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Richard Russell's Wisdom
by John Mauldin
April 14, 2006
Rich Man, Poor Man
The Power of Compounding
Rule 2: Don't Lose Money
Original article at Gold-eagle:
http://www.gold-eagle.com/editorials_05/mauldin041506.html
It is Good Friday, and I
am going to take the writing day off. Next week we will delve further into
the rich mines we began to explore last week on complexity theory and
fingers of instability. But I am going to give you something better than
my poor missives. Today we look at the chapter by Richard Russell from my
book Just One Thing. To find out more about the book, you can go to
www.amazon.com/justonething.
What can one say about my
friend Richard Russell without using a lot of superlatives? Richard has
been writing and publishing the Dow Theory Letters since 1958, and
never has he missed an issue! It is the longest newsletter service
continuously published by one person in the investment business. Richard
is now 80 years old, and writes an extremely popular daily e-letter, full
of commentary on the markets and whatever interests him that day. He gets
up at 3 am or so and starts his daily (massive) reading and finishes the
letter just after the markets close. He is my business hero.
He was the first writer
to recommend gold stocks in 1960. He called the top of the 1949-66 bull
market, and called the bottom of the bear market in 1974 almost to the
day, predicting a new bull market. (Think how tough it was to call for a
bull market in late 1974, when things looked really miserable!) He was a
bombardier in WWII, lived through the Depression, wars, and bull and bear
markets. I would say that Russell is one of those true innate market
geniuses that have simply forgotten more than most of us will ever know,
except I am not certain he has forgotten anything. His daily letter is
loaded with references and wisdom from the past and gives us a guide to
the future. (You can learn more - and subscribe! - at
www.dowtheoryletters.com.)
When I asked Richard to
contribute an article, I wanted his wisdom more than his actual market
theory, and that is what he has given us. You (and your kids!) should read
this again and again! Richard lives in La Jolla with his wife Faye.
Rich
Man, Poor Man
By Richard Russell
Making money entails a
lot more than predicting which way the stock or bond markets are heading
or trying to figure which stock or fund will double over the next few
years. For the great majority of investors, making money requires a plan,
self-discipline, and desire. I say "for the great majority of people,"
because if you're a Steven Spielberg or a Bill Gates you don't have to
know about the Dow or the markets or about yields or price/earnings
ratios. You're a phenomenon in your own field, and you're going to make
big money as a by-product of your talent and ability. But this kind of
genius is rare.
For the average investor,
you and me, we're not geniuses so we have to have a financial plan. In
view of this, I offer below a few rules and a few thoughts on investing
that we must be aware of if we are serious about making money.
I. The
Power of Compounding
Rule 1:
Compounding. One
of the most important lessons for living in the modern world is that to
survive you've got to have money. But to live (survive) happily, you must
have love, health (mental and physical), freedom, intellectual stimulation
-- and money. When I taught my kids about money, the first thing I taught
them was the use of the "money bible." What's the money bible? Simple,
it's a volume of the compounding interest tables.
Compounding is the royal
road to riches. Compounding is the safe road, the sure road, and
fortunately anybody can do it. To compound successfully you need the
following: perseverance in order to keep you firmly on the savings path.
You need intelligence in order to understand what you are doing and why.
You need knowledge of the mathematical tables in order to comprehend the
amazing rewards that will come to you if you faithfully follow the
compounding road. And, of course, you need time, time to allow the power
of compounding to work for you. Remember, compounding only works
through time.
But there are two catches
in the compounding process. The first is obvious -- compounding may
involve sacrifice (you can't spend it and still save it). Second,
compounding is boring -- b-o-r-i-n-g. Or I should say it's boring until
(after seven or eight years) the money starts to pour in. Then, believe
me, compounding becomes very interesting. In fact, it becomes downright
fascinating!
In order to emphasize the
power of compounding, I am including the following extraordinary study,
courtesy of Market Logic, of Ft.
Lauderdale, FL 33306.
