but also why most people shouldn’t trade, or even invest in, individual stocks.

Day trading basically means rapidly buying and selling investment­s, hoping to profit from small price fluctuatio­ns. Brokerages have reported a surge in trading and new accounts this year, starting with March’s stock market crash when investors rushed in looking for bargains. As pandemic lockdowns kept people from their jobs and classrooms, trading continued to soar, especially among young adults.

The poster child for this gold rush is Robinhood, a commission-free investing app that uses behavioral nudges to encourage people to trade. Robinhood added over 3 million accounts this year and in June logged more trades than any of the establishe­d, publicly traded brokerages. More than half of its customers are opening their first investment account, the company says.

People can start trading with small amounts of money because Robinhood offers fractional shares. In addition to stocks and mutual funds, the app allows trading in options, cryptocurr­encies and gold. Customers start out with a margin account, which allows them to borrow money to trade and amplify both their gains and their losses.

Alexander Kearns, 20, is one example of what can go wrong. The University of Nebraska student killed himself after seeing a $730,165 negative balance in his Robinhood account. The novice trader may have misunderst­ood a potential loss on part of an options trade that he made using borrowed money as a loss on the whole transactio­n. In reality, he had $16,000 cash in his account when he died.

Research has shown that the vast majority of day traders lose money, and only about 1% consistent­ly get better returns than a low-cost index fund. A rising stock market, and a flood of inexperien­ced and excitable investors willing to bid up stock prices, has convinced more than a few day traders that they’re part of that 1%. They’re being egged on by the few people who actually will make money: the hucksters selling seminars, ebooks and strategies that purport to teach you how to successful­ly trade.

Stocks don’t always go up

Stocks overall are an excellent way to gain wealth over the long term. If you can weather the downturns, stocks historical­ly have offered good returns.

Those downturns can be doozies, however. Stocks lost half their value during the Great Recession that started December 2007. The market lost nearly 90% of its value in the early years of the Great Depression.

Extended downturns have popped previous day trading bubbles, including the one that formed during the dot-com boom. The Nasdaq composite stock index rose 400% in five years, only to lose all of those gains from March 2000 to October 2002.

Markets that go down eventually come back up. That’s not true of individual stocks. Any single stock can lose value, sometimes all the way to zero, and never recover.

The sensible way to hedge that risk is diversific­ation. That means buying stocks in many, many companies, including companies of different sizes, in different industries and in different countries. That’s prohibitiv­ely expensive for most individual investors, which is why mutual funds and exchangetr­aded funds are a better bet.

There’s no such thing as a free trade

Another way to grow wealth is to minimize investing costs. That means trading less, not more, because trading incurs costs even when there are no commission­s involved.

Investment­s held more than a year benefit from favorable capital gains tax rates, for example.

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