Slide Show | March 2009
7 LESSONS FROM THE MELTDOWN
But you don’t have to spend $50,000 for a year at some elite university to acquire those pearls of wisdom. We’ll give you seven for the cost of this magazine. These lessons won’t restore your wealth. But someday, and maybe even before the financial markets recover, the knowledge will prove valuable. The slide show begins to your right.
By Jeffrey R. Kosnett
Photo Illustrations by Mark Matcho 7 LESSONS FROM THE MELTDOWN
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1) Where’s The Money? You’d Better Know—Literally.
If you’re an investor in a bundle of mortgages or business loans, do you know who the borrowers are? Investors in something called Agape World thought they had a piece of a package of well-screened business loans that paid as much
as 16% with nary a default. The loans and the interest payments
proved to be fake, and the investors lost more than $370 million total. 1) Where’s The Money? You’d Better Know—Literally.
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2) New Investment Gadgets Won’t Save You.
There’s a good chance that other gadgets, such as principal-protected notes, will also disappoint because any complex trading model is vulnerable to unusual events, such as the failure of big banks or a two-year recession. A bunch of all-purpose bond funds that were built around derivatives-trading strategies have already blown up.
If you believe stocks will recover but want to protect against
further decimation of your portfolio, pair a fund that tracks
Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index with short-term government or
municipal bonds. 2) New Investment Gadgets Won’t Save You.
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3) Don’t Deify Those Who Warned About Losses.
However, if you have an adviser who isn’t habitually negative but urged you to switch more into cash and Treasuries a year ago, then you should shower him or her with praise. Sending over a nice bottle of wine or a bouquet of flowers would be an appropriate thank-you gesture. 3) Don’t Deify Those Who Warned About Losses.
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4) Wild Swings Over Short Periods Are The New Normal.
For most of us, this pattern suggests that we should be trading less and holding longer, and putting little faith in those instant explanations of why the markets had a good week or a bad one. But if you do like to trade while the market is open, think about the time of day. If you own a stock that falls 10% at the market’s opening, don’t sell then (unless the company has announced that it is filing
for bankruptcy or that some other catastrophe has befallen it).
Before midday, the bargain hunters will poach, narrowing
that 10% loss to a more palatable 4% or so. If you need to sell,
that’s the time to do it. 4) Wild Swings Over Short Periods Are The New Normal.
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5) Cash Is Never Trash.
The lure of cash is that it enables you to pick up investments on sale. Gobs of high-quality stocks are down 50% or more over the past year. You can’t buy them unless you have some money in reserve 5) Cash Is Never Trash.
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6) You’re Taking More Chances Than Ever Before.
One of the unfortunate side-effects of the financial crisis is that practically every investment has become riskier than it used to be. For example, money-market mutual funds are not quite the ironclad investment they’ve always been touted to be. High-quality corporate and municipal bonds have shown they can fall by double-digit percentages. Blue-chip stocks are capable of losing half their value in a year. 6) You’re Taking More Chances Than Ever Before.
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7) We Live In A Tightly Wrapped World.
If you expect long-shot single-country funds or emerging-markets stocks to override your frustration with losses in the U.S., you’ll be disappointed. Instead of diversification by country, spread out across categories—stocks, bonds, real estate and commodities—with both domestic and
international selections. You’ll be ideally placed when business
recovers, which it will in Taiwan when it does in Tennessee. 7) We Live In A Tightly Wrapped World.






