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Blind Spots: The Mental Mistakes Investors Make
Blind Spots: The Mental Mistakes Investors Make
Blind Spots: The Mental Mistakes Investors Make
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Blind Spots: The Mental Mistakes Investors Make

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Your investor behavior will have as much of an impact on your success as the assets in which you choose to invest.


Do you feel stuck as an investor? Does investing, saving for the future, and the idea of "professional money man

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 24, 2023
ISBN9798986782522
Blind Spots: The Mental Mistakes Investors Make
Author

Steve Booren

Steve Booren started his investment career in 1978 with a NYSE investment fi rm. To provide clients with objective investment advice, he started Prosperion Financial Advisors in 1996, working to identify clients' opportunities and strengths and to develop strategies to manage risk. Steve is an avid cycler, accomplished skier, mediocre golfer and happy grandfather. With his wife Marie, he has two married children, Scott and John.

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    Book preview

    Blind Spots - Steve Booren

    CHAPTER 1

    Why Are We Talking about Behavior?

    For the past forty years, I’ve spent most of my days helping people with investing. The conversations have been as varied as the people sitting across from me: teachers, doctors, lawyers, janitors, business owners, and people from just about every other vocation you can imagine. While their circumstances and needs are often unique, there is one aspect that remains consistent across generations, vocations, and wealth levels: behavior.

    My experience has taught me that behavior is a far greater tell of a successful investor than nearly any other characteristic. Your behavior as an investor tells me everything I need to know about helping, or not helping, you work toward your financial goals. Good behavior doesn’t mean pinching every penny or saving every dime. Instead, good behavior is about asking for advice when you don’t know, heeding the advice you receive, and personally taking action or finding the right people to put that advice into motion. Those who are students of their behavior—and of their mistakes—have the opportunity to improve their behavior and outcomes. Let me give you an example.

    I met a gentleman named Ted at a conference in early September 2021. Ted has been a facility manager for a large organization for several decades. He helps maintain the building and equipment they use, ensuring it remains ready for the next event. Almost thirty years ago, he and his wife sat down with a financial advisor and sketched out a basic plan. This plan, presented in a three-ring binder, outlined a few simple rules—rules that if followed, offered a shot at a retirement well beyond what they thought was possible.

    The rules were simple:

    Avoid debt

    Save in retirement accounts

    Don’t be greedy

    Don’t spend more than you make

    Diversify

    Even after raising four kids, putting them through college, paying for their weddings, and generally doing life, they stuck to those basic rules. Today, they have about double the money the advisor thought they’d have. They have choices, flexibility, and a lifestyle that will keep them comfortable for years to come. They asked for advice, listened, and acted. Their good behavior allowed the power of compounding to work for them.

    This book is written for those who want to be students of their behavior. Maybe you’ve made poor decisions in the past: buying at the top, selling at the bottom, chasing a losing investment, or selling a winning investment too early. Maybe you’ve let emotion override logic and want to better understand why that happened, and what you can do to prevent it from happening again.

    As a result, this book is for both the DIY group—intent on managing their own money with as few illogical and emotional hiccups as possible—and for those who work with investment pros and financial advisors. It’s important to remember that while those professionals are paid for their advice, there’s little recourse for them if you call them up as the market tanks, demanding your entire portfolio be sold. At the end of the day, it’s your money, and you’re responsible for it. Ignoring logic in favor of emotion can burn an investor, regardless of their affiliation with a professional.

    My hope is that this book will help make you a better investor. You’ll learn more about why we often behave irrationally when it comes to money. Hopefully aspects of this book will encourage you to question your beliefs, behaviors, and attitudes. In doing so, you’ll not only better understand yourself, but what you can do to generate a better outcome over the rest of your investing years.

    THE IMPORTANCE OF GOOD BEHAVIOR

    I believe your behavior as an investor will impact your financial future much more than asset allocation, degree of diversification, or even security selection. How you respond to situations and react to events, and your emotional IQ, will ultimately dictate your success at long-term investing.

    Behavior reflects emotions, which are like an invisible muscle, always at work. Exercising my physical muscles with weights or repetition allows me to grow them into something stronger and more adept at handling even more resistance. Your emotional muscles work the same way. Trial by fire and tough situations all help to strengthen your resolve, confidence, humility, and ability to keep a cool head in trying times. Whether that’s a divorce, an unexpected death, a welcomed windfall, or a challenging disability, an emotional situation both good and bad will test your emotional aptitude. As the adage goes, the hottest flames forge the hardest steel.

    Like physical muscles, one’s emotional muscles are best exercised in specific ways. Without direction or proper technique, the benefit quickly becomes a safety hazard. We’ve all been in situations where we’ve let our emotions get the best of us—influencing our actions, words, even plans. Like those who yell at their waiter, untethered emotions rarely help to improve a situation and can quickly put people on a course for disaster.

    Professionals are not immune to bad behavior. Reflecting on my career as an advisor of over thirty years, I’ve had my share of cringe-worthy moments, managing money for myself and others. One example came in the late seventies, early in my investment career, after reading that the US government was auctioning mineral land leases to private companies and citizens. Winning one of these leases entitled the owner to engage oil and gas companies, who would in turn try to unearth black gold. It sounded like an opportunity, but the auctions themselves were logistically difficult to participate in, so I attempted to find people with expertise in securing these leases. My thinking was that I could win a lease, then turn around and offer it up to oil companies in exchange for a royalty. Fool-proof plan, right?

    My first mistake was hiring a company in Florida to help obtain the lease. Why I felt I could trust someone in Florida with oil and gas leases in Wyoming...well, that was a judgement error.

    After a couple of conversations with a salesman, he explained that many of his clients had won leases in the Powder River Basin of Wyoming. Greed set in, and my original plan to invest $5,000 suddenly changed to $20,000, a significant amount of capital at that time. But I wasn’t too worried. I will soon begin winning leases, and it won’t be long before cash flow starts rolling in from oil and gas revenues, I thought.

    Little did I know that this company was effectively running a scam. They had nothing to do with leases but were instead raising capital for themselves.

    How did that work out for me? I lost 100 percent of my capital. What was my recourse? Zero.

    Greed (which ties into emotional intelligence and behaviors) blinded my common sense. This loss did teach me a lesson, however, that I still put in practice today: complexity can hide a lot of sin. I learned a $20,000 lesson on keeping it

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