As a trend watcher and a market participant, my primary concern is to look for major trends or investment themes rather than to be immersed or get engaged in glamorous or fad based punts. Unfortunately, to the average investor’s mindset, expectations are weighted towards the actions of the ticker. Immediate gratification rather than long-term rationality is commonly preferred. The markets essentially become an arena for gambling. Yet when the cycle turns against them, they have everyone else to blame except themselves. Do you think the outperformances of market savants as Warren Buffett, Ben Graham and their ilk come with short-term mark-to-market bets? These gurus had long periods of underperformances before the markets eventually proved them right. Take for instance the illustrious Bill Miller of the Legg Mason Value Trust. His fund has had a phenomenal streak of beating the S & P 500 for a period of 15 years! Yet his fund is down by about 10%, does it make him less of a guru for today’s short-term quirk?
Unlike contemporary analysts who rate “value” buys on issues which have been moving up, these investing icons load up on issues frequently ignored by the public which to them represent as intrinsic value. Market timing, in short, has been inconsequential to them. In the words of another guru David Dreman in his Contrarian Investment Strategies: The Next Generation (emphasis mine), ``Demanding immediate success invariable leads to playing the fads or fashions currently performing well rather than investing on a solid basis. A course of investment, once charted, should be given time to work. Patience is a crucial but rare investment commodity. The problem is not as simple as it may appear; studies have shown that businessmen and other investors abhor uncertainty. To most people in the market place, quick input-output matching is an expected condition of successful investing.”
Patience, after all, is a matter of managing one’s expectations of time. To quote investing wordsmith Peter Bernstein (emphasis mine), ``Once we introduce the element of time, the linkage between risk and volatility begins to diminish. Time changes risk in many ways, not just its relation to volatility.” In converse, the shorter the timeframe, the bigger the risk involved. Time is, in essence, an investor’s best friend.
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