A lot of investors tend
to hang on to poorly performing investments for far too long
Investment advisors'
commonest lament is that investors are not patient with their investment. Investors
buy and sell too often, and have an excessively short-term perspective.
However, this is an impression that is primarily true of equity investors.
Equity investors tend to sell their holdings for three possible reasons:
one: they've made a loss,
two: they've made a
profit, and
three: they've made
neither a loss nor a profit.
However, mutual fund
investors seem to be guilty, if anything, of the reverse sin. There are far too
many investors who hang on to mediocre funds for long periods of time, losing
large chunks of potential returns.
Does that mean that
investors should be trigger-happy about getting out of their investments? Not
really. It means that most of us who invest in mutual funds need to distinguish
short-term declines or underperformance from long-term poor performance.
When we look at the
assets being managed by equity funds, they naturally mirror the long-term
performance of those funds. In general, funds that have done well have had good
inflows and are thus managing a large amount of money, and vice versa. The
interesting thing is that there are lot of anomalies to this. There are funds
that are doing badly but have a lot of money to manage. Mostly, they are funds
that have done well for extended periods of time in the past so have a set
faithful investors who are hanging in. That makes sense.
However, there are many
funds that have never done well, have always lagged the markets as well as
their peers and yet have thousands of crores of assets. The building up of
these assets can be attributed to salesmanship, but the blame for its
sustenance must go to investors who are not paying attention to their money. A
lot of us have investments we are ignoring but which are bleeding potential
returns. Investors need to weed out non-performers from their portfolios.
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