Summer Report Card: Active Fund Managers Demonstrate Bad Timing – Presented by Mark K. Lund, Financial Advisor in Utah

You’re driving down the interstate. Traffic is heavy and you’re running late. You get in the left lane, which is supposed to move faster. But for some reason it comes to a stop. So you dodge over to the right lane, which also stops. Now the left lane is moving again. So you signal to get back over—if someone would just let you in.

Frequent lane changing is a risky habit. Around 3% of all fatal crashes in the U.S. involve changing lanes or merging.1

But at least it’ll get you where you’re going sooner, right? Not so fast, say the people who study traffic flow.

Gary Davis, a civil engineering professor at the University of Minnesota, has found that when driving in heavy traffic, frequently changing lanes does not significantly affect the average speed of a car.

It just feels like you’re going faster.

The reason is that it’s difficult to judge the actual speed of traffic around us. “If you’re in heavy traffic,” he says, “it’s really hard for an individual to determine which lane is faster.”

Part of this is due to a limited window of perception (we pay more attention to the speed of traffic around us when we’re stopped), and part can be chalked up to what researchers call “lane envy”—the feeling we get when the cars beside us are moving and we’re not.

When you’re not making short-term progress, getting over into the next lane at least feels like you’re “doing something.”

The same psychology seemed to affect professional investors during this past summer’s volatility. In June, rate hikes by the Federal Reserve in response to inflation caused a dramatic sell-off in stocks.

According to the Financial Times, many active fund managers hoped to stem their short-term losses by fleeing into the “safe harbor” of cash.2 Unfortunately, having their money out of the market caused them to miss the dramatic recovery of the next few weeks.

Bank of America reported that “despite the super soaraway last month, only 28 percent of active fund managers focusing on big stocks beat their Russell 1000 benchmarks.”

In other words, if someone invested in a fund that tracked the Russell 1000 index and did absolutely nothing, they would have beaten nearly three quarters of active managers who specialize in that market sector.

Like frequent lane changes, frequent investment trades come with risks and potential costs.

With volatility continuing this year, even the most disciplined retirement savers have wondered about “changing lanes” to assets that appear to be doing better in the short-term. But just like someone who finds themselves stuck in traffic, just “doing something” is rarely productive. In both cases the most prudent action is patience with a view to the long-term.

If you ever have any questions about your investments or retirement plans, please feel free to give me a call at 801-545-0696.

Regards,
Mark Lund
Stonecreek Wealth Advisors, Inc., A Financial Advisor in Utah
11576 S State Street, Bldg. 1002
Draper, UT 84020

Sources:
1. http://go.pardot.com/e/91522/s-while-driving-save-you-time-/85v592/1675703584?h=OGyrZD6D-vHomZurK5gt6XiW9eH8iY13jMV8jQngD2I
2. http://go.pardot.com/e/91522/02-f899-4c28-b670-82d46ad18746/85v595/1675703584?h=OGyrZD6D-vHomZurK5gt6XiW9eH8iY13jMV8jQngD2I

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About the Author ()

Mark K. Lund is the author of The Effective Investor, a #1 Best Seller, and founder of Stonecreek Wealth Advisors, Inc. an independent, fee-only, Registered Investment Advisory firm. He has provided articles for or been quoted in: The Wall Street Journal, The Salt Lake Tribune, The Enterprise Newspaper, The Utah Business Connect Magazine, US News & World Report, and Newsmax.com, just to name a few.  Mark publishes two newsletters called, “The Mark Lund Growth Report” and “Mark Lund on Money.”  Mark provides CPE (continuing professional education) courses for CPAs.  You may also have seen him on KUTV Channel 2, or as a guest speaker at a local association or business. Mark provides investment and retirement planning services for individuals and 401(k) consulting for small businesses. In his book, The Effective Investor, Mark exposes the false narrative magazines, media, big Wall Street firms, and most advisors want you to believe. The good news is that Mark will show you that you don’t need their speculative ways of investing in order to be a successful investor. Get a free copy when you schedule your initial consultation.

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