Until recently, much of our investment advice has emphasized the importance of maintaining your investment strategy, even when it’s tempting to jump out during market declines. Year to date, tables have been turning. Not only have many broad markets delivered gains from acceptable to amazing, but there has also been the usual assortment of sizzling stocks like NVIDIA (NVDA) and tantalizing new products like crypto ETFs to distract us with their dazzle. Strong market performance is welcome news. But at least in the wider investment world, we’re likely to see a different kind of response that isn’t as welcoming: Instead of fleeing the downturns, restless market players may be tempted to chase after speculative trends, no matter how closely they resemble past Fear of Missing Out (FOMO) frenzies. There’s a reason Fear of Missing Out has its own acronym; it’s an incredibly common affliction. When we combine FOMO with recency bias, we humans are especially prone to sabotaging our own best interests in fair markets and foul. When we succumb to recency, we give current news more weight than it deserves. We begin to believe the latest trumpets are somehow more important than the countless similar fanfares we’ve experienced throughout the history of capital markets. We forget that before today’s Magnificent Seven and related AI tech trends, there were the Roaring Twenties of U.S. industrial innovation (including automobiles and airplanes), the 1970s Nifty Fifty blue chip extravaganza, and the 1990s Dot-Com boom (and subsequent bust). We can add these to countless supposedly unstoppable market forces that have periodically taken investors by storm with their jaded battle cry: “This time, it’s different.” In other words, there’s almost always something alluring and allegedly unprecedented to fuel our FOMO. But before you lend excessive weight to the most recent high-flyers, remember: The latest innovations are often very real, remarkable, and potentially game-changing forces in our lives. However, the way capital markets absorb these forces and convert them into long-term returns is far more constant. Which reinforces why our own refrain remains the same whether markets are up or down: Neither hot nor cold streaks among stocks, sectors, or markets give us good reason to abandon an otherwise well-built portfolio. Consider instead how quietly a remarkable centennial just passed: When the Massachusetts Investors Trust fund was launched 100 years ago on March 21, 1924, it became the nation’s first open-end mutual fund. Some 50 years later, Wells Fargo Bank’s Management Services Department gave us the tools index funds use to track published indexes. Now, these are innovations worth celebrating, as they ultimately brought lower-cost, more efficient, and equitable market access to all. In a similar vein, we pay homage to the recently passed Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman. Having founded the field of behavioral economics, Kahneman and his colleagues demonstrated (among many other things) the hazards inherent to being a stock picker in hot and cold markets alike: “Unfortunately, skill in evaluating the business prospects of a firm is not sufficient for successful stock trading, where the key question is whether the information about the firm is already incorporated in the price of its stock. Traders apparently lack the skill to answer this crucial question, but they appear to be ignorant of their ignorance.” — Daniel Kahneman This is why we advocate building and maintaining a low-cost, globally diversified investment portfolio aimed at your personal long-term goals. This is despite the cognitive traps laid by the most recent rounds of FOMO. As Kahneman reportedly observed even more bluntly: “If you think you’re an expert on picking stocks, then you should be fabulously rich. If you’re not, you’re probably not.” — Daniel Kahneman Instead of chasing after something new, let your FOMO spur you to contact me to review and update your financial plans and focus on doing what is best for you. Best, Rick |
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