One of the dirty secret is a simple one, and it derives mostly from
investor behavior. You don’t always get more return on average if you
take more risk. The amount of added return declines with each unit of
additional risk, and eventually turns negative at high levels of risk.
The graph above is a vague approximate representation of how this
process works.
Why is this so? Two related reasons:
- People are not very good at estimating the probability of success for ventures, and it gets worse as the probability of success gets lower. People overpay for chancy lottery ticket-like investments, because they would like to strike it rich. This malady affect men more than women, on average.
- People get to investment ideas late. They buy closer to tops than bottoms, and they sell closer to bottoms than tops. As a result, the more volatile the investment, the more money they lose in their buying and selling. This malady also affects men more than women, on average.
Put another way, this is choosing your investments based on your
circle of competence, such that your probability of choosing a good
investment goes up, and second, having the fortitude to hold a good
investment through good and bad times. We know that the more volatile the investment is, the more average people
lose in their buying and selling of the investment, versus being a
buy-and-hold investor.
Since stocks are a long duration investment, don’t buy them unless
you are going to hold them long enough for your thesis to work out.
Things don’t always go right in the short run, even with good ideas.
(And occasionally, things go right in the short run with bad ideas.)
For more on this topic, you can look at David Merkel's ,RealMoney.com writer, Volatility Analogy.
It explains the intuition behind how volatility affects the results
that investors receive as they get greedy, panic, and hold on for dear
life.
In closing, the dirty secret is this: size your risk level to what
you can live with without getting greedy or panicking. You will do
better than other investors who get tempted to make rash moves, and act
on that temptation. On average, the world belongs to moderate
risk-takers.
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