We live in a world of big bets. You canโ€™t watch a sporting event without being bombarded with advertisements for ways to bet on it. You canโ€™t read about investing without ads on this โ€œwinningโ€ strategy or that one. And this isnโ€™t about the โ€œkidsโ€ because Baby Boomers are buying bonds in one account while trading options in another. Theyโ€™re what I call the Jekyll and Hyde investors. And theyโ€™re everywhere.

I get it. Itโ€™s hard to be โ€œsafeโ€ with your money. Yes, you know how hard it was to make it, but โ€œlook at the opportunities out there,โ€ you say to yourself. You subscribe to this system or that, and before you know it, youโ€™re trading with the stars. That is until a once-in-a-generation Black Swan comes swooping in, and the investor begins losing money, like always. โ€œItโ€™s not my fault,โ€ he says, usually adding an excuse to justify the losses.

Your Survival Guy works too hard for his money to play these games. I have a front-row seat to the psychology of the investor. I know exactly how it all played out many times before this century, and like a broken record, it will play again and againโ€”and again. No one learns because they feel like they have the magic touch or that, this time, itโ€™s different. It never is.

I want investing to be boring. I want investors to embrace the income generated by my balanced strategy, similar to the bond and stock approach taken by the Vanguard Wellesley fund. I am not a fan of the Jekyll and Hyde approach, where one side could be completely wiped out.

Action Line: Work with an advisor to help you craft an individual mix of stocks and bonds. If you canโ€™t, then my next best choice is a Wellesley-style balanced fund, not the Jekyll and Hyde strategies we hear so much about or, more often, donโ€™t hear about because nobody tells you about their losses. Let’s talk.

 

Originally posted on Your Survival Guy.