How to Invest Your Money » Portfolio

Starting to invest: The case for being conservative

When young people are just starting to invest their money, it’s common to make a few mistakes along the way. I started investing in mutual funds when I was 19, mainly because they were easy to set-up with a pre-authorized purchase plan at my bank. Looking back, I think I made a lot of mistakes that are fairly common for young investors.
Every new investor is asked to fill out a risk tolerance profile to figure out what type of mutual funds they should be investing in. Young people have the longest time horizon and are typically more aggressive with their investments so they are steered towards expensive growth mutual funds.

That was how I started investing, and most Canadians have similar stories. If I could go back in time I would have invested in low-cost mutual funds (ETFs weren’t available back then) instead of expensive growth funds. But when I talk to young people who are just starting to invest, I tell them to forget about finding the perfect investment products. As a young investor, it’s your savings rate that matters most. Be conservative with your money and preserve your capital before you make too many mistakes.

Starting to invest

Many new investors are focused on the wrong things when it comes to investing their money. Rather than worrying about where to find the highest returns or how to lower their investment costs, young people should just focus on their savings rate while they figure out their short term goals.
Once enough money has been saved and all other financial obligations have been met, then it’s time to start looking for higher returns with index funds, ETFs or individual stocks. Your investment costs will also be lower if you have a larger portfolio to work with.
In my case, I saw all the fancy charts telling me to start saving for retirement now so I could put the power of compound interest to work. If I started saving $300 per month at 19, I would be a millionaire by the time I was 60. I was chasing higher returns instead of focusing on increasing my savings rate and building up my capital.

The case for being conservative

The problem with risk tolerance profiles is that they naturally skew young people towards aggressive investments. I had a good savings rate, but I was in the wrong products and didn’t have an investment plan.
I was investing in expensive growth mutual funds in both my non-registered account and in my RRSP contribution. A few years later when I needed the money, I ended up selling everything and incurring huge penalties for early withdrawals.
If I had just put that money inside a high-interest savings account, after three years I would have ended up with over $10,000. I would have had plenty of options to use that money for paying off debt, for a down payment on a house, or for starting to invest.
Now that I’m older and have developed a financial plan for the future, I’m much more aggressive with my investments. I look for higher investment returns and lower investment costs. But for young people just starting to invest, I think there’s a case for being conservative until a significant amount of money is saved and short term financial obligations are met.

Comments

  1. Aaron

    That’s wise advice. I’ve encountered many people who should have stuck to low risk investments with the focus of preserving capital. High interest savings accounts or short term GICs are good because fees are low and your money is liquid. Too many people jump into mutual fund RRSPs without a long term plan and without knowledge of the stock market. If you want your money back in the short term, then the fees and the direction of the stock market can bite!

  2. Monevator

    I agree. I suggest new investors with no savings get an emergency fund. After that, I suggest they regularly invest new money 50% in stock market index fund, and put the other 50% into a cash savings account.

    I’m frequently taken to task for over-simplifying, for not including bonds, for touting cash with its current low returns, for 50% stocks which is so risky etc etc.

    But I don’t get complaints from the real-world people I know who’ve actually put it into practice! There I have a 100% record of putting people on the path to investing with this strategy. 🙂

  3. John Meaney

    You have hit this one on the head!

    I have many a financial advisor steer me into funds without taking my personal goals over the next 5, 10, 20 yrs into account.

    I lost faith at a younger age in investment vehicles and the establishment. I am now some 20 yrs later finally correcting the mistakes made.

    Risk tolerance is does not address the actual psychology of the investor, but is a business model that serves the fund companies.

    ‘Monevator’ above, has a great baby steps approach for the starting investor.

    Another option is Harry Browne’s “Permanent Portfolio” Strategy.
    Here’s the asset allocation:
    25% Total Stock Market Index
    25% Long-Term Government Bonds
    25% Gold
    25% Cash

    http://personalmba.com/permanent-portfolio/

    This strategy would have saved me thousands and kept me invested longer.

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