Big Lie #1: Buy and Hold
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Title: Big Lie #1: Buy and Hold
Word Count: 560
Author: John M. McClure
Email: etfinancearticles@yahoo.com
Article URL: www.submityourarticle.com/articles/easypublish.php?art_id=7017
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Big Lie #1: Buy and Hold
Copyright 2006 Equitrend, Inc.
So much of what you hear in the financial press these days
is so wrong, that one must consider most financial
television and print to be strictly for entertainment
purposes only. In this article, we’re going to examine one
of the big lies constantly being pedaled, the myth of Buy
and Hold.
“Buy a stock or mutual fund and hold it through thick and
thin for 30 years and you will make money,” they say. “On
an annual basis, the market goes up a little less than 2/3
of the time. Over 5 years, it goes up ¾ of the time. Over
30 years, you are virtually guaranteed a positive return.”
They spout these statistics because the financial industry
is wholly dependent on buy and hold. With a buy and
strategy, your broker doesn’t need to know how to manage
money or guard your portfolio. All he has to do is sell
you more products and collect his commission, or more
recently, a hefty percentage of your portfolio as a
“management fee.”
In a perfect world of ever rising stock prices, buy and
hold would be a viable plan, but the real world tells a
different story, a sad story of the consequences of blindly
following a buy and hold strategy.
Here are the tragic facts:
* $100,000 invested in the S&P 500 in January, 2000, was
worth $84,901.72 in January, 2006.
* $100,000 invested in the NASDAQ 100 in January, 2000,
declined to $44,370.97 by January, 2006.
* The average recession in the United States decreases
major U.S. equity indexes 43%.
* The NASDAQ decline from March, 2000 to October, 2002,
will require a 461% gain just to get to break even.
* Of 16 major national stock markets, investors from only
five would have been guaranteed positive annual returns
over every 20 year period during the past century.
At best, buy and hold investors have been treading water
for the last six years, and by treading water, they’ve
actually been going backwards since the Consumer Price
Index has been going up an average of 2.5% per year. But
to many investors, treading water would have looked like a
really good deal.
They were the people who watched their nest eggs implode by
as much as 80% between 2000 and 2002 while their brokers
and mutual fund managers did nothing to save them.
Retirements were destroyed; millions had to return to work,
dreams were put on hold. Families suffered and still
suffer today in real and tangible ways.
And today many say that The Millennium Bear Market of 2000
can’t happen again. But it has happened before and will
happen again! Between 1972 and 1974, the NASDAQ dropped
60% and stayed down until April, 1980. Eight years of
negative returns.
Not to mention the Dow crash of 1987 or the fourteen year
bear market in the Nikkei Index.
Even without a headline making
drop, U.S. stock returns over the last five years have been
negative when factored for inflation.
The only sane solution for an investor today is to educate
himself and find a better way to protect and grow his
wealth. There are a number of proven options available,
but the absolute worst thing one can do is listen to the
pundits who tell you to “buy and hold.”
About the Author:
John M. McClure is CEO and President of EquiTrend Inc., a
stock market timing system that averages 42% profits per
year. Mr. McClure is also a Registered Investment Advisor
and President of the National Association of Active
Investment Managers.
www.equitrend.com
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