I believe people are a product of their environment, and that the most successful investors embody five key ‘traits’ for lack of a better term.
So here they are…the five traits I believe will help boost your profits and keep the bears at bay.
Every investor falls into a comfort zone sooner or later, whether it’s because they ‘know’ their investments or become overly familiar with certain methodologies. Sometimes this works for them, but the majority of the time it works against them for one simple reason…the markets change over time.
Really successful investors will deliberately go outside their comfort zones. They’re the ones who have stacks of magazines and books all over their homes. They read voraciously and make it a point to engage others around them in a never-ending process to learn more about the world.
Dr. Mark Mobius, Executive Chairman of Templeton Emerging Markets Group, is perhaps the ultimate example of what I am talking about. Overseeing research in 18 global emerging markets offices, he’s always on the go and commands an almost encyclopaedic knowledge of the investing landscape.
He revels in change because it’s synonymous with opportunity.
Average investors tend to try something once then move on. If it works, great. They’re a genius. But if it doesn’t, something must be wrong with the method or the recommendation or the source. They simply move on.
But successful investors follow up diligently and assume personal responsibility for their efforts. If an investment doesn’t work out the way they plan, they’ll be back. They never assume that a single shot is enough…not in life and not when it comes to their money.
Case in point…many investors are surprised to learn that professionals don’t think twice about taking 3, 4 or even 5 swings at the same investment before they settle into a position they like.
Take Jim Rogers, for example. He is one of the most successful investors on the planet and one of the most persistent, prescient thinkers I’ve ever met. When he latches onto something, it’s rare he’ll let go.
Yet, he’s also the first to tell you that he doesn’t know everything and doesn’t hide from trades that he’s messed up over the years.
In fact, Rogers frequently notes during interviews in a very self-deprecating manner that ‘he hopes he’s smart enough’ to buy or sell at some point a reporter has picked out for him.
More often than not, he is.
If you’re like me, you get all sorts of junk mail every day touting everything from the newest six-headed singing bass I can’t live without to the miracle hair cure discovered by some company I’ve never heard of.
What makes adverts so great is the ‘copy’. That’s the term for the language used to evoke a response which usually involves taking out your wallet and forking over a bunch of money. It’s a finely tuned science.
Here’s the thing…the better you are at reading it, the easier it gets to sort out opportunities, especially when it comes to reading about new companies in new industries.
To do it right, you need a healthy sense of scepticism. My grandmother, Mimi, had a finely tuned radar and saw to it that I developed one too. You’ve heard me reference her before in Money Morning as the voice of investing reason.
Mimi and I would play a game to see just how outrageous we could be whenever we learned about a new company that interested us. First, we’d review the analyst reports and company data. Then, we’d pretend to be the company’s marketing staff and make up outrageous claims.
Our goal was to understand the transition from what’s plausible to what’s possible. When we got a match…we knew we had an investment worth consideration.
All too often the modern media perpetuates the image of ‘lone wolves’ when it comes to making money. That may work for a little while, but in reality, the most successful investors are those who understand their own limitations and seek help to overcome them, especially when doing so benefits others.
Sir Richard Branson of Virgin is a great example of what I am talking about. Always on the go, he’s just as likely to ask you about what you do for fun as he is to engage you on the finer points of environmental management and leaving the world a better place for those who follow us in the future.
I know because that’s exactly what we discussed over dinner in London years ago when we wound up seated next to each other by happenstance at Nobu (which by the way is one of my favourite places to eat).
Sir Richard, and others like him, will often connect the dots later, knowing that the cascade is a lot bigger down the line…when the results start rolling in. But thinking about others is always the beginning of the line.
Our society is hopelessly wedded to the notion of high-powered people climbing the ladder of success without a stumble. Consequently, we like to believe that the legendary investors of our time are infallible.
Yet, if you look at who’s made it and who hasn’t, it becomes very clear that those who freely talk about their failures along the way are the truly successful ones.
Love him or hate him, George Soros is a great example.
He’s quick to recognise when he’s wrong and has famously acknowledged on several occasions that he’s survived because he’s capable of recognising his mistakes.
Most investors can’t. They’re too focused on being ‘right’ when being profitable is the higher priority, at least when it comes to long term success.
Keith Fitz-Gerald
Contributing Editor, Money Morning
Publisher’s Note: This is edited version of an article that first appeared here.
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