Over one year ago and thanks in no small part to the statement above, I concluded that Jim Cramer was a menace to investors.
It only took a few months for the rest of the nation to catch on.
Jon Stewart finally jumped on the bandwagon last March, exposing the
man for what I think he really is: an entertaining (if not, irritating)
media personality, but certainly not the champion of the individual
shareholder that he often claims to be.
In fact, I consider him to be the closest thing to a walking,
talking hazard for the individual investor there is. Now, Jon Stewart
may have the jokes, but I have the real reasons why Cramer is precisely
that -- and why you should take a pass on any investment advice he
tries to give you.
Thank you, Jon Stewart!
I continue to
fully applaud Cramer's stated goal -- help people make money by
investing in the stock market. But Cramer's outburst last year was a
mistake -- plain and simple. And, as Mr. Stewart so kindly illustrated,
it wasn't his first time.
You see, when someone issues panic-inducing market calls (as Cramer
does from time to time) -- and urges investors to avoid long-term
strategies to buy and hold good companies -- the average investor
simply gets crushed.
Cramer's Today show plea was grounded in a sound reality -- Fools should never have money they need during the next five years in the market.
But by advising people to indiscriminately sell, he helps contribute to
exactly the thing that he's trying to avoid: investors losing money.
Chances are, when the market was taking a chainsaw to some of our
more closely held assumptions about the U.S. financial system, most
viewers were so petrified that even a very small push was likely to
convince investors to join the terrified herds pulling their money out
of the market. And pull they did.
Between October and the end of November 2008, investors pulled out a
whopping $140 billion from U.S. equity funds. Based on what these funds
were holding, they were indirectly pulling out of mutual fund mainstays
like Pfizer (NYSE: PFE), Anheuser-Busch (NYSE: BUD), IBM (NYSE: IBM), Chesapeake Energy (NYSE: CHK), and U.S. Bank (NYSE: USB) -- many of which had already been hammered.
With the market now priced a bit above last year's "call," what the
heck has he done for you? Perhaps he saved you money in the collapse
that occurred in the ensuing months. But in order to complete the
circle, he would have had to tell these people precisely when to get
back in. Where the heck was he on March 6, when we reached the low? He
was nowhere to be seen on national television.
Those people who were convinced to run for the hills thus missed out on one of the biggest market rallies ever --
a rally no one saw coming. No matter how good Cramer's first call was,
that's 50% he won't be able to give you back. And therefore, it was a huge mistake.
Instead of holding onto the steady blue-chip stocks that have
historically provided investors with some of the strongest long-term
returns, many investors were just progressively selling at historic
lows ... thereby ignoring the sound and sage advice from names like
Buffett, Lynch, Graham, Munger, and Bogle.
You don't need a weatherman ...
I'll
admit that Cramer is entertaining, but no one can consistently forecast
the direction of the market, as he pretends to be able to do. I repeat:
No one can consistently forecast the direction of the market. That's the point.
The stock market moves completely randomly and unpredictably over
the short term. Therefore, trying to make a "call" on the market won't
consistently work out for you. Pick a direction (up or down), and
there's a 50% chance of being right -- even though the prediction is
rather meaningless.
It's like Punxsutawney Phil. The furry little critter climbs out of
his hole, and either he sees his shadow, or he doesn't. Whichever it
is, the result has nothing to do with whether winter is over -- just
like a stock market prediction has nothing to do with the market's
movements.
The scary part is that Cramer flip-flopped numerous
times in 2008, trying to call the bottom at various points throughout
the year. While CNBC may gloss over this fact, I've taken careful
notice. Don't forget about his theory that 2008 would be the year of natural gas. Ouch.
The talking heads on TV get paid to put on a song-and-dance show and
attract viewers. It's entertainment, folks. Your education or your
personal success, as Jon Stewart as kindly brought to light, is a
secondary priority (or not a consideration at all). Following the
advice of those that say they can predict the markets is likely to cost
you thousands (if not more).
Why?
In the real world, there are
commission costs, taxes, and opportunity costs -- all of which have a
tremendous impact on the returns that you're likely to experience.
Every time you pull the trigger in your account, think about your
broker and the tax-man doing a little touchdown dance. Much of their
income is predicated on you transacting as much as possible.
Take a hint from someone who knows a lot about the hidden costs of
investing: John Bogle, the founder of Vanguard Investments. He writes:
"No matter how efficient or inefficient markets may be, the returns
earned by investors as a group must fall short of the market returns by
precisely the amount of the aggregate costs they incur. It is the
central fact of investing."
Think about that the next time you hear "Buy, buy, buy" or "Sell, sell, sell."
And for those who listened to Mr. Cramer on his "prescient" market
call to sell, don't forget that he probably didn't bang on the table
loud enough to get you back in on the 50% rally we've just had.
Hopefully, you got yourself back in.
The Foolish bottom line
If you want to
make money in the stock market, you need to tune out the panic -- or
the euphoria. You need to remember that no one has any idea where the
market is going in the near or medium term. You need to buy shares of
great, built-to-last businesses. You need to hold for the long term.
And you need to keep as much money as you can from the tax man or your
broker.
That's what we do at Motley Fool Stock Advisor, and it's paying off. Take two of our best stocks, Activision (Nasdaq: ATVI) and UnitedHealth Group (NYSE: UNH).
We recommended buying shares of these stocks more than six years ago.
Both have thrashed the market by incredible margins. I bet we'll
continue to hold these two for a long time to come.
What was the cost of doing all this? Probably $24 in broker fees and
$0 in taxes. That's a perfect example of what I'm talking about. In
fact, our whole scorecard is beating the S&P 500 by 52 percentage
points.
As for Cramer ... he undoubtedly has an uncanny knowledge of
tickers, prices, and strange catch-phrases. But what he sorely lacks --
and what you must never forget in your investing days -- is
temperament. It was Warren Buffett who once said that, "the most
important quality for an investor is temperament, not intellect."
© 2009 UCLICK, L.L.C.
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