In this study we assume that investor B
opens an IRA at age 19. For seven consecutive periods he puts $2,000 into
his IRA at an average growth rate of 10% (7% interest plus growth). After
seven years this fellow makes NO MORE contributions -- he's finished.
A second investor, A, makes no
contributions until age 26 (this is the age when investor B was finished
with his contributions). Then A continues faithfully to contribute $2,000
every year until he's 65 (at the same theoretical 10% rate).
Now study the incredible results. B,
who made his contributions earlier and who made only seven contributions,
ends up with MORE money than A, who made 40 contributions but at a LATER
TIME. The difference in the two is that B had seven more early years of
compounding than A. Those seven early years were worth more than all
of A's 33 additional contributions.
This is a study that I suggest you show
to your kids. It's a study I've lived by, and I can tell you, "It works."
You can work your compounding with muni-bonds, with a good money market
fund, with T-bills, or say with five-year T-notes.

RULE 2: Don't Lose Money.
This may sound naive, but believe me it isn't. If you want to be wealthy,
you must not lose money; or I should say, you must not lose BIG money.
Absurd rule, silly rule? Maybe, but MOST PEOPLE LOSE MONEY in
disastrous investments, gambling, rotten business deals, greed, poor
timing. Yes, after almost five decades of investing and talking to
investors, I can tell you that most people definitely DO lose money, lose
big-time -- in the stock market, in options and futures, in real estate,
in bad loans, in mindless gambling, and in their own businesses.
Rule 3: Rich Man, Poor
Man. In the investment world
the wealthy investor has one major advantage over the little guy, the
stock market amateur, and the neophyte trader. The advantage that the
wealthy investor enjoys is that HE DOESN'T NEED THE MARKETS. I can't begin
to tell you what a difference that makes, both in one's mental attitude
and in the way one actually handles one's money.
The wealthy investor doesn't need the
markets, because he already has all the income he needs. He has
money coming in via bonds, T-bills, money-market funds, stocks, and real
estate. In other words, the wealthy investor never feels pressured
to "make money" in the market.
The wealthy investor tends to be an
expert on values. When bonds are cheap and bond yields are irresistibly
high, he buys bonds. When stocks are on the bargain table and stock yields
are attractive, he buys stocks. When real estate is a great value, he buys
real estate. When great art or fine jewelry or gold is on the "giveaway"
table, he buys art or diamonds or gold. In other words, the wealthy
investor puts his money where the great values are.
And if no outstanding
values are available, the wealthy investors waits. He can afford to
wait. He has money coming in daily, weekly, monthly. The wealthy investor
knows what he is looking for, and he doesn't mind waiting months or even
years for his next investment (they call that patience).
But what about the little
guy? This fellow always feels pressured to "make money." And in return
he's always pressuring the market to "do something" for him. But sadly,
the market isn't interested. When the little guy isn't buying stocks
offering 1% or 2% yields, he's off to Las Vegas or Atlantic City trying to
beat the house at roulette. Or he's spending 20 bucks a week on lottery
tickets, or he's "investing" in some crackpot scheme that his neighbor
told him about (in strictest confidence, of course).
And because the little
guy is trying to force the market to do something for him, he's a
guaranteed loser. The little guy doesn't understand values, so he
constantly overpays. He doesn't comprehend the power of compounding, and
he doesn't understand money. He's never heard the adage, "He who
understands interest, earns it. He who doesn't understand interest, pays
it." The little guy is the typical American, and he's deeply in debt.
The little guy is in hock
up to his ears. As a result, he's always sweating -- sweating to make
payments on his house, his refrigerator, his car, or his lawn mower. He's
impatient, and he feels perpetually put upon. He tells himself that he has
to make money -- fast. And he dreams of those "big, juicy mega-bucks." In
the end, the little guy wastes his money in the market, or he loses his
money gambling, or he dribbles it away on senseless schemes. In short,
this "money-nerd" spends his life dashing up the financial down escalator.
But here's the ironic
part of it. If, from the beginning, the little guy had adopted a strict
policy of never spending more than he made, if he had taken his extra
savings and compounded it in intelligent, income-producing securities,
then in due time he'd have money coming in daily, weekly, monthly, just
like the rich man. The little guy would have become a financial winner,
instead of a pathetic loser.
