Product Description Review Q&A with Author Ken Fisher Author Ken Fisher You start the book with Sir Templeton?โฌยs famous quote, "The four most expensive words in the English language are, ;This time it?โฌยs different.'" Is "this time" ever different? History doesn't repeat, not exactly. And the past cannot predict the future, but it is one good tool in determining if something is reasonable to expect. Investing is a probabilities game, not a certainties game. Nothing is certain in investing?โฌโ€all you can do is determine what a range of reasonable probabilities are. In the same way, it's not a possibilities game. It?โฌยs possible the world gets hit by an asteroid and destroys life as we know it, but the far greater probability is no such terrible thing happens. You can't develop a portfolio strategy around endless possibilities. You wouldn't even get out of bed if you considered everything that could possibly happen. Instead, as I show in the book, you can use history as one tool for shaping reasonable probabilities. Then, you look at the world of economic, sentiment and political drivers to determine what's most likely to happen?โฌโ€while always knowing you can be and will be wrong a lot. You say bull markets are inherently above average. How so? I interact with a lot of investors. And, amazingly, even many professionals don't get this?โฌโ€bull market returns are inherently above average. Most people get that long-term, stocks average between 9% and 10%. But that?โฌยs an average and bakes in big up years and big down years. I show in the book annual bull market returns on average have about doubled the market?โฌยs long-term annual average. And early bull market returns historically have been even bigger. All that means is long-term investors can and should expect to experience downside. But if you?โฌยre long-term growth oriented and remain disciplined to a good strategy appropriate for you, downside gets swamped by the bigger and longer periods of market upside. Stocks rise much more than they fall?โฌโ€I show this in the book. Yet people focus much more on downside, so they forget. You say "ideology is deadly" in investing, but don't a lot of people prefer one political party over another? Sure. Personally, I don't cotton to either major party. But most people do tend to have one party they like. That?โฌยs fine and normal. Where it becomes problematic is letting your party preference color your market views. Then, too, there are some profitable patterns investors may miss if they are blinded by ideology and don?โฌยt use history to overcome that. One example, in 2012, we either re-elect Obama, a Democrat, or newly elect a Republican. If you have a strong alliance to one party or the other, you likely think it's good if your guy wins, but bad if the other guy wins. But if you check history, you know either outcome has typically been good for stocks. When we re-elect a Democrat, stocks have averaged 14.5%, but when we newly elect a Republican, they average 18.8% in the election year. I explain why in the book. People's ideology blinds them. And because they don't remember even recent history, they don't remember this major pattern happening right in front of them. Right now, many fear the next 10 years may end up looking like the 2000s, overall pretty flat. What do you say to people concerned about a "lost decade"? They are fearful of something that?โฌยs never happened before in the US, not once. Those are bad odds to bet on. First, making a forecast for a 10-year period ahead is close to impossible. In the book, I explain why. But briefly, in the near term, demand is the primary driver of stock prices because supply doesn?โฌยt move enough to matter. Longer term, supply shifts swamp everything else. And you can't make a 10-year forecast unless you know something about where stock supply will head 8, 9 and 10 years from now. I've never seen anyone even begin to address that. Most important, flat or down 10-year periods for US stocks are historically rare. Then, too, every single 10-year period that followed was not only positive, but strongly positive. Can you get two back-to-back negative 10-year periods? Sure?โฌโ€but you better have a darn good reason why the period ahead will so strongly buck the odds. And you better have some new technology for forecasting 10-year returns because I?โฌยve never seen one that has worked consistently. Product DescriptionSir John Templeton, legendary investor, was famous for saying, "The four most dangerous words in investing are, 'This time it's different.'" He knew that though history doesn't repeat, not exactly, history is an excellent guide for investors.In Markets Never Forget But People Do: How Your Memory Is Costing You Money and Why This Time Isn't Different, long-time Forbes columnist, CEO of Fisher Investments, and 4-time New York Times bestselling author Ken Fisher shows how and why investors' memories fail them?โฌโ€and how costly that can be. More important, he shows steps investors can take to begin reducing errors they repeatedly make. The past is never indicative of the future, but history can be one powerful guide in shaping forward looking expectations. Readers can learn how to see the world more clearly?โฌโ€and learn to make fewer errors?โฌโ€by understanding just a bit of investing past.
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