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Prosper planet pulse
Home»Investments»Lessons learned from 30 years of investing
Investments

Lessons learned from 30 years of investing

prosperplanetpulse.comBy prosperplanetpulse.comJune 20, 2024No Comments5 Mins Read0 Views
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All investors experience successes and failures. The market doesn’t pick out certain investors. So what separates the best investors from the rest? It’s the lessons they learn along the way and how they apply them going forward.

Below are some of the key lessons I’ve learned from 30 years of investing.

“When the facts change, my opinion changes.”

This quote, often attributed to John Maynard Keynes (though it is believed he did not say it himself), is a reminder of the importance of adapting to changing circumstances. For example, in January the consensus forecast was that the Fed would cut interest rates six times this year. This forecast was based on an economic outlook that showed slowing economic growth, rising unemployment, and inflation approaching the Fed’s 2% target.

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However, the facts supporting the consensus at the beginning of the year have shifted, with economic growth, employment and inflation all significantly beating expectations, making it less likely that the Fed will cut interest rates aggressively in 2024.

Some investors were quick to adapt to the changing environment and revised their forecasts and portfolio positioning accordingly, while others who were anchored in the expectation of rate cuts were slower to adjust their expectations, which negatively impacted their portfolios.

Chasing yield is usually a bad idea

In a conference early in my career, a corporate CFO questioned the logic of risking his career for a 0.25% higher yield on his company’s short-term investments. That simple advice has stuck with me as I’ve seen investors lose money taking unnecessary risks to get a relatively small yield. In the years following the global financial crisis, the low-yield environment made it tempting to seek yield.

Higher yielding investments may have a place in a portfolio, but investors should do their homework to evaluate the feasibility of a bond’s coupon payments and principal repayments before investing. Equity investors seeking dividend yields should do similar work, evaluating the sustainability of current dividend payments (which are not guaranteed) and the valuation and growth prospects of the stock.