Rule 4:
Values. The only
time the average investor should stray outside the basic compounding
system is when a given market offers outstanding value. I judge an
investment to be a great value when it offers (a) safety, (b) an
attractive return, and (c) a good chance of appreciating in price. At all
other times, the compounding route is safer and probably a lot more
profitable, at least in the long run.
II. Time
TIME: Here's something
they won't tell you at your local brokerage office or in the "How to Beat
the Market" books. All investing and speculation is basically an exercise
in attempting to beat time.
"Russell, what are you
talking about?"
Just what I said -- when
you try to pick the winning stock or when you try to sell out near the top
of a bull market or when you try in-and-out trading, you may not realize
it but what you're doing is trying to beat time.
Time is the single most
valuable asset you can ever have in your investment arsenal. The problem
is that none of us has enough of it.
But let's indulge in a
bit of fantasy. Let's say you have 200 years to live, 200 years in which
to invest. Here's what you could do. You could buy $20,000 worth of
municipal bonds yielding, say, 5.5%.
At 5.5% money doubles in
13 years. So here's your plan: each time your money doubles you add
another $10,000. So at the end of 13 years you have $40,000 plus the
$10,000 you've added, meaning that at the end of 13 years you have
$50,000.
At the end of the next 13
years you have $100,000, you add $10,000, and then you have $110,000. You
reinvest it all in 5.5% munis, and at the end of the next 13 years you
have $220,000 and you add $10,000, making it $230,000.
At the end of the next 13
years you have $460,000 and you add $10,000, making it $470,000.
In 200 years there are
15.3 doubles. You do the math. By the end of the 200th year you wouldn't
know what to do with all your money. It would be coming out of your ears.
And all with minimum risk.
So with enough time, you
would be rich -- guaranteed. You wouldn't have to waste any time picking
the right stock or the right group or the right mutual fund. You would
just compound your way to riches, using your greatest asset: time.
There's only one problem:
in the real world you're not going to live 200 years. But if you start
young enough or if you start your kids early, you or they might have
anywhere from 30 to 60 years of time ahead of you.
Because most people have
run out of time, they spend endless hours and nervous energy trying to
beat time, which, by the way, is really what investing is all about. Pick
a stock that advances from 3 to 100, and if you've put enough money in
that stock you'll have beaten time. Or join a company that gives you a
million options, and your option moves up from 3 to 25 and again you've
beaten time.
How about this real
example of beating time. John Walter joined AT&T, but after nine short
months he was out of a job. The complaint was that Walter "lacked
intellectual leadership." Walter got $26 million for that little stint in
a severance package. That's what you call really beating time. Of course,
a few of us might have another word for it -- and for AT&T.
III. Hope
HOPE: It's human nature
to be optimistic. It's human nature to hope. Furthermore, hope is a
component of a healthy state of mind. Hope is the opposite of negativity.
Negativity in life can lead to anger, disappointment, and depression.
After all, if the world is a negative place, what's the point of living in
it? To be negative is to be
anti-life.
Ironically, it doesn't
work that way in the stock market. In the stock market hope is a hindrence,
not a help. Once you take a position in a stock, you obviously want that
stock to advance. But if the stock you bought is a real value, and you
bought it right, you should be content to sit with that stock in the
knowledge that over time its value will out without your help, without
your hoping.
So in the case of this
stock, you have value on your side -- and all you need is patience. In the
end, your patience will pay off with a higher price for your stock. Hope
shouldn't play any part in this process. You don't need hope, because you
bought the stock when it was a great value, and you bought it at the right
time.
Any time you find
yourself hoping in this business, the odds are that you are on the wrong
path -- or that you did something stupid that should be corrected.
Unfortunately, hope is a
money-loser in the investment business. This is counterintuitive but true.
Hope will keep you riding a stock that is headed down. Hope will keep you
from taking a small loss and, instead, allow that small loss to develop
into a large loss.
