How Market Timing Lost Me $200K | White Coat Investor (2024)

[Editor's Note: Today's guest post was submitted by Ian Cook, an Emergency Physician who blogs at Carpe Diem, MD. Every quarter, a bunch of guest posts are submitted to WCI and we select the ones that we think will help our readers the most. There are a lot of lessons to learn from this post, and not just the ones Dr. Cook learned from his experience. See my note at the end for more details. Dr. Cook and I have no financial relationship.]

It was November 2019 when I received a call from my “financial advisor”. “Tesla is up. Right now is a good time to sell. Take some profits.” I was on the fence….

Handpicking Stocks

Tesla was the first stock that I ever bought. I bought it in 2016 after buying a Model X. The car was amazing, the process of purchasing was simple, the performance of the vehicle was unparalleled.

I wanted to follow the Oracle of Omaha philosophy “Why not invest your assets in the companies you really like?”

Tesla was $350 and I bought $5,000. It immediately dropped. I bought more. Over the years Tesla would fluctuate like the tides of the ocean. With every dip I would buy more. Eventually, I invested $30,000 in Tesla with an average price of $300/share for 100 shares. I believed in this company. But I really had not achieved any significant gains in three years.

The investment world was completely split when evaluating Tesla. It was one of the most shorted stocks in history. Some analysts were predicting bankruptcy while others were predicting a $2,000 price target. The analysts could not decide if Tesla was a car company or tech company and they were incapable of evaluating Tesla’s stock price.

I was a believer and still believe that Tesla is a tech company with the ability to be bigger than Apple, especially if you consider the symbiotic relationship of Space X and Tesla.

You can envision a plan where Space X supplies the Tesla network via Starlink (satellite internet) and Tesla develops electric vehicles with full autopilot capabilities that can drive anywhere in the world.

Combine the millions of autopilot hours performed by active drivers with the above capabilities and it becomes clear that the competition is behind. Lastly, all Tesla owners have an app that can locate and summon their Tesla. This app can easily be converted to allow for autopilot ride sharing. (Watch out Uber and Lyft.)

If Tesla pulls this off, they will beat Uber and Lyft to their end game business model by developing the autonomous vehicle and a Tesla ride-sharing app. Tesla will have both the hardware (vehicles/Starlink) and the software (Tesla app).

Ever notice that Model 3s can be leased but NOT leased to own? My personal theory is that those will be used for the first Tesla-owned autopilot fleet, but I’m getting too off topic….

Timing the Market

So, what happened? I sold my $30,000 Tesla position in November 2019. Not because I did not believe in my investment but because I wanted to try and time the market.

I wanted to sell high and buy low

The problem is that it never went lower than $300 again…. I waited and waited and the stock climbed and climbed.

I bought back in at $450, $700 and $330 a share with a total investment of $12,250 at an average price of $408 a share. So, I ended up with less than half of my total investment at a high price per share because I wanted to time the market.

Tesla continued to climb to $1,5000 a share before splitting in 2020

My current investment $12,500 (130 Shares) is worth $75,000 a $62,500 gain

My initial investment of $30,000 (100 shares) would be worth $287,000 a $257,000 gain*

And that is how I lost $200,000 dollars in 5 minutes… ($194,500)

I sold a company that I believed in by trying to time the market. The smarter move would have been to hold my current position and add to my position on downturns. This was my initial strategy, and I abandoned it to try and gain additional profit. As a long-term investor, I learned that chasing short-term gains is an awful idea. Some would argue that investing in individual stocks is equal to gambling and they may be right. However, I do enjoy having a mixed portfolio of index funds and individual stocks. My wife Lauren’s portfolio is a stable Vanguard account, and we use my account for a more mixed portfolio.

Short-Term Rentals as Investments

2016 was a year of firsts. Besides buying my first stock, Tesla, we bought our first short-term rental property.

Our short-term rental property has been one of our best investments. The equity from that property has exceeded the growth of our retirement account portfolios, and we have been able to enjoy the property each year. We have shared great memories and experiences with family and friends all while building our net worth.

We purchased a $500,000 condo with $50,000 down (10%) that is now valued at $800,000. The STR income covers the mortgage and expenses, resulting in a significant return on our investment.

Our short-term rental is a buy-and-hold strategy that has worked out well. I wish I would have kept to that strategy with Tesla.

The moral of the story is trust your instincts and own your decisions when it comes to investing. I believed in Tesla and chose to try and time the market by selling my position. Everything in that sentence is wrong, and I paid the price.

I own that decision and have learned from it. I also learned that investing in short-term real estate can be a profitable and enjoyable experience. Our real estate and stock investing journey began at the same time. We have done better with our real estate investing. The stock market remains a proven source of wealth generation, but we prefer to diversify our investments.

Lauren and I practice a mixed investment strategy between retirement accounts and real estate. In real estate, we diversify further into Short Term Rental properties and Long-Term Multifamily properties. Our focus is on building our Short-Term Rental portfolio to increase cashflow and fund our additional real estate investments.

We believe that Short Term Rental properties are a great way for high-income professionals to begin investing in real estate.

*Tesla stock analysis performed on November 25th, 2020

[Editor's Note:

  1. I agree with the OP that a buy and hold investing strategy is a much better idea than a market timing strategy.
  2. I also agree that investing in stocks and real estate is a great way to reach financial independence.

