| 投资者该有的心态 股市投资,买低卖高而已,赚取差价,和做投机生意也没有太大的差别。 说起来容易,做起来难:什么时候是“低”和应该买入的?什么时候又是“高”和应该卖出的? 人们的投资行为,多数不是在基于这样的原则,虽然感觉上自己是在努力的这样做。 人们投资行为的不“理性”现实,和做购买不同季节的衣服决策时的行为有点类似:明明知道,错季节购买可以获得好得多的价格,但是,多数的时候多数的人们不是这么做的,他们更乐意随大流。 下面的文章也说:更多的人喜欢等到下雨的时候在购买雨具。到天冷的时候再购买厚棉衣。 这样做,也有它的道理:毕竟,只有到了那个时候做那样的事,才成为需要优先考虑的。 这也是为什么,在季节到来的时候,当季的衣物卖的最多。不然的话,商店就应该在冬天的时候用最大的面积来销售冬季的衣服,而在冬天的时候来对付人们对于夏季衣物的需要。 所以,逆市而行,说起来容易,真的是做起来很难。 下面的文章给你提供了最新的证据。 Don't jump back into stocks unless you will stay 8:30 AM ET 3/22/13 | Marketwatch Getty ImagesTraders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- People don't buy umbrellas until it rains. They don't buy overcoats until the thermometer plunges below freezing. And many don't buy stocks until the market is up. Way up. We've seen that dramatically this year as retail investors emerged from their bond-market cocoons and jumped back into stocks. From 2007 through 2012, they pulled $600 billion from U.S. equity mutual funds while putting twice that amount into bond funds, according to the Investment Company Institute. But in January, investors started pouring money back into U.S. stock funds -- some $19 billion, their biggest such contribution in more than six years, according to ICI data. Since then, it's tapered off a bit, though flows into foreign equity mutual funds have remained strong. Meanwhile, retail brokerage firms like Fidelity, Schwab, and TD Ameritrade reported substantial increases in trading volume over 2012. Anecdotal evidence of a sentiment shift is also plentiful. This is from USA Today: "Efren Hernandez, 49, a government worker from Los Angeles, got back in the stock market this month after selling most of his stocks in 2007 and 2008…." "[Joanne] Mechling, 47, a married market researcher with no kids from Portland, Ore., admits that the fear of missing out on gains has given her a new sense of urgency to get invested. With the market near a new high, 'it's definitely safe to invest now,' she says…" Investors appear to have gotten back into stocks again for three reasons: equity markets' huge rallies to all-time highs; the decline in volatility, as measured by the VIX VIX) , over the past year, and the resolution of that great non-issue, the fiscal cliff, which created a noisy but ultimately meaningless brouhaha in the financial media late in 2012. As The New York Times reported, "Jim Cole, a 52-year-old employee at the Bank of the West in San Francisco, had most of the money in his individual retirement account in cash at the end of 2012 as he awaited a bad outcome to the fiscal negotiations in Washington. Since Congress reached its agreement, he has put almost all of that money to work in stocks." "'There doesn't seem to be this swirl of impending doom hanging over the U.S. economy or the world economy …,'" Cole told the Times. I don't want to throw cold water on these good people, who are doing their best for themselves and their families. But really, this is exactly the wrong way to invest. Investors who dump stocks amid fear and turmoil and then jump back in when their fellow investors are showing signs of complacency -- well, what can you say? This kind of backward market timing has caused mutual fund holders -- a good proxy for individual investors -- to underperform pitifully. A study by DALBAR tracking performance of equity mutual fund investors in the 20 years ending December 2011 -- a period encompassing bull and bear markets alike -- showed their compound returns trailed that of the Standard & Poor's 500 indexSPX) by more than four percentage points a year, precisely because of dreadful market timing. Just keeping their money in a no-brainer index fund or ETF and ignoring it would have been much more profitable. This is where psychology is not investors' best friend. Most of us are buffeted (no pun intended) by conflicting emotions of fear and greed, hubris and regret that prompts us to do exactly the wrong thing at the wrong time. Researchers in behavioral finance believe that people would much rather avoid a loss than enjoy a gain. Many of us -- men in particular -- are overconfident in our investing ability. It's the Lake Wobegon syndrome run amok. Investors kick themselves regularly for errors of omission – not buying Apple Inc. AAPL) when it first came out with the iPhone or not selling Apple when it hit $700, or maybe not being in stocks before the S&P soared 120% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA) hit all-time highs. "Now what's bothering you is that you're going to be exposed as an idiot," said Meir Statman, a pioneer in behavioral finance and professor at Santa Clara University. Regret is linked to what Statman calls "hindsight error." "Hindsight error misleads us into thinking that what is clear in hindsight was equally clear in foresight," he wrote in his book, "What Investors Really Want." And Bruno Solnik, who teaches at HKUST Business School in Hong Kong, pointed out that "regret is experienced relative to the best outcome of alternative choices that could have been made" -- like, say, investing in stocks in March 2009. Coulda, shoulda, woulda. That's why after four years of a bull market, I'd be pretty wary of throwing my money at stocks to "make up for lost ground." And I'm skeptical these people with a newfound affinity for stocks will really stay the course when times get rough again, as they surely will. That's why Statman suggests easing back in slowly -- over a period of months. "Dollar cost averaging is the remedy for regret," he said. And I'd recommend if you're going to get in now, don't put more than 25% to 30% of your money in equities, and wait for the next bear market to add more. But if you're not in it for the long haul, just don't bother. In the stock market, patience is the name of the game. |