In the stock market hope
gets in the way of reality, hope gets in the way of common sense. One of
the first rules in investing is "don't take the big loss." In order to do
that, you've got to be willing to take a small loss.
If the stock market turns
bearish, and you're staying put with your whole position, and you're
HOPING that what you see is not really happening -- then welcome to
poverty city. In this situation, all your hoping isn't going to save you
or make you a penny. In fact, in this situation hope is the devil that
bids you to sit -- while your portfolio of stocks goes down the drain.
In the investing business
my suggestion is that you avoid hope. Forget the siren, hope; instead,
embrace cold, clear reality.
IV. Acting
ACTING: A few days ago a
young subscriber asked me, "Russell, you've been dealing with the markets
since the late 1940s. This is a strange question, but what is the most
important lesson you've learned in all that time?"
I didn't have to think
too long. I told him, "The most important lesson I've learned comes from
something Freud said. He said, 'Thinking is rehearsing.' What Freud meant
was that thinking is no substitute for acting. In this world, in
investing, in any field, there is no substitute for taking action."
This brings up another
story which illustrates the same theme. J.P. Morgan was "Master of the
Universe" back in the 1920s. One day a young man came up to Morgan and
said, "Mr. Morgan, I'm sorry to bother you, but I own some stocks that
have been acting poorly, and I'm very anxious about these stocks. In fact
worrying about those stocks is starting to ruin my health. Yet, I still
like the stocks. It's a terrible dilemma. What do you think I should do,
sir?"
Without hesitating Morgan
said, "Young man, sell to the sleeping point."
The lesson is the same.
There's no substitute for acting. In the business of investing or the
business of life, thinking is not going to do it for you. Thinking is just
rehearsing. You must learn to act.
That's the single most
important lesson that I've learned in this business.
Again, and I've written
about this episode before, a very wealthy and successful investor once
said to me, "Russell, do you know why stockbrokers never become rich in
this business?"
I confessed that I didn't
know. He explained, "They don't get rich because they never believe their
own bullshit."
Again, it's the same
lesson. If you want to make money (or get rich) in a bull market, thinking
and talking isn't going to do it. You've got to buy stocks. Brokers never
do that. Do you know one broker who has?
A painful lesson: Back in
1991 when we had a perfect opportunity, we could have ended Saddam
Hussein's career, and we could have done it with ease. But those in
command, for political reasons, didn't want to face the adverse publicity
of taking additional US casualties. So we stopped short, and Saddam was
home free. We were afraid to act. And now we're dealing with that failure
to act with another and messier war.
In my own life many of
the mistakes I've made have come because I forgot or ignored the "acting
lesson." Thinking is rehearsing, and I was rehearsing instead of acting.
Bad marriages, bad investments, lost opportunities, bad business decisions
-- all made worse because we fail for any number of reasons to act.
The reasons to act are
almost always better than the reasons you can think up not to act. If you,
my dear readers, can understand the meaning of what is expressed in this
one sentence, then believe me, you've learned a most valuable lesson. It's
a lesson that has saved my life many times. And I mean literally, it's a
lesson that has saved my life.
Memphis,
Montreal, Orlando, Las Vegas, New York, La Jolla
I have been enjoying the
last few months of not travelling, although that is going to come to an end
soon. As noted in the headline, I will be in Memphis, Montreal, Orlando,
Las Vegas, New York, and La Jolla in May and June. And I am trying to keep
up with my research and writing for my book project. I am really having as
much fun as I have ever had on a project. I hope I can translate that
enthusiasm into the book!
This is a time when we
celebrate transformation and renewal. When what is wrong can be changed.
When we can learn where true value really lies.. The weather is great in
Texas. Seems like the time for a really long walk outside. So I think I
will hit the send button and leave the office behind for a few days! Have
a happy Easter. Enjoy your friends and family.
Your really enjoying life
analyst,

John Mauldin
John@FrontLineThoughts.com
www.frontlinethoughts.com/gateway.htm
Frontpage:
www.emotionalwealth.com
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