However, I see a lot of other lessons that this post demonstrates well that I think every WCIer should learn. I'll list them below:

How Market Timing Lost Me $200K | White Coat Investor (4)

  1. You aren't what you drive.
  2. Don't invest emotionally. Stocks don't care who owns them. Buying stocks you've heard of works well when well-known stocks are outperforming, but not so well when they are not (and there are times when they do not).
  3. Don't invest in individual stocks. At all. At least not with real money. Don't take on uncompensated risk.
  4. Don't take advice from brokers or anyone else who recommends you invest in (much less trade) individual stocks. There is no price too low for bad advice.
  5. Remember that direct real estate investing has aspects of a second job.
  6. When you own short-term rentals, you are not in the landlording business, you are in the hotel business. If you thought landlording required a lot of extra time and effort, wait until you run a hotel.
  7. If you are putting additional time and effort into your investments, subtract out the value of that time when calculating your returns. The more valuable your time is, the lower that return will be. The more valuable your time, the more value a property manager can bring you.
  8. Those who invest in my favorite mutual fund, The Vanguard Total Stock Market Fund, bought Tesla stock shortly after the IPO in 2010 at approximately $17/share (<$4 when accounting for the split awhile back) and then rode it to almost $800 a share before its recent drop under $600 this week.
  9. Remember that there will always be something you could have bought that would have provided higher returns. Don't let FOMO convince you to performance chase. You didn't “lose money” every time you missed something that “went to the moon”. There are no called strikes in investing.]

What do you think? What lessons did you learn from this doc's experience? Comment below!

How Market Timing Lost Me $200K | White Coat Investor (2024)

FAQs

How often do investors beat the market? ›

It is relatively common to beat the market for 1–3 years at a time. That can largely be explained by luck. But the data clearly shows that even professional fund managers are unable to beat the market consistently over a longer period of time, like 10–15 years.

What is the lost decade for investors? ›

Once the Tech Bubble deflated, the equity market began an extended period of underperformance which came to be known as “the lost decade in equities.” From December 31, 1999 to December 31, 2009, the S&P 500® returned -1%/year, whereas NASDAQ returned -5%/year [or -6%/year for the NASDAQ 100].

How much does the average investor lose? ›

The average stock market return is about 10% per year, as measured by the S&P 500 index, but that 10% average rate is reduced by inflation. Investors can expect to lose purchasing power of 2% to 3% every year due to inflation.

Do 90% of investors lose money? ›

It's a shocking statistic — approximately 90% of retail investors lose money in the stock market over the long run. With the rise of commission-free trading apps like Robinhood, more people than ever are trying their hand at stock picking.

Who has beaten the market consistently? ›

Warren Buffett

Those who invested $10,000 in Berkshire Hathaway in 1965 are above the $60.2 million mark today. 1314 Buffett's investing style of discipline, patience, and value has consistently outperformed the market for decades.

Are most investors losing money? ›

About 90% of investors lose money trading stocks. That's 9 out of every 10 people — both newbies and seasoned professionals — losing their hard earned dollars by trying to outsmart an unpredictable and extremely volatile machine.

How often do investors lose money? ›

It is widely accepted across the investment fraternity that the vast majority of retail traders lose money - any seasoned investor will tell you this. In fact more than 70% of DIY investors lose money.

What years are considered your golden years for investing? ›

The prime years for making smart financial decisions are, on average, 53 and 54.

Who gets the money when stocks lose? ›

“In other words, the money did not exist or disappear for long-term investors if you did not make any transactions. However, for short-term investors, when stock prices go up or down, the money would be transferred among them as a zero-sum game, i.e. your losses would be others' gains, and vice versa.”

Do you lose all your money if the stock market crashes? ›

Your portfolio might lose value, but losing value is different than losing money. When stock prices fall, your investments are not worth as much. But the market will inevitably rebound, and when that happens, stock prices will increase once again -- and your portfolio will regain the value it lost.

Should I pull my money out of the stock market? ›

It can be nerve-wracking to watch your portfolio consistently drop during bear market periods. After all, nobody likes losing money; that goes against the whole purpose of investing. However, pulling your money out of the stock market during down periods can often do more harm than good in the long term.

What is the 80% rule investing? ›

Definition of '80% Rule'

The 80% Rule is a Market Profile concept and strategy. If the market opens (or moves outside of the value area ) and then moves back into the value area for two consecutive 30-min-bars, then the 80% rule states that there is a high probability of completely filling the value area.

What is the 70% rule investing? ›

Basically, the rule says real estate investors should pay no more than 70% of a property's after-repair value (ARV) minus the cost of the repairs necessary to renovate the home. The ARV of a property is the amount a home could sell for after flippers renovate it.

How much money do I need to invest to make $3,000 a month? ›

Imagine you wish to amass $3000 monthly from your investments, amounting to $36,000 annually. If you park your funds in a savings account offering a 2% annual interest rate, you'd need to inject roughly $1.8 million into the account.

What percent of investors beat the market? ›

Less than 10% of active large-cap fund managers have outperformed the S&P 500 over the last 15 years. The biggest drag on investment returns is unavoidable, but you can minimize it if you're smart.

Does the average investor beat the market? ›

Key Takeaways. Figuring out whether you can beat the market is not easy one, but the answers generally vary depending on who you ask. The average investor may not have a very good chance of beating the market. Regular investors may be able to achieve better risk-adjusted returns by focusing on losing less.

What percentage of investors outperform the market? ›

We saw from the data above that an investor has about a 75% chance of underperforming the market in any given year which means you have a 25% chance of beating the market in any given year.

Has any investor beaten the market? ›

The Legendary Investors

Warren Buffett, for example, has produced a 20.9 percent annualized return over fifty-three years. Peter Lynch of Fidelity returned 29 percent over thirteen years. And Yale's David Swensen has returned 13.5 percent over thirty-three years.

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