3 Signs You’re Gambling, Not Investing!

Never has there been a time in market history when more people who think of 
themselves as investors were actually gambling with their money. From Wall 
Street to Main Street the lines are blurry. Just look at the trials of JP 
Morgan (JPM), where even the bank itself confused hedging risk with making an 
enormous bet; and Facebook (FB), whose IPO created a frenzy that has so far 
lost money for investors 
that rushed in. If it can happen to them it can happen to you. Mark 
Matson, the author of "Main Street Money" joined Breakout to discuss three 
signs that you're gambling with your money, not investing it.
1. Stock Picking
Matson says "the idea that you're going to have inside knowledge, or 
knowledge that nobody else has" and use it to pick stocks with better 
returns than the broader market is folly. Individual stocks are always 
more risky than a diversified portfolio. You're kidding yourself if you 
think otherwise. This rule applies not just to the go-to names like 
Apple (AAPL) but perennial value plays like Berkshire Hathaway (BRK).
Matson advises that instead of hand-picking your portfolio of five to ten 
stocks, you must be much more diversified with exposure to 11,000 
global stocks.
2. Market Timing
"The trick to investing is not buy and hold, it's buy and re-balance," he says.
This means is keeping your portfolio 
mixed with equities and debt at whatever risk level you wish to have. 
For instance, if you want to have 50% stocks and 50% bonds, then when 
your equities post gains, your portfolio could suddenly become weighted 
55% stocks. This would be a sign to fix your asset balance by selling 
some stocks and putting the proceeds back into debt until you got back 
to that 50-50 mix.
"You do want buy low and sell high, but you gotta do it smart."
3. Track Record Investing
Matson says most people decide they want their equity investments 
spread around in pools like small cap growth or large multinationals. 
Once that has been decided they go out and look for the mutual funds 
with the best track record in those specific sectors.
"The reality is 75% of all active fundmanagers fail to deliver market rate of 
returns and those 25% who get lucky have zero correlation about repeating in 
the future," he says. There's little if any connection 
between beating the market one year, and pulling off the same trick the 
next.
"Don't chase some hot stock picker or someone even with a 20 or 30 
year record," Matson insists. This is the equivalent of betting on the 
jockey to win the horse race.
It's a far better strategy to own global index funds with low cost 
and widely diversified risk. "Remember, the returns come from the 
market, not the individual investor," says Matson.
Run through his list and see if you're applying these rules with your money. If 
you aren't, there's a good chance you're taking on more risk 
than you think.

http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/breakout/3-signs-gambling-not-investing-143026282.html;_ylt=Agaz3qLF135yjVcr.CMJXdGiuYdG;_ylu=X3oDMTQwbTdyMm1pBG1pdANGUCBCcmVha291dARwa2cDZGIxMjJiMTgtY2IyYi0zMmVhLTkyMWMtZGRlMzIyNzU0NjUxBHBvcwMxBHNlYwNNZWRpYVNlY3Rpb25MaXN0VGVtcAR2ZXIDMDgwOWM5ZDAtYTVhZC0xMWUxLWJmYWUtODg1OGFkNmMzOWRh;_ylg=X3oDMTJmZ2I0NTZoBGludGwDdXMEbGFuZwNlbi11cwRwc3RhaWQDBHBzdGNhdANob21lBHB0A3NlY3Rpb25zBHRlc3QDTWFya2V0VXBkYXRlX0Fib3ZlX0xSRUM-;_ylv=3

 
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