Financial plaNning     
		
		Common Investing Mistakes 
		
		
		
		 
		 
		CBN.com 
		   One of the key maxims of  successful investing is this: Avoid making major mistakes. We're all bound to make some mistakes, but hopefully they're not  terribly costly ones. 
		
		 Recently, it occurred to  me that it would be instructive to challenge our Sound Mind Investing readers to step forward and admit to the  group, "This was my biggest  mistake." In looking back over the past 5-10 years, what did they do, or  not do, that they now regard as a major error? I was interested in learning if  a few common themes would emerge that we could then address in our newsletter. 
		In the interest of fair  play, I went first by sharing the story of one of my biggest blunders of recent  years. In 1999 I watched with amazement as some of the dot.com stocks rose to  breathtaking price levels when they had no earnings and no hope of having any  earnings for several years. The ones that did have miniscule earnings had P/E  ratios that went to 200, then 300, then 400 and more. It was insane. I decided  to cash in on the insanity by selling short two of the high flyers, profiting  when the inevitable bursting of the bubble took place. (If an investor thinks  the price of a stock is going down, the investor can borrow the stock from a  broker and sell it. Eventually, the investor must buy the stock back on the  open market at what he hopes will be a lower price.) But I didn't put a plan in  place. I was so sure that "they just couldn't keep going higher" that  I didn't bother with stop losses or any of the other aspects of a plan that I  regularly apply elsewhere. 
		I was way wrong. They did keep going higher. I was overly  confident, not knowing at the time that the limits of the mania were far more  elastic than I had ever imagined. I finally couldn't take it anymore and got  out. The losses weren't devastating, but they were painful, embarrassing, and  much more than they would have been if I had followed my usual guidelines. To  add insult to injury, the mania ended the very next week after I got out! (It  almost seems as if the market taunts you sometimes, doesn't it?)  
		My analysis was correct;  my timing  driven by my emotions  was terrible. If I had had the courage of my  convictions and hung in there, I would have cleaned up over the next year as  the tech crash unfolded.  
		Lesson: When you enter an  investment, always have a specific plan in place that will trigger your exit.  No exceptions. Even when you know you're right. Especially when you know you're right. 
		Our Sound Mind Investing readers accepted the challenge and came  forward with their stories. They varied in the details, but had a lot in common  when it came to the basic underlying problems. Here are the four most common  themes: 
		• No plan for when to sell. Tales abounded of buying stocks, happily  watching them rise, and then passively standing by and watching them crater to  single digit lows (or even bankruptcy). Some admitted to compounding the  problem by optimistically buying even more shares as they dropped in value, a  practice known as "averaging down."  
		• Overly concentrated in a "hot" sector. When an industry  moves into the media spotlight (as technology did in the 1998-2000 mania),  investors often respond by investing more and more of their portfolio in that  one industry. When the inevitable selloff occurs, their losses are much larger  than if they had maintained a prudent level of diversification. 
		• Underinvested in stocks. Out of either fear or ignorance, many  investors failed to invest 80%-100% of their portfolios in stocks in their  younger days, when time was on their side and they could afford to take the  additional risk. This cost them tens of thousands of dollars.  
		• Following the wrong advice. Many were the reports of turning their  portfolios over to a market professional and trusting him to get the job done.  In some cases, their trust was betrayed due to conflicts of interest  the broker placed a greater value on earning  commissions than what was best for the client. In others, the broker was well  intentioned but was either inept or used a flawed strategy. 
	         
		Sound Mind Investing  exists to help individuals understand and apply biblically-based principles for making spending and investing decisions in order that their future financial security would be strengthened, and their giving to worldwide missionary efforts for the cause of Christ would accelerate. In other words, we want to help you have more so that you can give more.
		 
		  
		  
 
 
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