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The 4 Best Words of Investing Adviceby Bill Barker - December 28, 2007 - 0 comments
bad advice as well. If you've ever heard "It doesn't matter how high the price is -- buy all the Enron you can," that probably falls into the latter category." title="The 4 Best Words of Investing Advice"/> While you can spend all day listing smart and useful investment advice, I got to thinking about great advice that is limited to four words. Let's check the results. "Buy what you know" [I]t is most often read to mean buy the brands that you know, buy the companies that make products that you like, and buy the company names that you always hear in daily life. Thank you, Jeff. "Buy what you know" may help new investors get comfortable with the process, but it simply won't help you pick particularly good stocks if you don't get into the valuation side of the equation. Plenty of people bought Krispy Kreme because they "knew it," and that was a disaster. Alternatively, in the late '90s, plenty bought Microsoft because they "knew it," but, because of the valuation back then, they haven't been well rewarded despite the accomplishments of the company in the interim. Plenty of other people have bought Starbucks because they knew it, and that's worked out fantastically. Simply put, acting on "buy what you know" doesn't lead you anywhere in particular. "Buy low, sell high" We can all tell plenty of stories about someone selling a stock at a quick profit that seemed high but turned out to be several hundred or thousand percent below what they could have made by holding onto the stock. Tom Gardner frequently mentions Daktronics (Nasdaq: DAKT), Websense (Nasdaq: WBSN), Dell , and Whole Foods when confessing his own bad calls. Not to pick on Tom -- his results speak for themselves. But these were mistakes that came out of the "buy low, sell high" mold. "Buy an index fund" And that remains true. If you've got little time to keep track of stocks, this really is the best investment advice around. It's not perfect -- after all, you might be asking, "Which index fund?" And then you'd want to specify certain characteristics, such as: That means a fund like Vanguard Total Stock Market Index (VTSMX), or the Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF (AMEX: VTI), which coincidentally may hold a lot of what you know, including GE, Microsoft, Coca-Cola, Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ), Verizon (NYSE: VZ), and Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG). When cornered at cocktail parties for investment advice, this is the one piece I usually provide. After all, barely 25% of mutual funds beat the relevant market index over time. I don't think that you can really improve on this advice if you're stuck using four words or fewer. But you can spend more than four words on investment advice, and as with the other four-word mantras above, doing so usually yields even better advice. Like the classic index fund, a managed fund can have no load, low costs, low turnover, and strong diversification. It can, on rare occasions, have managers capable of properly allocating capital and valuing businesses, thereby adding value beyond the overall increases of the market. When you combine all of these factors, you get a fund that improves on its index -- and helps you make money. Such funds are out there. They take more than four words' worth of work to find, but Motley Fool Rule Your Retirement has uncovered a number of them. Along with a selection of exchange-traded funds that it recommends, as well as index funds beyond the S&P 500, our retirement newsletter focuses on inexpensive, diversified ways to save and invest for a healthy and happy retirement. |
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