How
do you make your investment decisions and where do you get your information? If
you're like most of the people I know, you look to the experts. That's
fine, however it's important to be aware that for every expert, there's an
opinion and for every opinion there's an expert. I have a friend who says that
opinions are like noses: everyone has one but you wouldn't live in anyone
else's nose!
Around
the first of the year, along with the New Year's resolutions, come the New Year
predictions for what will be hot and what will not. As if that isn't enough to
produce a massive case of information indigestion, now we have the cable
financial shows with pretty much the opinion of the hour.
What
this is producing is a frenzy of buy and sell activity for stocks in general,
and now for mutual funds as well. I don't think this approach serves either the
investors in particular or the funds in general.
The
big problem with this for mutual fund investors is that all the experts are
recommending different funds. It might be one thing if experts had a solid
basis for their perspective. If they did, then you would think their
recommendations would line up and they'd all be touting the same thing.
But
they don't and they aren't. Oh sure, each one of them can make a good case for
their pick. But so can the next "expert." And usually both of them
won't be right (if either of them is). So, where's the value in this for you?
Beats me.
Another
problem with this approach is that many experts recommend different funds at different
times, and, in an effort to be in the hot fund, investors keep moving from fund
to fund.
In
the same breath, the experts are telling us to invest for the long term. Well,
I can't figure out how to do both: be in the latest hot fund, and hold what
I've got for the long haul.
The
downside of all of this for the funds is that sometimes a fund touted as the
hot one to be in attracts so much investment attention (i.e., money) that it
grows beyond its original intention. At that point, it loses its direction and
the very thing that made it strong is sacrificed. And guess what happens to the
performance?
So,
in the midst of all the hawking and hype for this fund or that, what's an
investor to do to make intelligent choices?
For
myself and my clients I use a trend tracking methodology, which identifies
long-term trends in various markets. I research funds for stability and
reliability as well as current performance. Then, when our trend indicator
signals a Buy, we select our mutual funds based on momentum figures for various
time periods to arrive at the most promising fund(s) to use for this
cycle.
This
gives us a head start and sometimes, weeks after we've bought a fund, I see it
written up in financial papers as being one of the best performers.
Does
this approach always put us in the number one fund? Maybe not. But we are
almost always in funds that are doing very, very well. And do we get in at the
bottom and out at the very top? Again, maybe not.
However,
I can tell you that, using this methodology, my clients and I followed the sell
signal we got in October, 2000, and were safely invested in solid money markets
when the stock market crashed and burned.
Is
this approach for you? It depends on how much adrenaline rush you like when you
watch your investments. Personally, I fulfill my thrill quotient with other
things in life and enjoy sleeping at night when it comes to my
investments.

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