The ‘Do Nothing’ Route To Investing Success

If in doubt, it’s smarter to keep your powder dry.

The content of this article was relevant at the time of publishing. Circumstances change continuously and caution should therefore be exercised when relying upon any content contained within this article.

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More.

I have a confession. And it’s this: some of my best investing returns have been from actions that I didn’t take, as opposed to those I did take.
 
In other words, you might say, I profited from laziness, inertia and indolence.
 
Well, yes. I dozed through the dotcom mania, overlooked the banking boom, and totally missed ‘peak oil’ and huge fortunes to be made in oil and gas shares.
 
That said, if I’m being more charitable with myself, I can certainly come up with other — and more flattering — descriptions: hard-headedness, farsightedness and an ability to ignore hype, for instance.
 
But the fundamental facts remain.
 
Simply put, I’m often convinced that when it comes to investing, sitting on your hands can be the most profitable course of action.

Human frailty

Why? Several reasons.
 
As individual investors, for instance, we lack the massive analytical resources of the professionals.
 
We’re also notoriously prone to the quirks, blind spots and biases that make the study of behavioural investing such rich fishing waters for psychologists and economists.
 
Moreover, as I’ve observed before, many investing decisions are binary in nature — sell this, buy that — and you need to get both of them correct for a given action to be judged a success. Which isn’t easy.
 
And so on, and so on.

Hard evidence

For proof of all this, look no further than some of the research by behavioural economists and academics Daniel Kahneman, Amos Tversky, Terry Odean and Brad Barber.
 
Odean, for instance — a finance professor at University of California, Berkeley, and a former student of Kahneman — studied the trading records of 10,000 brokerage accounts of individual investors over a seven‑year period.
 
Here’s how the Nobel prize-winning Kahneman sums it up in his 2011 bestseller Thinking, Fast and Slow:

“On average, the shares that individual traders sold did better than those they bought, by a very substantial margin: 3.2 percentage points per year, above and beyond the significant costs of executing the two trades… It is clear that for the large majority of individual investors, taking a shower and doing nothing would have been a better policy than implementing the ideas that came to their minds.”
 

Or, for another proof point, look no further than Tim Hale’s excellent investment primer, Smarter Investing. As he points out in it, over the period 1984 to 2002, the average American equity fund soared from $100 to $500 in terms of comparative spending power. But individual investors investing in those same funds saw their $100 turned into just $90 — and that during one of the biggest bull markets in recent history!

Five-point plan

So how best to turn this into hard, actionable — and profitable — investing lessons?
 
Here are five such lessons to start with.
 
1) If you’re not convinced that a given investment can beat the market, it can be better to just stay invested in the market. In other words, unless you’re sure a proposed trade stands good odds of beating a low-cost index tracker, don’t try. Stay with the tracker.
 
2) It can be more profitable betting against the herd, rather than going with it. At the moment, everyone is selling out of oil, gas and mining. To me, that indicates that there may be excellent buying opportunities around the corner.

3) Buy businesses, not hype. It’s easy to get carried away by great-sounding businesses and charismatic silver-tongued executives. So look at the numbers, and ask yourself some tough questions. Money that’s lost can’t subsequently be re-invested elsewhere, so it’s often better to keep your powder dry.
 
4) Timing the market is damnably difficult. While I don’t believe that it can’t be done, I do believe that a strategy of ‘long-term buy and hold’ — that is, buy, and then pretty much do nothing — is a better course of action for many of us. Especially if you’ve bought into a decent business that’s just going through a tricky patch.
 
5) Learn from your mistakes. In my experience, many people make the same core mistakes, again and again. Admit you’re wrong, figure out your mental blind spots, and try to steer clear next time.

You won’t be alone

To me, such lessons seem persuasively obvious — even though it’s equally clear that many private investors appear to do the exact opposite.
 
But take a look at the strategies of such super-investors as Warren Buffett, Anthony Bolton, Sir John Templeton, Howard Marks and Seth Klarman, and you can easily see that they, too, often follow such investing principles.
 
So in the spirit of an end-of-year self-audit, ask yourself if you too might at times be better off doing nothing.
 
Your broker won’t thank you for the reduced trading commissions. But you might see the benefit in your account balance.

 

More on Investing Articles

A senior man and his wife holding hands walking up a hill on a footpath looking away from the camera at the view. The fishing village of Polperro is behind them.
Investing Articles

Is 50 too old to start buying shares?

Christopher Ruane explains why 'better late than never' is key to his thinking about whether 50's too old to start…

Read more »

Two male friends are out in Tynemouth, North East UK. They are walking on a sidewalk and pushing their baby sons in strollers. They are wearing warm clothing.
Investing Articles

Here’s what £150 a month in a Junior ISA could be worth by 2045…

You might be surprised to learn by how large a Junior ISA portfolio could become inside 20 years from modest…

Read more »

Investing Articles

This red hot equity fund in my SIPP returned 12.6% in the first 2 months of 2026

This global equity fund is delivering huge returns for Edward Sheldon’s SIPP in 2026, despite all the risks and uncertainty…

Read more »

Friends at the bay near the village of Diabaig on the side of Loch Torridon in Wester Ross, Scotland. They are taking a break from their bike ride to relax and chat. They are laughing together.
Investing Articles

Want to retire richer? Here’s Warren Buffett’s golden rule to build wealth

If you want to build wealth for a richer retirement, then following Warren Buffett’s golden rule might be the best…

Read more »

Black woman using smartphone at home, watching stock charts.
Investing Articles

Get ready for stock market volatility…

As conflict in the Middle East makes share prices fluctuate, what strategies can investors use to try and find opportunities…

Read more »

British Isles on nautical map
Investing Articles

Why the FTSE 100 fell almost 5% this week

Declines in mining shares dragged the FTSE 100 down after a strong start to the year. Is the pullback an…

Read more »

Middle aged businesswoman using laptop while working from home
Investing Articles

How much do you need to invest in US stocks to earn a £2,000 monthly passive income?

Is it possible to target several thousand pounds of passive income each month by buying US growth stocks? Absolutely –…

Read more »

A mature woman help a senior woman out of a car as she takes her to the shops.
Investing Articles

How big does your ISA need to be to earn £1,000 a month in passive income?

Andrew Mackie explains how a long-term ISA strategy can help investors build a chunky £12,000 passive income in less than…

Read more »