Why Do You Care What the Market Did Today?

0

Are you one of those people who pore over the Wall Street Journal every morning? Do you find yourself tuning into CNBC to check the market throughout the day?
Unless you’re in the investment business, you don’t need to know how the market is doing every business day. It’s better to take a long-term view of all of your investments—or enlist the services of a respected Registered Investment Advisor to manage your money.
Too many investors have gotten hooked on daily investment talk shows. It’s information overkill. You don’t need to clutter your brain with the hourly movements in the commodities markets, the precious metals markets, or the stock and bond markets. You don’t need to be concerned with the daily analysis of these economic and market experts.
Every financial talk show seems to present the same maddening scenario. Only the specifics change. One guest says energy stocks are the way to go and another says food stocks. One says buy precious metals, and another says it’s time to dump your gold. In the end, what have you learned? Only that the opinions of the experts always differ, and there is no obvious answer.
Even as an investment advisor, I once fell into the same pattern. As with many financial pros that are about my age, years ago Friday nights found me in front of the television watching the great Louis Rukeyser’s Wall Street Week. The program always began with Lou talking to three renowned stock market pros. And Lou would usually ask them for a short-term stock market forecast.
But after a few years, a pattern was developing. One guest would say the market was going up, another said the market was going down and the third somehow managed to disagree with the first two!
In other words, it became apparent that the talking heads we see on financial programs are chosen for their ability to talk. They need to look and sound good. Rarely do any of the shows call out the bad calls.
DAILY QUOTES
Perhaps you are one of those investors who buy a new stock or mutual fund and then spend the next few days tracking its performance to see how your pick is panning out. It’s a natural tendency. But do you need to keep following it every day, week, or even every month?
You don’t check the value of your home or car every day. Why should you bother checking your investment values every day? Take the same attitude with your stock and bond investments.
Of course, it’s true that every one of your investments has a new price every business day. In fact, your stock investments can change prices by the minute—and your mutual funds change every day. But those are not your prices. Those are someone else’s, someone who is selling today. Your prices are months or years down the road.
In fact, you should stay away from stocks or stock mutual funds entirely if you foresee needing that particular chunk of money within the coming three or four years. If your time horizon is shorter than three or four years you need to keep that money in relatively stable investments such as short-term bonds, bank CDs or money market funds.
The problem is that following your portfolio too closely can motivate you to make bad decisions if you get caught up in the moment. And since there are always plenty of bad news stories to shake your confidence, you are more likely to sell out of fear rather than sticking to your long-term plans.
So assume you’ve made a good decision when you bought the investment, and then sit back and give it a chance to grow. Look at the market through a telescope, not a microscope.
The late Benjamin Graham, known as the Father of Securities Analysis, laid it out bluntly in his book, The Intelligent Investor: “The investor with a portfolio of sound stocks should expect their prices to fluctuate and should neither be concerned by sizable declines nor become excited by sizable advances. He should always remember that market quotations are there for his convenience, either to be taken advantage of or to be ignored.”
FINANCIAL MARKETS AND THE MEDIA
The financial media never stops making all of us feel like we absolutely must know stuff . . . the right now stuff.
But how much credence should you put in the commentary of the experts on Wall Street and the financial media? Almost none. I have been watching financial markets for decades and have yet to find a single one with a perfectly functioning crystal ball.
In other words, they don’t know with any certainty what the future holds.
Never have, never will.
But individually, each expert will spout fiercely held arguments for why the market will go up, down, or sideways. And if you didn’t know better, you might even think they actually do know the future.
They don’t. They can offer perfectly plausible reasons for why the market went up or down in the past—20/20 hindsight is rampant on Wall Street. But they can’t tell you with any certainty what the market is going to do next. Not this year, not next year, not ever, and since the media (almost) never calls them on their misses, they continue to prognosticate.
The financial shows, like most television, are entertainment. If you enjoy that form of entertainment, feel free to keep watching, but don’t expect to glean any gems of insight that will help your long-term performance. What advice would you follow anyway? Every guest touts a different stock, a different sector, a different strategy or a different outlook on the market. You’d beinvesting in circles if you really tried to follow the experts.
But it’s not difficult to understand why so many investors think they need to be concerned about the daily bumps and grinds of the markets. It’s because the media beats it into them.
With more than 30 years of experience in the investment industry, Ken Weber has become one of the premier mutual fund experts in the United States.
For ten years he published a financial newsletter, Weber’s Fund Advisor. His investment advice has also appeared in most major financial publications, including Barron’s, Money, The Wall Street Journal, Reuters, and The New York Times. Weber is a founding member of Fidelity Investments’ RIA Advisor Council, and is a member of the National Association of Active Investment Managers and the Financial Planning Association.
Prior to entering the financial services industry, Weber was a professional magician and mentalist. He is also the author of the book Maximum Entertainment: Director’s Notes for Magicians and Mentalists.
A native New Yorker, Weber holds a bachelor’s degree from Hofstra University and a master’s degree from Brooklyn College of the City of New York. His company, Weber Asset Management Inc., is located in Lake Success, New York. Connect with Weber on: WeberAsset.com

Share.

About Author

Founded in 1994 by the late Pamela Hulse Andrews, Cascade Business News (CBN) became Central Oregon’s premier business publication. CascadeBusNews.com • CBN@CascadeBusNews.com

Leave A Reply