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Weekend reading: How the Dow nearly made me a celebrity

Good reads from around the Web.

You almost got to hear me this week – as in you almost got to hear me waffling on in real-life, as well as via this regular Saturday ramble.

I know! Calm yourselves, there’s still Countryfile to look forward to.

The grand occasion nearly happened because I was nearly featured in a radio broadcast that nearly looked at investing in ISAs in the light of the US stock market highs.

Alas, something more exciting than me and my views turned up, and ISAs were dropped.

That’s show business!

Number cruncher

While some of you may consider it a new low for the loved but troubled Beeb that it’d invite me onto the airwaves, I was flattered and a bit thrilled.

The BBC!

On the other hand, I was all set to push back against the basic premise – that it was ISA season, and with the stock market on a tear we should be carefully considering where to invest our money.

Obviously I’ve got nothing against investing, nor the careful consideration of it.

But should anyone be thinking about it today, because the US Dow Jones index has hit a new high? Should we be putting money into equities – or not – because markets have rallied? Should we be contemplating our ISAs every March?

No, no, and no.

Most people should have a multi-year investing plan that is broadly market neutral. More active investors might try their hand at tweaking their allocations based on what they guess are the underlying valuations [1], but nobody should be investing because some number is higher today than yesterday. Most people will be better off ignoring all the headlines entirely, and going fully passive [2].

As for ISAs, you should open them on 6 April – the first day you can – rather than lose the benefit of a year’s tax-free compounding by waiting until the 5 April deadline.

No head for heights

And what about those new highs on the Dow?

While I set up Monevator partly to help people understand that non-events like this are made into a big deal by the fund management industry with products to push, I’d be a liar if I said I was immune.

Physician, heal thyself, and all that.

So sure I noticed the new high. As a partial stock picker (for my sins) I’ve also noticed many all-time highs being made by individual shares, too.

However any emotional reaction is short-lived when I remind myself:

You don’t believe me, despite my credentials as a blogger who was almost on the radio?

Here are some other good articles that say much the same in different ways:

From the blogs

Making good use of the things that we find…

Passive investing

Active investing

Other articles

Product of the week: Halifax’s fixed rate cash ISAs [21] now top the table over three, four, and five years, says The Telegraph [22]. You’re still only getting a miserable 3.1% by locking up your money up for five years though.

Mainstream media money

Note: Some links are to Google search results – these enable you to click through to read the piece without you being a paid subscriber of the site.

Passive investing

Active investing

Other stuff worth reading

Book of the week: Warren Buffett’s legendary annual letter made three book recommendations this year: Outsiders [34] by William Thorndike; The Clash of the Cultures [35] by passive investing guru Jack Bogle; and Tap Dancing to Work [36], a book about Buffett himself by his friend Carol Loomis.

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