5 Timeless Lessons from a Lifetime of Investing

Billionaire US businessman, investor, and philanthropist David Booth, who founded global asset management firm Dimensional Fund Advisors 40 years ago, has brought together five timeless lessons from his decades in the finance industry – lessons he wishes every investor could know so they have a better investment experience.

Dimensional manages over $A 1 trillion globally, is closely linked to several Nobel laureates in economics, including Merton Miller, Eugene Fama, Robert Merton, and Myron Scholes. David Booth founded global asset management firm Dimensional Fund Advisors 40 years ago this year. He was a Research Assistant at the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business, which was renamed the Booth School in 2008 after a $300 million pledge from the Booth family. Dimensional have a long history of applying academic research to practical investing. For this reason, Calibre Private Wealth Adviser, through our independent research partners, have historically recommended a number of their equity and fixed income strategies designed to target higher expected returns for the long-term benefit of our clients.

Here are his five lessons for investors.

Lesson 1: Gambling is not investing, and investing is not gambling

Gambling is a short-term bet. If you treat the market like a casino, and you’re picking stocks or timing the market, you need to be right twice – in an aim to buy low and sell high. Professor Fama showed that it’s unlikely for any individual to be able to pick the right stock at the right time, especially more than once.

Investing, on the other hand, is long term. While all investments have risk, there are things you can do as a long-term investor to manage those risks and be prepared. As Nobel laureate Merton Miller said, “Diversification is your buddy.” Investing is buying a little bit of almost every company and holding them for a long time. The only bet you’re making is on human ingenuity to find productive solutions to the world’s problems.

Lesson 2: Embrace uncertainty

COVID-19, the Global Financial Crisis, the Euro crisis, the Asian Financial Crisis, 9-11, China’s ‘hard landing’ the list goes on. These are events of the past 25 years that have created the unexpected.

Yet if we look at the long-term return of markets like the US S&P 500 or Australia’s ASX 200 the average total return is 10 per cent and 8 per cent respectively per annum. But neither have really ever registered a 10 per cent and 8 per cent return in any given year. The same is true of dozens of other markets around the world that have delivered strong long-term average returns.

Share-market behaviour is uncertain, just like most things in our lives. None of us can make uncertainty disappear but dealing thoughtfully with uncertainty can make a huge difference in our investment returns, and even more importantly, our quality of life.

The way to deal with uncertainty is to prepare for it. Without uncertainty, there would be no opportunity to do better than a relatively riskless return like that from a money market fund. We always emphasise that risk and expected returns are related, which means you can’t have more of one without more of the other. Make the best-informed choices you can, then monitor performance and make portfolio adjustments as necessary.

Come up with a plan to get back on track in case things don’t go as expected. And remember, you can’t control markets, so don’t blame yourself for results outside your control. Try to relax knowing you’ve made the best-informed choices you can. A trusted financial adviser, a fiduciary who puts your interests first can help you cultivate this sort of discipline and long-term perspective.

Lesson 3: Implementation is the art of financial science

Financial science tells us that things like diversification, long-term investment, compounding returns and dollar-cost averaging are the difference between below or above average returns. Yet, despite the science, so much can be lost in application because of poor discipline.

I was compelled to approach investing differently by the research Fama and other leading academics were doing to better understand markets and returns. There’s general agreement on what financial science tells us, yet so much can be gained or lost in application. Just as some sports teams can consistently execute their strategies better than others, investment professionals can consistently add value by dealing better with market mechanics.

Bob Merton and Myron Scholes were recognised as Nobel laureates for their options-pricing model, which shows that flexibility has value. Great implementation requires paying attention to detail, applying judgment, and being flexible.

Lesson 4: Tune out the noise

If an investment sounds too good to be true, it probably is. When people ask me if I’m investing in the latest shiny investment idea, I tell them, “If I don’t understand something, I don’t invest in it.” That’s because I’ve seen a lot of fads come and go.

TV pundits handing out stock tips? Friends letting friends in on their next big investment? I see these more as entertainment than information.

Stress is induced when people think that they can time markets or find the next winning stock, or that they can hire people who can. There is no compelling evidence that professional stock pickers can consistently beat the markets. Even after one outperforms, it’s difficult to determine whether a manager was skilful or lucky.

The good news is you can still do well without having to find what markets might have missed. While markets are unpredictable and may even seem chaotic at times, they have an underlying order. Buyers and sellers come together and trade, which is the activity that sets market prices. Unless each side agrees to a price, they don’t trade.

New information and expectations about returns are quickly incorporated. Consistently finding big winners is difficult, but everybody can have access to the expected returns that a diversified, low-cost portfolio can generate.

Lesson 5: Have a philosophy you can stick with

It can be difficult to stay the investment course during periods of extreme market volatility. Look at the 20 days between late February and mid-March 2020 when COVID-19 first hit. Record amounts of money exited equity funds flow into money markets. The ASX 200 at one point lost over 29%.

However, those that stayed true to their strategy and didn’t panic saw a subsequent 60% gain in the ASX 200 over the next 6 months from the bottom of the COVID crash. 2020 will be a year we will never forget for many, many reasons. We think you should add one more reason to why you won’t overlook how important it is to maintain discipline and stick to your strategy of diversified long-term investing.

By learning to embrace uncertainty, you can also focus more on controlling what you can control. You can make an impact on how much you earn, how much you spend, how much you save, and how much risk you take. This is where a professional adviser you trust can really help. Discipline applied over a lifetime can have a powerful impact.

Next steps

To find out more about how any of these measures may be of assistance in your individual circumstances, please contact Gordon Thoms or David Conte at Calibre Private Wealth Advisers on ph. (03) 9824 2777 or email us here.

This advice may not be suitable to you because it contains general advice that has not been tailored to your personal circumstances. Please seek personal financial and tax/or legal advice prior to acting on this information. Before acquiring a financial product a person should obtain a Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) relating to that product and consider the contents of the PDS before making a decision about whether to acquire the product. The material contained in this document is based on information received in good faith from sources within the market, and on our understanding of legislation and Government press releases at the date of publication, which are believed to be reliable and accurate. Opinions constitute our judgment at the time of issue and are subject to change. Neither, the Licensee or any of the Oreana Group of companies, nor their employees or directors give any warranty of accuracy, nor accept any responsibility for errors or omissions in this document. Gordon Thoms and David Conte of Calibre Private Wealth Advisers are Authorised Representatives of Oreana Financial Services Limited ABN 91 607 515 122, an Australian Financial Services Licensee, Registered office at Level 7, 484 St Kilda Road, Melbourne, VIC 3004. This site is designed for Australian residents only. Nothing on this website is an offer or a solicitation of an offer to acquire any products or services, by any person or entity outside of Australia.

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