Digg It |   Del.icio.us |   Printer Friendly |   PDF |   Email

The Only Thing We Have To Fear

Thursday, January 29, 2009 | Bob De Dea

Rating:
Fear of missing the next winner is a killer.

The quote above is from a recent article by one of my all-time favorite financial gurus, our own Chris Rowe.  It got me thinking about how fear often rules our financial futures and even our lives.

It’s fear that we won’t be successful or good enough at something that keeps us from trying new things.  We all have our arrived-at level of comfort and that’s not necessarily a bad thing – it’s not unreasonable for us to think twice before parachuting out of an airplane or eating raw shellfish from an unknown source or using margin to buy an Ultrashort ETF.  Fear is meant to be a psychological inhibitor that keeps us from destructive actions or from potential (or perceived) threats.

We all know the instinctual fear response: the uncomfortable surge of apprehension, the gripping manifestation of panic in our breathing and in the fibers of our being (literally, as the emotion causes adrenaline in the blood to flow to the muscles with fresh oxygen and minerals, in anticipation of a physical reaction to a threat).  Such self-preservation is fear’s most basic form.

And we all understand the psychological form of fear: the desire to avoid pain that we’ve experienced in the past.  This one is common among investors and is the type referred to by Chris in the above quote.

“I missed out before.  If I don’t buy now, I could miss making the big bucks.”

“I got burned by following that guy’s recommendation.  I’ll never listen to him again.”

Notice that the thing about this form of fear is that it’s designed to keep us from again encountering the cause of the pain.

Fear is not logical.  It doesn’t consider the big picture.  One bad trade on a guy’s recommendation and the guy is an idiot, notwithstanding his generally successful track record.  Here’s where fear can backfire.  Remember how I said it’s a reaction to a perceived threat?  In the days of our early ancestors, if you ran away from a movement in the underbrush because you were afraid it might be a lion, this was a good thing.  You had nothing to lose if you were wrong, and everything to gain if you were right, since it was a matter of survival.  As Frank Tallis, in his book Hidden Minds, writes:

The reason why evolution has equipped the brain with a swift (although not necessarily accurate) processing system is quite straightforward.  In the ancestral environment, predators struck quickly.  Therefore, it was well worth responding to any potential threat – even if the majority of responses proved to be unnecessary.  The cost of failing to respond (or responding slowly after careful, conscious, consideration) was probably death.  On the other hand, there were no costs attached to being jittery.  In the ancestral environment, it didn’t pay to be cool.

Such distinctions are more difficult to draw in the modern world where, when fear kicks in, we still resort to either escape (getting out of the market before you lose it all) or confrontation (blaming Wall Street or the government or anyone and everyone for making this mess, or at least for allowing it to happen).  We are still slaves to that adrenaline rush.

Unfortunately, fear sometimes keeps us from being smart.

And there's another face to fear: The attack of uncertainty and anxiety that occurs when we don’t have enough information to make a reasoned decision.  We don't have to look hard at the current market to be overcome by this kind of fear.  If this leads us to seek out more knowledge in an effort to make sense of what we’re experiencing, or if it keeps us in cash because of the unfathomable volatility on Wall Street – great!  But it can also cause us to make irrational and not-well-thought-out moves in a market that will not hesitate to rip our faces off.

What does that mean to me as an investor?  Well, sometimes the perceived threat is imaginary (“The market will never recover!”).  For our ancestors, it didn’t matter how many times they were wrong about there being a lion in the brush; it was always a good idea to run.  For the modern investor, it’s important to sort the wheat of truth from the chaff of imagination.

The cause of the pain in the earlier examples, it could be argued, was not missing the timing or listening to the guy with his recommendation – it was a combination of our own desire to win (our belief that we would make big money) and the slap in the face that lets us know we really can’t control outcomes.  In other words, it was our expectation being thwarted.  We would, after all, experience the same unpleasant feeling if we picked a loser on our own.  Predicting the market is like trying to sculpt with mercury.  The most we can hope for is understanding what’s going on right now.

The key to conquering fear is knowledge.  That’s why we here at Tycoon spend so much time and energy writing articles and equipping you with an arsenal of information, facts, ideas, and principles to guide you in your investing life.

