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The Lazy Person's Guide to Investing: A Book for Procrastinators, the Financially Challenged, and Everyone Who Worries About Dealing With Their Money A Book for Procrastinators, the Financially Challenged, and Everyone Who Worries About Dealing with Their Money. You don't trust your brokers as far as you can drop-kick them. Stock market listings make your eyes swim. And you'd rather watch paint dry than study financial statements. Guess what! There's a simple, hassle-free, time-tested, and low-cost way to outsmart the experts and gain financial security... In this straightforward and easy-to-follow guide, nationally known columnist and stock market commentator Dr. Paul Farrell shows you exactly how to build wealth with your personal portfolio or 401(k)-even if you hate numbers and finance. In fact, you'll discover that the Wall Street wonder boys, the brokers who play "portfolio management" with other peoples' money, quietly invest their own private nest eggs in the same way that Dr. Farrell suggests you invest yours. You'll learn: | ||||||
Free hint: The sooner you start, the more your money can grow and compound-until you're ready to put a kid through college or retire. That's why you need to start relaxing with The Lazy Person's Guide to Investing today!
Think like an amateur. —Peter Lynch, One Up on Wall Street
Scott Burns is a syndicated financial columnist with the Dallas Morning News. His lighthearted, impish sense of humor makes him a big favorite among Texans, not to mention a growing audience throughout the country. And it's easy to understand why he's so popular once you read any of Scott's columns or visit his Web site. His casual, keep-it-simple style takes the edge off the all-too-often serious world of finance, making readers smile and come back for more. Scott launched the Couch Potato Portfolio back in 1991. You can track the glacial no-news-is-good-news progress of the portfolio on Burns's Web site, where he updates its performance once a year in feature columns that are as eagerly anticipated as Warren Buffett's annual barbecue in Omaha.
Before Scott introduced his portfolio in 1991, he back-checked the data from 1973 through 1991. How did it perform? Absolutely super, with an incredible 10.29 percent average annual return for that eighteen-year period. Incredible because, as you recall, those numbers carry through the 1982 bear market and the crash of '87. Hot stuff, I'd say. Moreover, as Scott puts it, the Couch Potato Portfolio achieved these results with:
So the Couch Potato is the perfect candidate for laziest portfolio. The Couch Potato Portfolio is so simple it's an embarrassment to Wall Street's army of brokers, analysts, and money managers who labor so long and so hard to build their supersophisticated portfolios of handpicked stocks that generate commissions for them.
Here's the keep-it-simple trick to building your own Couch Potato Portfolio: You need only two funds in a 50-50 asset allocation. That mix will give you all the diversification you'll ever need for your natural life, through bear markets and bull markets. This is it:
That's all? Yes, that's it. You heard me: All you need to do here is take $6,000, for example, and put $3,000 in the stock fund and the other $3,000 in the bond fund. Then grab the remote, lie down on the couch, enjoy your favorite programs, and forget about your portfolio till next year, when you'll need to do about ten minutes of rebalancing (that's right, just ten minutes a year!).
There's more: For the aggressive couch-bound investor who invariably believes you can always add some bells and whistles and improve on virtually anything, Scott also offers the "Sophisticated Couch Potato Portfolio." How "sophisticated"? This much: Instead of a 50-50 split between stocks and bonds, the allocation is 75-25. But not to complicate things any more than necessary, you get to use the same two funds. Put 75 percent of your money in the Vanguard 500 Index and 25 percent of the portfolio in the Vanguard Total Bond Index Fund. That means if you have $10,000 cash to start, you put $7,500 in the stock fund and $2,500 in the bond fund.
You think it's too simple? Too good to be true? That there's gotta be a gimmick? Sorry folks, no tricks. It is that simple. Because it works. Here's how. In his 2001 annual update Scott reports:
Once again, folks, dazzling proof positive that pure unadul-terated laziness wins in both the short run and the long run.
Okay, I know I said no tinkering. So I told a little white lie. But just a little one. Scott says you gotta get up off the couch and away from the tube for maybe ten minutes a year. Here's how the impish genius puts it:
Scott then adds this amusing tidbit: "With telephone exchange privileges at most mutual fund families, you can do this in less time than it takes to go to the refrigerator. Indeed, as a timing exercise, I suggest you put a medium sized potato in your microwave: Your annual portfolio management will be done in less than the ten minutes it takes to cook the potato." Then back to the tube. Before you forget it, make a note to check out Scott's Web site, especially his columns on Couch Potato Portfolios. He does have some interesting suggestions on possible refinements, including situations when a tax-free bond fund makes sense, exchange-traded funds, and how to eliminate all bond fees by buying Treasury securities direct rather than in a fund. But as Scott tells us, none of those refinements is required in order to retire a millionaire. You don't need to complicate your life-just stick to the basic Couch Potato Portfolio with no stress, except your little ten-minute annual rebalancing efforts.
The Couch Potato Portfolio is definitely not going to win any applause from Wall Street's commissioned brokers, nor from America's day traders, nor even from fee-based professional financial advisers. Yes, they'll put down this oversimplified no-stress portfolio strategy. But secretly, they all know it's virtually impossible for them to beat the Couch Potato Portfolio. Since none of them can make any money recommending no-load index funds, however, they'll stay noticeably silent, because they know in their hearts that indexing is the best and safest solution for most Americans.
When I informed Scott that his Couch Potato Portfolios were getting the most votes in the laziest portfolio contest, Scott offered this brief acceptance speech: "Let's hope sloth becomes a universal virtue for investors." If you want more of Scott's straight shooting and light-hearted insights into the Byzantine world of personal finance and investing, have the Dallas Morning News delivered to your doorstep along with your local paper. Well, at least your online doorstep, by linking to Scott's "It's Only Money" column and his rather extensive archive at DallasNews.com.
Instead of focusing almost exclusively on our finances, —Ralph Warner, Get a Life: You Don't Need a Million to Retire Well Copyright © 204 by Paul B. Farrell About the Author Paul B. Farrell, J.D., Ph.D. is the author of six books on personal finance and investing, including The Millionaire Code, The Winning Portfolio, Expert Investing on the Net, and The Lazy Person's Guide to Investing. Earlier Dr. Farrell was an investment banker with Morgan Stanley; executive vice president of the Financial News Network; executive vice president of Mercury Entertainment Corp; and associate editor of the Los Angeles Herald Examiner. He has four degrees: Bachelor of Architecture, Master of Regional Planning, Juris Doctor, and Ph.D. in Psychology. He served as a staff sergeant with the U.S. Marine Corps in Korea. More by Paul B. Farrell, J.D., Ph.D. |
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