Investor Emotions

Beyond 2020 and Elections

On the night of October 17, 2020, I like five million other Kiwis, watched the general election results roll in. Based on pre-election polls there was little doubt that Labour would form the government again. the New Zealand markets were unrattled by the result and looked pretty steady with investors relaxed after the Labour Party secured a historic majority in the general election.

Should you expect unexpected returns with FAANG stocks?

Investment returns have two parts: the expected return and the unexpected return. The expected return is the best guess of what will happen based on all the information currently available. The unexpected return is the surprise, the difference between what does happen and what was expected. Investors should base their portfolio decisions on expected returns, not realised returns, and the two can differ by a lot.

A second-wave wobble | COVID-19 special focus

By now, most people are aware that our world – especially the situation with COVID-19 pandemic – is changing and developing lightning fast. A mystery COVID-19 outbreak in Auckland on 11 August has forced the government to postpone the dissolution of parliament as the country’s alert levels changed at noon on 12 August.

The cost of short-sighted investing | COVID-19 Special Focus

If you are frequently checking the portfolio balance, then you may see a rise in your anxiety and stress levels. Behavioural finance studies confirm that investors tend to be more cautious when they check portfolios regularly, with adverse long-term consequences for their investing goals.

Forward-looking | Covid-19 Special Focus

Do you find it confusing when a bleak economic report emerges from the press, only to be accompanied by a positive surge in the global share market? You're not alone. The last few months have produced many examples of a stark contrast between global market performance and economic indicators.

Investing FOMO | Covid-19 Special Focus

Investing FOMO is when you watch a share price soar to new highs, and you realise you missed out on the opportunity. You might spend the next hours, days, weeks thinking about what could have been the returns. This type of self-talk and do-it-yourself financial planning is damaging to your mental health and retirement goals.