Wikinvest Wire

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

MSM Clues In To The Need To Innovate

Smart Money posted an article called Investing Reinvented: A Smart Money Master Plan. The article recaps what has gone wrong with traditional investing including some unintentionally funny quotes from financial advisors and then offers some ideas (without much detail) about how to start making changes.

If this marks a genuine recognition that markets evolve and so portfolio success must evolve then I am all for it. If the article is merely a bit of investment populism then it is less useful but still to the extent the magazine targets people who are just starting out perhaps the article will cause more people to seek out ideas that are more inline with reality.

Reality can still include buy and hold but long term holds sometimes need to go. When I buy a stock or an ETF I certainly hope to hold it forever. Over the years I've blogged about plenty of names that I sold for various reasons (good and bad) or other names where partial sales made sense. I've labeled this as buy and hope to hold. If something gets wildly overvalued, works out badly or somehow changes itself then it needs to be sold. Being in touch with this requires time spent monitoring a portfolio's holdings.

I would add that the buy and hope to hold should probably avoid broad based indexes and countries that seem to be shaky fundamental ground. The ETP industry obviously provides access for all sorts of countries and themes which greatly democratizes the chance for portfolio success which I think the Smart Money article is alluding to.

In addition to buying and hoping to hold the article makes a point that will be familiar to long time readers of being willing to explore new exposures. There is increasingly more recognition of the importance of minimizing losses during large market downturns. Some of the "new" exposures can help with this--currency funds, hedge fund replicators, absolute return and so on.

The markets evolve, that success in evolving markets requires innovative products and then end users must sift through these innovative products seems like it would be intuitive but apparently it is not. Hopefully articles like the one linked above help mainstream investors start to think about things differently. There is visibility for meaningful change in how people fund their retirement years and investors who will not seek (competent) professional help (this will be most people) need to be more engaged in determining their financial future, much more engaged.

By now you know of the passing of Clarence Clemons from the E Street Band which for whatever reason seems to be far more socially significant than the passing of Danny Federici. I remember the exact moment I first discovered Springsteen, my buddy Dave got his hands on the Born To Run album a couple of years after it came out (we were nine when it first came out) and he and the band have been a music staple ever since. Is there anyone else whose favorite Springsteen song is Rosalita?

1 comments:

winslow said...

Springsteen's music was the only thing that kept me sane all these years...especially in regards to the economy.I followed him long before he was popular and saw him at the first and only rock concert ever at Gammage at ASU. Jungleland is quite and arrangement.

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