Have you ever noticed those that most vehemently attack a buy-and-hold strategy really don't understand how buy-and-hold works? The confuse a buy-and-hold strategy with day-trading with a longer duration.
Case in point, the Forbes article Buy-And-Hold In Disrepute by Robert Lenzner. He tries to tie the buy-and-hold strategy to a risky BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India and China) investment:They lost even more in Russia and other emerging markets--to the tune of 70% or more--if they bought into the "BRIC" investing concept promoted hard by Goldman Sachs (GS) in the early part of the decade. You needed to buy and sell, not buy and hold. If you bought and held, you had the pleasure of the run-up followed by the pain of the collapse.
A true implementation of buy-and-hold would include a reasonable asset allocation framework in which emerging markets would never command anything more than a small percentage of total invested assets. Since, the people investing their hard-earned money should not be responsible in any way, who can we blame Mr. Lenzner?The truth is that the public was badly served by its investment advisers, like Alliance Bernstein, or their big public mutual funds, which stayed 100% invested all through the lead-up to the worst financial crisis since the 1930s. They took little or no money off the table. They never called your Aunt Sadie to advise her to take profits in 2006 and 2007 before the bottom dropped out.
So, the brilliant investment advisers should immediately sell as the investment peaks, then buy back in as it hits bottom? I thought we were talking about buy-and-hold. This sounds a lot like market timing.Investors beware: You have to watch over your money like hawks, read your monthly statements and ask questions. You must be active, not passive, when dealing with commoditized investment firms..
Finally, we agree on something. Maybe I should stop reading on a high note.Were you told to sell your General Electric (GE) or your Citigroup (C) before they became single-digit stocks? Many value-oriented funds were buying Fannie Mae (FNM) months before it became Uncle Sam's property.
No, but then again we should take personal responsibility for our market losses. Actually, the article would have been a lot better if it was titled "Professional Money Managers In Disrepute" and the unneeded references to buy-and-hold were omitted. But then again mentioning (or taking shots at) buy-and-hold and Buffett (I spared you from that remark) helps with the search engines and garners clicks.
Full Disclosure: No position in the aforementioned securities, but I did lose money in GE and C, in which I take full responsibility.
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