I often find that many investors sound like a bunch of guys coming back from a fishing trip. When you ask them if fishing was good, they only remember their best catch. They will discuss this single catch with as many details as possible, they will tell you how good they were and how they knew it was going to happen this way. If they don’t catch a big one, they will quickly summarize their trip finding some kind of excuse why it didn’t work out.
When you discuss investing with people around you, they will most likely tell you about their best trade and forget about the rest. However, we rarely learn from our best moves in life, we usually learn from our mistakes. This is why I think it’s important to look back at our past moves and look at what went wrong to make sure it doesn’t happen again. I’ve highlighted three things I regret about my portfolio today.
#1 Having chased returns for too long
When I started investing, I was young and thought of making money, lots of money with my investments. I didn’t realize it takes years to make real money and that I’m not the next Warren Buffett. This is how I wasted a good seven years chasing returns before building a real investing process based on a serious strategy.
Interesting enough, I’ve made more money during those 7 years than I’m making now with my dividend growth strategy. Several reasons explain this:
- I started investing at a perfect moment (my first 3 years were 2003 to 2006);
- I withdrew most of my money to buy a house in 2007, therefore I didn’t lose much in dollars in 2008;
- I used to spend about 2 hours per day on my portfolio to be successful.
However, if I had started a dividend growth portfolio back in 2003, I would be generating more than double what I do now in dividend payments. Those are great years I didn’t use to benefit from the power of compounding interest rates.
#2 Ignoring boring stocks at first sight
When I first started investing in dividend stocks, I systematically ignored any company with yield under 2.5%. In fact, I was even reluctant to pick companies with a yield under 3%. The only exceptions I made back then was Coca-Cola (KO) and Chevron (CVX) which were paying something around 2.75%. I thought I needed strong yield at first (3%+) to build a dividend portfolio. I also thought that low dividend yielding stocks would take forever to pay something that was worth considering. I was terribly wrong.
I’ve made a case about how low dividend yield stocks outperform high yielding stocks.
I first bought a company yielding under 2% when I considered Apple (AAPL) as I was seduced by its amazing growth potential. At that time, the stock was trading low (under $400 before the split) and AAPL just started paying a dividend not too long ago. I thought that worse comes to worse, AAPL would become another Microsoft (MSFT); a techno giant full of cash finally distributing its unused wealth with shareholders. It turned out to be a better investment while the stock price almost doubled and the dividend payout is strongly increasing each year.
After this “success”, I bought other companies with lower yields such as Disney (DIS), Canadian National Railway (CNR.TO / CNI) and 3M Co (MMM). The key is to find companies with low yield, but also a low payout ratio and a strong ability to generate strong cash flow. These companies are then able to aggressively increase their payout year after year. When the dividend increases, their stock price usually follows accordingly.
#3 Not saving enough to invest
While I would have a stronger portfolio if I had realized the first 2 things earlier in my investing life, the third thing I regret the most is also the most important. No matter what you read about investing, there are two metrics that will determine what your portfolio will look like in the future: the time invested in the market (how many years you stay invested) and the amount of capital you invest. I started investing at a very young age (23), but I didn’t save very much money so far.
A few years ago, I was able to put between $5,000 and $10,000 per year in my retirement fund. Those were the good years. Over the past 3 years, I barely saved $1,000 per year. We ran into many budgeting challenges such as a third child, a bigger house and other bad habits worsening our lifestyle inflation. I didn’t worry too much because I still have a pension fund at work and I was working hard on making more revenue.
However, if I had started saving $10,000 per year back in 2003, I would be sitting on a 6 figure portfolio on top of having a house and my pension fund. Even better, this 6 figure portfolio would only grow bigger and faster as the compounding dividend growth rate would also grow accordingly.
Once I come back from my trip, I will have to work on a whole different budget and prioritize savings. The sooner you save money; the sooner you achieve financial independence. There is no trick, no magic to reach FIRE, it’s only a matter of working hard and saving hard!
What about you, what are the things you regret the most about your portfolio?
Dividends Down Under
So far, the only main regret that I have is not starting investing earlier (and I’m 24 right now!). The power of investing is incredible and I wish more people, particularly younger people, saw the power of it.
Tristan
DivGuy
well… you are still pretty young 😉 I’m trying to get my kids to invest soon (through my own account). Cheers,
Mike
Ben
Really like what you had to say … especially the stuff at the beginning of the post. We learn way more from failure than success. I’m just starting out and, while I know there will be bumps in the road, those bumps will help me (and my portfolio) grow. More investment/financial bloggers should write posts like this!
DivGuy
Hey Ben!
first, I Love your avatar 🙂
We learn more from our mistakes because they hurt and this is a feeling ten times worst than any good feeling (psychology courses told me that 😉 ).
Cheers,
Mike
Kerry Jones
My main regret has been not holding positions long enough. There have been numerous instances where I have sold to lock in 20% gains only to miss out on much larger gains had I held the stock longer. Moving towards more of a dividend/cash flow focus has helped me moderate this impulse to sell to lock in short term gains.
DivGuy
Hello Kerry,
I’m sure that you will be holding your dividend stocks longer as they keep paying you to wait. this is one of the reason why I switch toward this strategy!
Cheers,
Mike
The Money Commando
The main thing I regret is not focusing on quality right from the beginning. For me this means companies with low debt, earnings that aren’t subjected to the ups and downs of the economic cycle, and who have strong credit ratings. These are the companies that can emerge from a downturn in the economy stronger, not weaker.
I’m working to reshape my portfolio with these goals in mind.
DivGuy
Hey Money Commando,
thx for stopping by!
you are right, quality is the first quality we should all search for when buying shares!
cheers,
Mike
Investment Hunting
Great article. I was laughing about your fishing analogy. It’s s true.
STE
My regret is holding the loss counter and selling the winner too early ,,kind of ” lost aversion “‘in behavioral finance ,, I try to learn much about behavioral finance to avoid such mistake and pit fall,, as there is too much value trap there,,cheers !
amber tree
Nice lessons…!
My biggest regret is not investing in a world tracker after we bought our house. We bought in 2008, and the dust settled early 2009. We decided topple up cash at that time to save for later, to do more work on the house, for the kids we wanted…. With hindsight, I have missed a serious bull run…
Then again, we slept well at night, having no risk worries.
DivGuy
Hey ATL,
I was lucky enough to buy my second house near the end of 2006. When the market crashed in 2008, I didn’t have much savings at stake :-). 2009-2012 were good money savings year for me and it was a good timing to build a new portfolio. I wish I could have kept saving money since then thought!
Cheers,
Mike.