Back to the Investment Basics, Part 5: Patience and Personal Persistence
So far in our investment basics series, we’ve explored the history of investing; how important it is to save (so you have money to invest); how to invest efficiently in broad markets; and why to avoid chasing or fleeing rising or falling prices.
By applying these logistics, you are much better positioned to let capital markets work their wonders on your investments. But there are two more essentials that can make or break even the most sensible portfolio, and neither of them are about market dynamics. They’re about you.
Once you’ve structured your investments to capture available, risk-adjusted market returns, you’ll need to stay on track as planned.
This calls for channeling your ability to be patient, and for ensuring your personal goals—rather than shifting market conditions—are driving your ongoing decisions.
You can’t invest if you haven’t saved.
Markets are inspired by ingenuity, tempered by diversification.
The price you pay matters.
Patience is a virtue.
Investing is personal.
Investing Like a 90-Year-Old
As we touched on earlier in this series, it’s risky to fixate on the most recent, random bursts of market activity. If you view the market close-up, you’re likely to perceive false, or at least misleading “patterns” that instill overly bleak or bold outlooks, even though all evidence suggests we cannot know what to expect next.
This, in turn, can trick you into making impatient investment choices that neither reflect nor advance your personal financial goals.
Instead, we suggest taking a wider view of the market across years of performance. This typically reveals a smoother upward progression—even if it rarely feels smooth at the time! Of course, we still can’t chart the future with certainty, but we can at least envision a range of potential dotted lines, generally pointing onward and upward … if you remain patient and participatory in the market’s expected growth.
As 92-year-old Warren Buffett observed:
“Our stay-put behavior reflects our view that the stock market serves as a relocation center at which money is moved from the active to the patient.”
— 1991 Berkshire Hathaway Shareholders Letter
Buffett wrote this statement more than 30 years ago and was practicing it long before then. He hasn’t changed his tune either, as evidenced in this more recent reflection:
“Productive assets such as farms, real estate and, yes, business ownership produce wealth – lots of it. … All that’s required is the passage of time, an inner calm, ample diversification and a minimization of transactions and fees.”
— 2020 Berkshire Hathaway Shareholders Letter
Being patient, and preferring decades-long investment commitments has worked wonders for Buffett. You could do worse than to emulate someone who has been investing for 70-some years and has long been among the wealthiest people on the planet.
Investing Isn’t Always the Answer
However, before you decide to invest everything you own, there’s a related caveat: Not all your money belongs in the market.
First, even the most stoic investor’s patience can wear thin during periodic, occasionally lengthy downturns. Diversification, along with a ballast of more stable investments, can help you maintain your resolve during troubling times.
Beyond that, it’s critical to keep some cash, or cash-like assets on hand throughout your life, to fund near-term spending needs. The goal is to avoid a scenario in which you have critical upcoming expenses, but the only way to cover them is to sell investments that have just taken a beating in the market or are otherwise tied up in holdings that can’t readily be converted to cash.
That said, holding too much cash comes with its own risks. Most notably, cash rarely keeps pace with inflation, which means you’re likely to lose spending power over time.
The trick is to balance investing toward future spending, with keeping enough cash on hand to cover upcoming expenses. For example, if your child is heading to college in the next year or two, you probably don’t want to wager their entire tuition bill on whether the market remains stable until then. On the other hand, if your child is still a toddler, you’ve got years to let that money earn market returns over time.
Which brings us to our final point.
Investing Is Personal
How do you decide how much to invest, and how much to keep in reserve for upcoming expenses (such as buying a home, paying for higher education, paying down debt, etc.)?
The answer is personal. The market is like an ocean: endless, ever-changeable, enduring. Since there’s no way you can control this greater force, how you choose to navigate it should be focused on your particulars. Not your neighbor’s interests. Not what the popular financial press would have you notice. Not what the tides have washed onto your financial beach most recently.
As you harness our previous investment essentials to build and manage your evidence-based investment portfolio, each decision you make should be grounded in your personal financial goals, when you want or need to achieve them, and which risk/reward tradeoffs you are willing or unwilling to make along the way.
To help you focus accordingly, we recommend forming a solid plan (which we can help with), and then automating as many of your investment decisions as possible. The fewer decisions you must make or re-make, the less indecision will wear away at your resolve over time.
This advice is timeless. According to a recent article in the financial press, a ConsumerAffairs survey listed 30-something Delyanne Barros as the second-most popular financial influencer among Gen-Z investors. We couldn’t help but notice how closely at least one of her tweets complemented Buffett’s advice, and ours (emphasis ours):
“Purchases I have automated: Paper Towels, Toilet Paper, Hair Products, Laundry Detergent, Body Wash, Tampons, Index Funds” — @DelyanneMoney
In other words, your investments should remain personal, guided by your own wants and needs. Set aside what you need for upcoming spending. Automate the rest by turning to low-cost index- or index-like investments. Then, let the market do its long-term thing.
By following these essentials, you can spend less time deciding what to do next, and more time actually doing it. That’s a good idea at any age, and a great way to wrap our multipart series on investment basics.
We’d love to continue the conversation with you in person. Reach out to us to schedule a complimentary 15-minute call to discuss your financial situation and concerns and share how we may be able to help.
This commentary reflects the personal opinions, viewpoints and analyses of the Stordahl Capital Management, Inc. employees providing such comments, and should not be regarded as a description of advisory services provided by Stordahl Capital Management, Inc. or performance returns of any Stordahl Capital Management, Inc. Investments client. The views reflected in the commentary are subject to change at any time without notice. Nothing in this piece constitutes investment advice, performance data or any recommendation that any particular security, portfolio of securities, transaction or investment strategy is suitable for any specific person. Any mention of a particular security and related performance data is not a recommendation to buy or sell that security. Accessing websites through links directs you away from our website. Stordahl Capital Management is not responsible for errors or omissions in the material on third party websites and does not necessarily approve of or endorse the information provided. Users who gain access to third party websites may be subject to the copyright and other restrictions on use imposed by those providers and assume responsibility and risk from the use of those websites. Please note that trading instructions through email, fax or voicemail will not be taken. Your identity and timely retrieval of instructions cannot be guaranteed. Stordahl Capital Management, Inc. manages its clients’ accounts using a variety of investment techniques and strategies, which are not necessarily discussed in the commentary. Investments in securities involve the risk of loss. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.