Why Manage Your Nest Egg Yourself?
by Lyle Wilkinson
Published on this site: April 6th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

Why would anyone manage their own stock portfolio? Why would
you want to? You want a better net return. There are two parts
to a better return, gross return and investing expense. Investing
expense is simply the gap between gross return and net return.
Investing Expense
Investing expense, the expense of having a stock portfolio,
includes commissions, management fees, annual fees, quarterly
fees, inactivity fees, planning fees and slippage. The most
tangible argument for self-directed portfolio management is
lower investing expense. Doing it yourself predictably reduces
future investing expense. Switching from a full price broker
to an online broker reduces commission cost. Making your own
buy/sell decisions eliminates management fees. The lower you
drive investing expense the smaller the gap between gross
return and net returns.
Slippage is the price change from decision to buy/sell to execution
of a trade. Fast online discount brokers have less slippage than
full service trade-by-phone brokers. Some slippage may come from
brokers skimming or trading their own accounts. Most slippage comes
as prices move in the time between decision and trade. Faster execution
reduces slippage.
Few pros charge based on how much your account has grown.
Fewer pay you if your account shrinks. Mutual fund managers
may even increase their fee rate if their fund's asset base
is falling and they can't cut their costs. Ask you account
manager if you get a refund if the net asset value of your
account falls.
Gross Return
Gross return is the increase in an investment. Net return is the
bottom line, the amount your account has grown. Net return is gross
return less investment expenses. Future gross return is less certain
than future expense. Return goals are often stated relative to the
markets. This takes market variance out of performance measures.
Some strategies 'beat the market'. Some pro money managers 'beat
the market.' Some self-directed investors 'beat the market.'
Pro money manager returns and self-directed returns overlap.Some
pros beat some do-it-yourselfers, and vice-versa. There is little
consistency from year to year. A pro with a stellar 2004, may not
have a good 2005. On average about 1 in 5 pros beat the market.
On average about 1 in 5 do-it-yourselfers beat the market. How is
it easier to find the 1 in 5 pro who will beat the market than to
find a stock that will beat the market?
If a switch is being assessed based on past performance,
try to get details on the performance calculations. The best
simple measure is to divide current net asset value by starting
net asset value. Getting the annual return requires solving
the compound interest rate formula. True annual performance
numbers are always less than or equal to the average of annual
returns.
Individuals can self manage portfolios to 'beat the professionals'
and to 'beat the market'. However, lowering investing expense
is more predictable than increasing gross return. Getting
a better gross return is not the slam-dunk reducing investing
expense is. Getting a better return requires effort to learn,
to pick strategies, and to trade with discipline. Some investors
reduce the effort by subscribing to a stock guru newsletter.
It takes some time and effort to find a newsletter that will
work for you.
Non-Financial Considerations
Some of the reasons for being a self-directed investor go
beyond financial.
Anonymity
With self-directed portfolios no one has to know your financial
status. No one needs to know enough to want to share your wins or
laugh at your mistakes. In money matters, privacy is good.
Control
With self-directed portfolios no one stands between you and your
money. The self-directed investor doesn't hesitate to pull out $100,000
for the down payment on a house, when he knows he isn't reducing
his portfolio manager's income by the 2% annual management fees
($2,000).
The self-directed investor doesn't get sold on buying stories (stocks)
when they don't fit his portfolio strategy. He/she doesn't get or
act on hot tips. He takes pride in having a plan and working the
plan.
Autonomy
The self-directed investor doesn't have to follow the crowd. This
investor has a plan. His plan is not swayed by mutual fund managers
or by other investors.
Fun
Self-directed investing has some of the features of gambling, with
a smaller house advantage and less travel expense. But be careful;
don't let the excitement of making big bets overwhelm you. Manage
your portfolio.
Self-directed investors want to do it themselves to reduce expense,
increase net return, protect anonymity, keep control, enhance autonomy,
and have fun.

Lyle Wilkinson, investor, trader, author, MBA Helps individuals
learn to self direct their stock portfolios. Book, e-book, PowerPoint
"DIY Portfolio Management" http://www.diyportfoliomanagement.com
mailto:[email protected]

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