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Weekend reading: Whither investing goals and the weather?

Some great investing articles from around the web.

This week my favourite post was really just a quote. It came from sporadic blogger UK Value Investor who wrote [1]:

Having a returns goal in stock market investing is a bit like having the goal of it being sunny tomorrow.

What a succinct way of putting it. Bravo!

Of course, as someone who writes 1,000 words when 100 will do, I don’t think his pithy aphorism tells the full story. His quip focuses on tomorrow, but his actual goal has a five-year time horizon.

Whether the market will rise or fall tomorrow is almost a 50/50 call. (There’s a slight bias towards it rising). It’s practically a coin toss.

But as we’ve seen from looking at returns from stocks and volatility [2], the odds of superior returns from the stock market increase in step with the length of time you’re invested.

To extend the weather metaphor, we’d question the sanity of a farmer who refused to plant his corn because the forecast is for rain next Tuesday. He’s planting in the reasonable expectation of enough sunny days over summer to deliver his harvest.

Or what would you think of a wine producer who tore up her vineyards when she realised she can’t predict the weather a decade out?

Madness: in reality she’d look at the location, the terroir (French for mud, basically) and the witty bottle labeling she has in mind to amuse dinner party guests in a decade or so, and then she’d put her feet up with Jay McInerey’s wonderful A Hedonist in the Cellar [3] and trust in the law of averages.

It’s the same when investing. We can’t know what the market will do tomorrow, but we can prepare ourselves with a well-diversified portfolio and a long-term plan. (And if volatility really scares you, consider investing with a focus on income [4], which is usually more stable than valuations).

UK Value Investor’s quote is excellent, and I’ll be using it in the future myself. It’s a great reminder to be wary of banking on spreadsheets and average returns. After a good run for equities like we’ve enjoyed recently, it’s all too easy to get complacent.

But real life investing has a habit of raining on your parade. Or surprising you with a rainbow.

From the money and investing blogs

Money Maven roundup

Mainstream money

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