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The Rational Vs. Irrational Investor

By Kevin Hansen, Director Business Development – Retirement Solutions, Principal Financial Group, Principal Funds Distributor, Inc. On occasion, we all make questionable decisions and reach incorrect assumptions. Often, this is due to cognitive biases – built-in tendencies that we all share. Many social psychologists believe cognitive biases help us process information more efficiently. But in some situations, these biases can lead us to make serious mistakes. When it comes to investing, it’s important to recognize (and hopefully avoid) the negative impact of cognitive biases on your financial decisions. I highlight four of these biases below and point out some rational responses to counteract them. Irrational Bias 1: Overconfidence Investors who see their portfolios rising for extended periods can easily forget previous down markets. This overconfidence can lead them to make risky decisions. Research shows that men are particularly vulnerable to this bias. According to Brad M. Barber, Professor of Finance at the UC Davis Graduate School of Management: “Men tend to be more overconfident than women, and overconfident investors tend to think they know more than they actually do.” Rational Response In these situations, revisiting your comfort level with risk could help you get your confidence in check. A quick call or email to your financial professional could also give you added insights. Irrational Bias 2: Anchoring The concept of anchoring revolves around people’s tendency to cling to a single piece of information during the decision-making process. This is often the first information they encounter. Once the “anchor” is set, other judgments are made based on that anchor. Consider an investor who first encounters a mutual fund that is priced at $22 a share. If the price of that fund later drops to $18.50, that person may think he or she has found a “bargain.” In reality, however, the original $22 price may have been overvalued. Rational Response Evaluate an investment based on a variety of fundamental metrics over time. Focus on the overall asset allocation plan and less on the day-by-day prices of individual investment options. Irrational Bias 3: Loss Aversion As Nobel-Prize winner Daniel Kahneman discovered, a loss generates 2.25 times more pain than the pleasure generated by an equivalent gain. A loss of $1,000, for instance, could only be offset emotionally by a gain of at least $2,250. This level of emotional “pain” could easily lead an investor to sell during periods of volatility – just to make the pain stop. Rational Response Focus on your goals for the long term to help avoid this pitfall. Irrational Bias 4: Mental Accounting Our brains have a natural tendency to organize information. When it comes to money, we tend to view some assets as being different from others based on their source or intended use. This can be helpful for investors who set aside a specific amount of money each month for retirement or another goal. That money is off the table, in a sense, because it’s in their mental “savings” box. In other situations, however, this can work against investors. A modest but unexpected inheritance is a good example. Because those inherited assets aren’t part of the investor’s current financial plan, he or she may feel like it’s “fun money,” even though investing those assets could go a long way toward helping the investor achieve an important financial goal. Rational Response Working with a financial professional on a “save some/spend some” plan to help overcome this bias. The Payoff Of Rational Thinking Emotional investing can be costly. Taking a rational approach, on the other hand, can help you focus on the essential elements of successful investing – a diversified approach and a focus on the long term. Asset allocation and diversification do not ensure a profit or protect against a loss. Principal Funds, Inc. is distributed by Principal Funds Distributor, Inc.

FVC: First Trust To Roll Out Dynamic Focus Five ETF

By Jonathan Jones and Tom Lydon First Trust, the seventh-largest U.S. ETF issuer, is planning to introduce a dynamic version of its popular First Trust Dorsey Wright Focus 5 ETF (NASDAQ: FV ) . The First Trust Dorsey Wright Dynamic Focus 5 ETF (NASDAQ: FVC ) is expected to debut today, reports ETF Trends . The new ETF will track the Dorsey Wright Dynamic Focus Five Index. “The index is designed to provide targeted exposure to five First Trust sector and industry based ETFs as identified by DWA’s proprietary relative strength methodology. This methodology is a ranking system used to measure a security’s price momentum relative to its peers and helps DWA identify meaningful patterns in daily share price movements,” according to a statement issued by First Trust . FV, one of the most successful ETFs to come to market in 2014, follows DWA’s relative strength ranking system where sector ETFs are compared to each other to measure price momentum relative to other ETFs in the universe and the top five ranking ETFs are included in the underlying index. The momentum strategy basically bets that hot movers will continue to rise, so investors would essentially be buying high and selling even higher. FVC’s underlying index “allocates to the cash index when the relative strength of more than one-third of the universe of First Trust ETFs begins to diminish relative to the cash index.” “The index seeks to identify major themes in the market, have exposure to those sectors whose price action is superior to others in the universe, and eliminate exposure to those sectors whose price action is sub-par to others in the universe. In instances where relative strength diminishes across equity sectors, the index gains varying amounts of exposure to the cash index,” according to the statement. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Riskier Bond ETFs For A More Dovish Fed Outlook

By Max Chen and Tom Lydon With the Federal Reserve holding interest rates and only anticipating two rate hikes this year, fixed-income investors may turn to riskier debt securities and related exchange traded funds, reports industry analyst ETF Trends . The Fed’s dovish stance sent the U.S. dollar retreating, with the Dollar Index down about 1.9% since the Fed’s Wednesday announcement. “Any weakening of the U.S. dollar will support emerging markets that have issued U.S. denominated debt and will take pressure off of China’s need to manage their currency,” Matthew Whitbread, investment manager at Baring Asset Management, said on CNBC . “This would bode well for investors able to allocate to select emerging market currencies and local bond markets.” Fixed-income investors may gain exposure to U.S. dollar-denominated emerging market debt through ETF options. For instance, the iShares J.P. Morgan USD Emerging Markets Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: EMB ) has a 7.01 year duration and a 5.30% 30-day SEC yield. The PowerShares Emerging Markets Sovereign Debt Portfolio (NYSEARCA: PCY ) has a 8.34 year duration and a 5.90% 30-day SEC yield. The Vanguard Emerging Markets Government Bond ETF (NASDAQ: VWOB ) has a 6.2 year duration and a 4.95% 30-day SEC yield. Year-to-date, EMB rose 3.9%, PCY gained 3.6% and VWOB returned 3.4%. Additionally, with emerging market currencies appreciating against the greenback, local-currency emerging market bond ETFs have also been outperforming. For local currency-denominated emerging market bond ETFs, the iShares Emerging Markets Local Currency Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: LEMB ) has a 4.77 year duration and a 4.73% 30-day SEC yield. The Market Vectors Emerging Markets Local Currency Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: EMLC ) has a 4.76 year duration and a 5.95% 30-day SEC yield. The actively managed WisdomTree Emerging Markets Local Debt Fund (NYSEARCA: ELD ) has a 5.01 year duration and a 5.89% 30-day SEC yield. Year-to-date, LEMB increased 3.7%, EMLC advanced 6.6% and ELD gained 5.3%. “Overall, a more dovish Fed should support risky assets, in particular high yield credit that benefits both from falling yields as well as economic growth,” Whitbread added. For instance, over the past two days, the SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: JNK ) was up 1.7% and the iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: HYG ) was 1.2% higher. JNK has a 4.26 year duration and a 7.28% 30-day SEC yield. HYG has a 4.01 year duration and a 7.26% 30-day SEC yield. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.