“When you first start to study a field, it seems like you have to memorize a zillion things. You don’t. What you need is to identify the core principles — generally three to twelve of them — that govern the field. The million things you thought you had to memorize are simply various combinations of the core principles.” — John Reed
Rising from the Dotcom Ashes
My first foray into the world of investing started when I was 22 years old, during the dot-com bubble of the late 90s. These were the days of “growth over profits”, pets.com, and “prefix investing”[1]Nanotech Excitement Boosts Wrong Stock, The Market by Mike Maznick, Techdirt.com, 4 December 2003 where companies looking to boost their stock prices added “.com” to the end of their name, a practice even my local dry cleaner followed to boost its brand appeal with trendy consumers. Investors jumped in to the Internet gold rush with both feet, hoping to make a quick buck. I can remember the day I became addicted to fast money – sitting in a boardroom listening to the Chairman of an Internet start-up I was working at tell us the company’s stock was poised to double from $30 to $60, this was after a spectacular 12-24 month run in which the stock rose from $2 per share to $30. Plain and simple it was inexperience and youthful bravado that caused me to buy into what this charismatic chairman was selling and hold on to the stock rather than cashing out and walking away with a $84,000 capital gain at 22, made in under two years. If I had sold my shares in this dotcom darling, paid my taxes (assume 40%) and invested my net gain of $50,00 into the S&P/TSX Composite index which has delivered an annualized return of 6.56% over the last 16 years I would have seen that capital almost triple to $140,000. Yes, it does pain me to write that. Now, if I could only go back in time and give this younger version of myself some sage advice. I would tell my younger self:“This is a BUBBLE, pure and simple, SELL AND BE HAPPY for this once in a lifetime economic opportunity”
- The compounding power of investment income;
- Significant capital appreciation upside that only comes with intelligent, well-researched and seldom made bets; and
- Avoiding the dangerous risk of ignorant investing and investing for the long-term in financially sound, blue chip, steady dividend paying companies that you envision holding over a longer period of time
The Recovery
My journey to recovery involved reading many, many volumes of books on investing, some incredibly helpful while others offered overly elementary advice that wouldn’t deliver the market beating returns that I wanted to secure my financial freedom. I grew frustrated with the dearth of books that either treated their readers as a Math PHD or talked down to their readers. I didn’t have the patience to learn complex formulas and algorithms, nor did I want to read through pages of a rather lame fictional story created as an attempt to make the financial advice embedded throughout the book more digestible for the average Joe. I also found most personal finance books had a rather narrow focus on just one of the many important principals necessary to plan and execute a successful personal wealth creation strategy that delivers market beating returns. Sure, I understand automatic saving is important but why should I read an entire book to learn about one pretty straight forward investing concept.
Real personal wealth creation, the type that offers us the financial freedom to pursue what really inspires us in life, requires a comprehensive investing approach that considers a number of interrelated concepts that deliver the occasional home run, fixed income to protect your capital, a steady income stream and solid blue-chip, dividend paying companies with a track record of delivering solid gains over the long run.
The Mission
I want to help fill a niche in the personal finance and investing space I see by providing a comprehensive, no nonsense and accessible blog all about wealth creation. My mission is to share my learnings, thoughts and insights I wish I had known when I was 22 and got lucky from the Internet boom. This blog is for people who want to take control of their financial freedom and are willing to take a more disciplined and long-term approach. It is for people who understand that outside of the lottery there is no legal get rich quick formula, but it is very possible for you to create wealth and financial security for yourself and family by implementing a straight forward and proven approach to investing.
I’ve seen far too many people not give their financial future any thought or any investment of time. I want to help you not only function in today’s economy but I want to help you avoid the mistakes I made early in my investing journey.
hi...
ReplyDeletejust came upon your post today on Softbank. I am an older investor, just have a small pool of money I play with, from lithium, to gold, diamonds, high tech...etc
I have done OK on some not so on others. The issue I have is getting through all the pump dump, men in short pants, and day traders to find out what is real and not flat out pump and dump? I find that the companies themselves, with paid advertorials, and great plans to start, to think about, possibly moving towards developing a plan to study the opportunites of doing something...!!
So, many companies are out there, either riding the coat tails of other mines, or just putting out yearly propaganda to get another PP, to pay their wages.....
Very difficult to find what is real and not. Then I find, quiet companies that you hear nothing from, go from 30 cents to 3 dollars in 5 days...?!
in summation, it is a tough gig out there, and I only have so many hours in the day to read and research...
But, SoftBank looks like it has some good potential, would like to see the price drop a bit before I buy my 5 shares...lol