It's a new year.  Whether or not you're the type to make resolutions, I would encourage you to consider taking the next step and going the distance yourself.  To take control of your own financial future, study one of the educational courses offered by Tycoon:  Teeka’s ETF Master Trader program or Chris’ Internal Strength System.  You’ll be taught by professionals how to master fear, so that next time you feel your heartbeat racing and you’re almost incapacitated by terror, you’ll have the weapons and the tools to gain the upper hand.

Do not look back in anger, or forward in fear, but around in awareness. – James Thurber


(Please let us know what you think about Bob De Dea's article.)
Rate his article here »



Bob De Dea
Guest Contributor
The Tycoon Report


Rate this article
Thank you for your vote!

5 Comments

Post your own comment
  • Most recent
  • 1
  • Oldest
  1. Carl (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    When one focuses on results rather than execution of a plan, one is bound to stumble. If one rushes into execution without a plan, one is more likely to be executed than to be successful.



    Thanks, Bob, for another of your engaging and insightful commentaries.



    - Carl
  2. d. (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Ref: "FEAR" It seems as though the powers that be , have expressed that the American public is not spending because of fear. This is a mistake, WE are not spending out of protest! Thats why no "BAILOUT" or any "Trick" is going to get the economy going. We see right through the smoke and mirrors. For example, Fuel prices went sky high, people quit driving and cut back. Then the prices for fuel went down and we continued to NOT drive out of protest and will continue to do so. It has come to the attention of law makers in some states (Missouri. Oregon)that this "dont spend out of protest" is happening and they are worried enough that they are trying to pass legislation (in an attempt to bolster lost tax revenue) that would administer a fuel tax based on how many MILES you drive using a STATE issued GPS unit attached to your car!

    Folks this is not an "evolution" of the brain, but a "revolution of the pocket book". We are not going to spend money on something we dont need to impress people we dont even like. Who cares, keep your money and dont spend or invest "until" you know you can trust the broker/investment firm or the market . Maybe we dont want the market as it has been known, "TO RECOVER". It may just need to dwindle down to nothing for a while ! the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA existed way before Wall Street ever was! Wall Steet has become more than it ever should have. We looked around and become aware that "Ponzie Schemes" and "Carpet Baggers" rule the alley ways of Wall Street and we are not spending. Hold on to your money for TEN years. Then look at investing it again. The honest investment teams will still be there! The dishonest ones that are shakin in their boots right now, wishing you would spend money will be gone.
  3. jj (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Maybe there isn't enough fear yet for the stock market to be near a bottom.I know myself,that I keep looking at past stock prices like today's are a bargain.Maybe I'm still not afraid enough to be going long.It seems like the whole world is waiting for Obama to save the financial system.If investors eventually lose faith in Obama and govts printing fiat currency to save the system,we can look forward to crashing currencies, crashing stock market and soaring gold.Holding some real money,gold,is a necessity in my opinion.
  4. Joyce (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    I have followed our own Market guru Chris, for 8 months. I have at least been conservative in my trades but unfortunately have been burnt in almost all of his recommendations. Its beginning to hurt and the realization that even the market guru doesn't win very often. I have fear now of following his advice. I understand the fundamentals of what he believes, just think none of the "rules" are applying. I hope things turn better, for all of our sakes and for Chris, of course.
  5. Charles M (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    This one and Chris's are among the best Tyc Reports I've read. Thanks for the valuable words that allow me to look into my head to see why I make the decisions and choices that affect my investing.
  • Most recent
  • 1
  • Oldest

Add Your Comments

Please keep your comments relevant to this blog entry. Email addresses are never displayed.

Please fill in the missing field(s).

Important: To comment on Tycoon Report articles, you must first log in. If you are a paying customer of Tycoon, you may use the same login and password that you use normally. If you do not yet have a login, please take a moment to register below. It’s free, and you only need to do it once.

Register

(email address and password information will NOT be displayed publicly)

Name *

Email *

Password *

Subscribe to The Tycoon Report
By registering, you agree to our terms of service.

Already a member? Log in!

(you will not be taken away from this page)

Email *

Password *

Remember?

Forgot Password?




Important Notice to all stock spammers, scammers and penny stock pump-and-dumpers: You will get no respect here. Don’t bother submitting fraudulent or misleading information in the guise of an article, because we will remove it. Any piece of content submitted on this site can be removed at the sole discretion of the Tycoon staff.