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Ben Stein How Not to Ruin Your Life

Ben Stein, How Not to Ruin Your Life

A Year of Living Dangerously

by Ben Stein

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Posted on Friday, April 25, 2008, 12:00AM

It's spring. The weather out here in Malibu is fabulous, although cool at night, as always.

This past weekend, I made a roaring fire and spent the evening studying my stock brokerage statements for the past year. It made for depressing reading. I'd been up amazingly this time last year, and by October 2007 I was really feeling rich. Then came the "correction" and, wow, did my stocks have some correcting to do.

But there were lessons to be learned, and to be shared with you, my kind readers.

Two Hot Tips

The first lesson is that over long periods, I almost always do far better with broad indexes than with individual stocks. Yes, I've had many stocks that rocketed up, but when the corrections came, they tended to drop like stones. The indexes, though, tended to hold up far better. In fact, I could find almost no index funds that truly disappointed over a 10-year period.

The best ones were the foreign emerging-market and foreign developed, but even with the recent corrections the REIT index, the natural resources index, and the finance index did fairly well. Sometimes they did amazingly well. Obviously, the most dismaying was the finance index, and the best was the natural resources index. But that will change, of course -- the leader never stays the leader forever.

The other major lesson I learned is that patience is everything. If you can well and truly wait patiently through painful corrections, add to your holdings, and refrain from frequent trading, you'll do far better than if you trade frequently. In fact, there's copious data suggesting that very frequent trading causes dramatically lower returns than just buying and holding.

Cashing In

So, there are two extremely basic but useful lessons: diversify and have patience. These seem amazingly simple, even simple-minded, but they're much harder to practice than you might think. Avoiding being sucked into the siren-song madness of buying hot individual stocks takes strength of character indeed.

Now, I know what you're thinking: "Well, I would like to buy and hold, but it ain't easy. Sometimes I need money unexpectedly and have to sell. Sometimes I need to follow a friend's hot tip."

Here's where the "buckets of money" strategy of my pal Ray Lucia comes in. This has many parts, but the most basic is to keep a good chunk of cash or near-cash on hand so you can slide through the rough patches without having to sell stock.

That makes so much sense it's almost insane. But how many people do you know who actually do it? If I were able to re-jigger my financial life right now, I think the first thing I would do is to have far more cash. I guess I could do that by selling stock, but a lot of that stock is down from where it once was and I hate to sell at that stage. (I can easily forego the "hot tip" part; I've already been down that dead-end street.)

The Landscape Has Changed

OK, so now you know: diversify and hold. But I have another lesson, and it's a grim one.

When I first started this column four or so years ago, we all thought inflation was under control. No one knew why prices were so docile. Money supply was rising. The world was afire with prosperity, but prices were tame. The pre-retiree didn't need to plan on more than 2 percent inflation.

All that's changed. We don't know why, but even as the world economy is slowing, prices are rising -- and fast. Commodities, Far Eastern wages, and foodstuffs are all shooting up at frightening rates, and there are at least two consequences of this dreary phenomenon. One is that you need to save more for retirement because prices will be so much higher than they are now.

The second is that you'll want to own assets that keep pace with inflation (or "discount" inflation, as we economists say). The main ones are commodities indexes, which by definition track commodities. But another asset that typically keeps pace with inflation is real property. I know we're in a sharp real estate correction, but it's possible that the correction will be shortened by demand for real estate as an inflation hedge. Just think about it.

Hedging Against Inflation

In the meantime, I know of only one equities-based investment that explicitly keeps up with inflation -- inflation-protected variable annuities. For a fee, insurers will sell you a policy that's guaranteed to keep up with inflation. The fee isn't trivial, and you should have your broker investigate all the details.

But the key is that the insurers do the hedging for you, and you pay for that service. It's well worth looking into. My feelings won't be hurt if you don't buy it, but at least have a peek.

(In the interest of full disclosure, bear in mind that I'm an honorary spokesperson for the National Retirement Planning Coalition, and one of that organization's endless list of members is the trade association for variable annuities. Also bear in mind that they've been about the best investment the Steins have ever made.)

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141 Comments

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  • Yahoo! Finance User - Monday, April 28, 2008, 12:34AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    I hope the insurance companies that sell the inflation protected annuities do a better job of measuring inflation than the federal government does. Face it, the government is cooking the books in order to minimize payments to retirees.

  • DennisAOK - Monday, April 28, 2008, 12:58AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    Over time, natural resource stocks will do better than commodity indices. Annuities are a rip off. You'll do better with a balanced portfolio that eliminates the cut of the insurance company.

  • michaelE - Monday, April 28, 2008, 1:02AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Ben says When I first started this column, we thought inflation was under control. All that's changed. We don't know why, but even as the world economy is slowing, prices are rising -- and fast. The guy admits he's an idiot. He doesn't know why inflation isn't under control? 1. President and prior congress spending like drunken sailors, and handing out tax cuts has driven deficit from 4 trillion in 2001 to over 9 trillion. Remember Cheney telling us deficits don't matter. 2. FED lowering interest rates to far below inflation with printed money, driving investors into more risky investments, ie commodities. 3. Globilization, which has increased consumption of natural resources particularly oil. Eventually this will become the limiting factor in terms of manufacturing. People then will fight for the remaining jobs leading to massive poverty.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Monday, April 28, 2008, 1:05AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    " I know we're in a sharp real estate correction, but it's possible that the correction will be shortened by demand for real estate as an inflation hedge. Just think about it." Ben? Are you really going crazy? even the most bullish hypester knows the RE market is going down ,down..Prime borrowers are walking away from overvalued assets now, never mind the next wave of option arms'..we have at least a couple of years to wait for property increases again, and alot further to drop... ..as to buy and hold, Maybe after the 'real' correction. There again ,the market will correct ,and has not yet ! .....and as to your editorial on CBS morning show saying the polygamist mothers were innocent, and have done " Nothing at all" well if 53 yo men fathering children with 14 yo olds is nothing...I have to say I used to enjoy your commentary, now I think...well I just can't say it

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Monday, April 28, 2008, 1:30AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    I agree with the previous poster. shadowstats dot com has inflation at 7% using the pre-Clinton formula compared to today's official 4%. So, how inflation is and will be measured has to be considered. Stein makes the point that housing, or real estate, is typically an inflation hedge. But, there are also inflationary costs to owning housing such as rising property taxes, fees, insurance and utilities. And though mortgage rates are low now, they'd also rise with inflation hurting potential buyers. Finally, what if we're just experiencing an inflationary blip and deflation takes hold instead? What would occur with an annuity based on inflation when inflation is negative? And what would be the best investment? The US peso... I mean dollar? ;)

Showing comments 1-5 of 141Next >>
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