Christine Benz wrote about How to Build a Portfolio You Don’t Have to Babysit. She cited research from Jeff Ptak that found that if mutual fund managers didn't make any trades, they just held on to their original portfolios they would have had better results than the funds actually had. Benz supported the conclusion saying she'll "take a policy of benign neglect any old day."
I am sympathetic to the point and depending on what is chosen, it can be a valid approach for the end result even if there is a little pain along the way. Benz talks about target date funds for example. I am not a fan but they can absolutely get the job done. I have never met anyone who liked target date funds. My sample size is small but the few I've met, I've never heard anyone who owns one say something positive. They generally did poorly in 2008 and in 2022.
As we've talked about before, there are quite a few individual stocks and narrower ETFs in client accounts that have been there since I started back at the old firm in 2004.
This Canadian bank, the name is unimportant, is one I have owned for 22 years. It's has always had a good dividend but has been very unremarkable the vast majority of the time. It's had a few years where it was up a lot including last year and a few years it has been down a lot on the way to compounding at a pretty good clip. The role it plays is exactly what I hoped it would do when I first bought it, yield and not a lot of drama (there's been some but not a lot). I've literally never had a client ask about it.
The only reason that I think someone would have sold it would have been impatience.
If you use any individual stocks have you held them for a very long time? The more often someone checks their portfolio the more difficult I suppose it is to just hold on because great stocks will go through some terrible periods.
If you use broad based index funds, why would you ever need to sell beyond rebalancing and meeting cash needs? The reasons people sell have to do with short term thinking that they cannot see beyond like being afraid of the tariff decline.
We spend a lot of time here experimenting with how to build set and almost forget portfolios, it certainly is intellectually appealing to have something that will give a decent return and be robust in the face of turmoil. Some sort of domestic equity exposure (broad based index or narrower holdings) some sort of foreign equity exposure (broad based index or narrower holdings), a couple of very boring holdings (not bonds with duration) that will offset equity market volatility and a small slice to negative convexity will probably get it done a little better than a target date fund but you still can't completely ignore it.
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