The Gone Fishin' Portfolio. Alexander Henry Green

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you're skeptical on this point, it may be that you've bought the story that Wall Street is selling: Investing is so complicated—or your personal circumstances so exceptional—that you should not be trusted to run your own money.

      I'll concede that if you don't know what the heck you're doing, this is true. But one solution is learning what to do, rather than turning your financial welfare over to someone else.

      When it comes to managing your money, there are plenty of potential pitfalls out there. However, those investors who wind up in retirement with less money than they need have generally fallen prey to one of four basic mistakes:

      1 They were too conservative, so their portfolio didn't grow enough to begin generating the income required to meet their spending requirements.

      2 They were too aggressive, so a significant percentage of their portfolio went up in flames along the way.

      3 They tried—and failed—to time the market. Confident that they would be in for market rallies and out for market corrections, they ended up doing just the opposite much of the time.

      4 They delegated unwisely. They turned their financial affairs over to a broker, insurance agent or financial planner who—over time—converted a substantial amount of their assets into the firm's assets. In addition, the advisor may have been too conservative, been too aggressive, or tried and failed to time the market.

      If your nest egg is lying in pieces late in life, you don't have the opportunity—or the time—to build another one. The consequences, both personal and financial, can be devastating.

      There are few guarantees in the world of investing. In fact, once you get beyond the risk-free world of Treasurys and certificates of deposit, there are virtually none. However, the Gone Fishin’ Portfolio eliminates six major investment risks:

      1 It keeps you from being so conservative that your long-term purchasing power fails to keep up with inflation.

      2 It prevents you from handling your money recklessly.

      3 It does not require you to own any individual stocks or bonds. So a single security—think Enron or Shearson Lehman—cannot cause your portfolio to crater.

      4 It does not require a broker, financial consultant or anyone else to attach himself to your portfolio like a barnacle, siphoning off fees every year.

      5 It doesn't require you—or any investment “expert”—to forecast the economy, predict the market or analyze competing economic theories about the future.

      6 Perhaps most importantly, it guarantees that your time will be your own. Rather than spending countless hours evaluating stocks, market trends or fund managers, you'll spend your time as you please. While others struggle to manage their money effectively, you'll have “gone fishin’.”

      This last point means that instead of spending countless hours fretting over your investment portfolio, you'll be able to relax … play golf … travel the world … spend more time with your kids or grandkids … or just swing on a hammock in the shade with a glass of ice-cold lemonade. Because your investments will be on autopilot.

      This is not just a strategy for today's markets, incidentally. The Gone Fishin’ Portfolio is designed to prosper—and generate peace of mind—through all market environments. And I invite you to be skeptical. In fact, let me begin by asking you a question.

      I hope so. That, in a nutshell, is the Gone Fishin’ Portfolio. It's about handling the money you intend to retire on simply, effectively and cost-efficiently, with the absolute minimum of time and attention.

      If you're like most people I know, you have better things to do than watch your stocks bounce up and down all day.

      Don't get me wrong. I'm not averse to trading stocks. (Long-term investing and short-term trading are not mutually exclusive activities.) But short-term trading strategies are beyond the scope of this book. Instead of focusing on trading or speculating, we're going to focus here on the money you intend to retire on—and perhaps ultimately leave to your kids, your grandkids or your favorite charity. This is money that shouldn't be treated like chips in a poker game.

      Reaching financial independence is a serious goal, one that should be pursued in a disciplined, rigorous way.

      That's why I recommend that you make the Gone Fishin’ Portfolio the foundation of your long-term investment program. The philosophy behind it is based on the best investment thinking available. It has been tested in various economic conditions. It can increase your returns while reducing risk. And it will minimize your investment costs and annual taxes on your portfolio.

      Best of all, it works. Investors who have put their money to work this way have enjoyed years of excellent returns while taking less risk than being fully invested in stocks.

      I invite you to join them.

      I offer nothing more than simple facts, plain arguments, and common sense.

      Source: Common Sense, Thomas Paine

      A while back, some friends and I were vacationing in Key West and decided to do some deep-sea fishing.

      We didn't have a boat, so we went to a local marina to see what we could charter. There were several boats available, so we began talking to various captains.

      Most assured us that the fishing was excellent and encouraged us to hire them for the next day, before someone else booked them. But since we were in no hurry, we took our time and kept wandering down the dock chatting with the crews of different charters.

      Near the end of the dock, we saw an older captain leaning back comfortably in his captain's chair with a beer in one hand and a cigar in the other.

      “The fishin's been great,” he said. “But the catchin’,” he added with a shake of his head, “the catchin’ ain't been so good.”

      “Why not?” we asked, a little surprised given the positive spin we had gotten from the other boat captains.

      He said the weather had been unseasonably cool. That had affected migration patterns. The big schools of fish hadn't shown up yet. “Nobody's been catchin’ much lately,” he said.

      We looked at each other in disappointment.

      “It's still great weather to go out,” he added. “And the fish might show up,” he said after a long puff on his cigar. “You never know.”

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