OK, let's be straight here. I obviously don't know whether you personally are beating or lagging the market. But with a great many professional money managers failing to keep upwith the market, it's not much of a leap to assume that plenty of individual investors have found themselves eating Mr. Market's dust, particularly during the crazy rallyover the past eight months.
For those of you scratching your heads and wondering why you can't seem to figure out the crazy stock market, an article from CNBC yesterday might go a long way toward elucidating the situation. The thesis of the article was that investors who are still hesitant after the market's crash are slowly starting to creep back into the market:
Investment advisors say clients continue to view stocks with hesitancy and skepticism - a vestige of the panic that swept through the markets just a year ago. But that fear, ironically, has kept stocks from going up too far, too fast - allowing the market to move gradually higher as investors creep timidly back into stocks.
And that is the problem
"Buy low and
sell high" is the supposed mantra of most investors, but many
individual investors find their emotions swinging more wildly than the
bottom of the batting order at a 4-year-old's tee-ball game. When times
are terrible and valuations are low, fear takes over and causes them to
sell as fast as their mouse button can click. But when recovery hopes
are high and everyone is feeling more bullish, these same investors find themselves willing to pay up for many of the same stocks they sold in a panic months earlier.
Of course, it's not surprising in the least that that devilish imp Greed is goading investors right now. Looking at the returns of some stocks, you'd think making money in the market was as easy as buying a cup of coffee.
|
Company |
Return Since March 9 |
|---|---|
|
Las Vegas Sands (NYSE: LVS) |
1,142% |
|
Dendreon (Nasdaq: DNDN) |
1,004% |
|
Fifth Third Bancorp |
602% |
|
Ford (NYSE: F) |
401% |
|
Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) |
323% |
Source: Capital IQ, a Standard & Poor's company.
And while the recent returns may be somewhat higher because the drop-off was so steep, these kinds of gains aren't all that unusual following a market downturn. Check out what happened to these stocks in the eight months following the bottom of the dot-com blowup.
|
Company |
Return From Oct. 8, 2002 |
|---|---|
|
Corning (NYSE: GLW) |
614% |
|
Citrix Systems |
287% |
|
Alcatel-Lucent |
257% |
|
NVIDIA (Nasdaq: NVDA) |
243% |
|
NetApp |
209% |
Source: Capital IQ, a Standard & Poor's company.
Over that time, the median return of the 100 top-performing stocks came in at just under 97%, trouncing the 22% that the S&P 500 index provided. But here's the catch: In the three years that followed, the median performance of that same group clocked in at a hair under 22%, below the S&P's 29% gain.
Investors looking for easy money who charged back into the market after the first eight months of the post-dot-com rally may well have found themselves seriously disappointed.
Bulls make money, bears make money, and lemmings go splat
One
possible takeaway from this story is that if you don't have the time or
emotional fortitude to properly mind your investments, you may be
better off handing over your investing duties to a professional.
Assuming, of course, you find one you can trust to do the job right.
If you're dead set on managing your investments yourself, though, you probably want to keep a couple things in mind:
© 2009 UCLICK, L.L.C.