There are various avenues individual investors may exercise in managing their investments.
Investing properly is a full-time job, and that it would be very difficult for individual investors to manage their own money if they have other employment.
This leaves them two options:
Investing properly is a full-time job, and that it would be very difficult for individual investors to manage their own money if they have other employment.
This leaves them two options:
1) Mutual Funds
2) Money Managers
Open-end mutual funds
Open-end mutual funds offer the investor access to both liquidity and the ability to sell for net asset value.
On the other hand, many funds are driven by relative performance and often grow to sizes where market-beating returns are not possible.
Since managers are compensated by assets under management, they are also prone to follow short-term trends in order to avoid falling behind their peers in the near-term which could trigger a mass exodus of investors.
Closed-end funds
Closed-end funds do not offer investors ready liquidity at net asset value.
However, they may be prudent investments when they trade at substantial discounts to their net asset values.
Money Managers
In evaluating money managers, individual investors should raise the following questions which will help select a manager:
- Do they manage their own money in parallel with their clients'?
- Has the size of the portfolio grown exceedingly large?
- What is the investment philosophy of the manager? Does it make long-term sense?
In evaluating investment results, investors must look deeper than a manager's historical investment returns.
- For example, any manager can generate phenomenal returns within a certain period of time.
- Are the returns described over at least one full business cycle?
- Also, were the returns generated using leverage?
- Or were they generated despite the portfolio holding large amounts of cash (in which case risk is much lower)?
Take Home Message
Investors who adopt a value-oriented investment approach should be able to invest safely with promise of a satisfactory return.
If they do not have the time to manage their money full-time, find a trustworthy manager who employs this value investing philosophy.
Read also:
- Your investments using Mutual Funds or Money Managers
- Trading and portfolio management from a value investing point of view
- Value Investor's Opportunities in Distressed Securities
- Value Investing Opportunities in the Banking Sector
- Look at FUNDAMENTALS and POTENTIAL CATALYSTS when making investment decisions
- Where to look for Investment Opportunities
- Business value cannot be precisely determined. Make use of ranges of values
- Central elements to a Value Investing Philosophy
- The Philosophy of Value Investing and Why It Works
- Philosophy of value investing. Need to have clear strategies too
- How Wall Streets can create investment fads? The Junk Bond Market of mid-1980s
- Understanding these changes in the investment world allows investors to earn superior returns
- What's good for Wall Street is not necessarily good for investors
- Speculators, Investors and Market Fluctuations