Jump to content

Biggest regrets of the older posters here?


yadayada

Recommended Posts

I was trying to say that it is relatively easy (for me) to get sidetracked: I was working on updating price-targets for a few stocks I own but here I am again, posting stupid stuff in a stupid thread. All the time I wasted on the internet ..  :P

 

If that's what you meant, then I misunderstood you. I've just seen too many people write sneering remarks of the kind. My apologies.

 

They publicly complain about what other people are doing, implying that they're better than them, etc.

Hmm. I thought that was exactly what value investing is all about.

 

You know it isn't in this context.

 

Finding undervalued companies and betting on them when it's an unpopular opinion is different from writing condescending remarks on the internet.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 257
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Before this devolves into a flame war, I want to mention the "harrumph" was supposed to be self mocking, the implication being that I'm being curmudgeon-y, and that I really shouldn't be paid attention to.

 

That being said, if people want to discuss this stuff, fine.  I'm just sadden by two things.  First, these questions repeat themselves.  And when you see a question over and over again it starts to grate on you a bit.  Especially since, getting to the second thing, all of this "noise" can scare away some of the better contributors to this board, e.g., PlanMaestro.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Before this devolves into a flame war, I want to mention the "harrumph" was supposed to be self mocking, the implication being that I'm being curmudgeon-y, and that I really shouldn't be paid attention to.

 

That being said, if people want to discuss this stuff, fine.  I'm just sadden by two things.  First, these questions repeat themselves.  And when you see a question over and over again it starts to grate on you a bit.  Especially since, getting to the second thing, all of this "noise" can scare away some of the better contributors to this board, e.g., PlanMaestro.

 

I read the response as the friendly "Get off my lawn!" comment :) No worries from me.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What is interesting to me is the number of posters whose biggest regret is having missed out on the bargains of 2008/9.  It was just so obvious they say how cheap things were.  Of course hindsight is always 20/20.  Things could have turned out differently than they did.  BAC, etc could have been nationalized.  Other things could have happened.

 

In any case, since it was so obvious that there was extreme value then, I am surprised that more people aren't salivating at oil and gas.  Sure, there will be losers, but there will also be many winners.  There will be any number of stocks that bought today will be worth multiples in a few years most likely.  But wait, you say, it's not obvious which ones those will be.  Who knows what will happen with the price of oil.  Exactly.  But it wasn't any more clear in 2008/9.  There were winners with banks and losers.  There were winners with leveraged companies and losers. 

 

So you have your chance.  You want a return of those bargains, you've got them.  People say oil and gas is too hard, it belongs in the too hard pile, it's outside of the circle of competence, insert your favorite cliche.  Don't forget, the exact same things were said about financials, etc a few years ago.  You don't get to pick your crisis.  When it comes that's your opportunity.  I suspect in a few years when some of these stocks have become 10 baggers and more people will declare how easy it was back in those days to know that.  A lot of people will probably decide to start looking into the names then.  It's just never easy.

 

Well Said.  Aside from PWE.  The rest I have got on my list are not getting to new 52'week lows yet. 

 

Did buy 500 shares of MTL the other day, though. 

 

I think people are confusing your comment  with cheap financials.  In 2009 I bought SB, GE, WFC, AMEX, FFH options to my recollection.  I did not buy BAC (2010) AIG (2011) or JPM until much later.  One of the best was JPM after the whale. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Before this devolves into a flame war, I want to mention the "harrumph" was supposed to be self mocking, the implication being that I'm being curmudgeon-y, and that I really shouldn't be paid attention to.

 

That being said, if people want to discuss this stuff, fine.  I'm just sadden by two things.  First, these questions repeat themselves.  And when you see a question over and over again it starts to grate on you a bit.  Especially since, getting to the second thing, all of this "noise" can scare away some of the better contributors to this board, e.g., PlanMaestro.

 

These questions repeat themselves because there are new people coming in the community all the time. It isn't Parsad that is asking for tips on what to avoid in the beginning and such. Whenever you started out and didn't know anything about anything, I'm sure that having a friendly place to ask for advice would be much appreciated.

 

And if people discussing things in threads that nobody is forced to click on is really enough to scare someone off, then that person will have nowhere to hide on the net. But I don't think that's the real reason anyone would be driven off anyway, though it might be a convenient excuse. Nobody who liked everything else here would give it up because of harmless threads like this one.

 

It's also funny when I hear some people talk about how this forum has change since 2008-2009 or whatever. Of course. Everything was on sale in a once-in-a-lifetime fire sale that lasted for a long time. Of course there are fewer life-changing bargains to write about today. It's not this forum's fault.

 

I think Plan just preferred the Twitter format, where he posts regularly. He also stopped writing in his blog...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What is interesting to me is the number of posters whose biggest regret is having missed out on the bargains of 2008/9.  It was just so obvious they say how cheap things were.  Of course hindsight is always 20/20.  Things could have turned out differently than they did.  BAC, etc could have been nationalized.  Other things could have happened.

 

Yeah, Depression-era investors learned something very different.

 

I've learned to regret recency bias.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wonder if in 10-20 years many investors who started out close to 2008-2009 will regret that they expected it to repeat every few years... That certainly seems to be the case for many people.

 

This is a really good point.  So many are waiting for "the next big one".  We will get another crash, probably some smaller ones and bigger ones, that's how it works.  But I'm not sure if we'll see a massive one or not, maybe we will.  Seems these things are 5-10 years apart, and 2008 is getting further and further in the rearview mirror.

 

Someone earlier said that everything makes sense in hindsight.  This is very true, looking forward it's murky and foggy, looking backwards it seems so clear.

 

At times there were career choices, or decisions that I regretted.  I thought they set me back.  But I've grown/matured and realized that it's all about the attitude.  I've realized that what I thought was wasted time was valuable when I considered it as such.  Some things I consider advantages now a few years ago I'd have classified as regrets.

 

I love how the answer to this question changes with time.  I remember about 10 years ago the common response was "I regret not buying Starbucks or Microsoft in the 90s."  Of course at the time they weren't sure things either, well Microsoft was, but they had some dark clouds looming.  This thread reminds me of my brother-in-law who told me "Next time you find a sure thing stock that'll triple call me up and I'll take out a loan to buy it."  Sure thing buddy, that'll be right after I mortgage everything I own to buy.  Sure things are only sure things in the past.

 

Some people say to live without regrets, but that's usually a license to be stupid.  I'd say a better route is to live in a manner where you can accept failure and grow from it.  You will fail, you'll probably fail big, some will be epic.  Just learn and move forward.  Failing isn't really that bad, the one who hurts the most is yourself, others don't care much.  Others are usually there to help you move forward, the biggest hurdle to overcoming failure is yourself.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wonder if in 10-20 years many investors who started out close to 2008-2009 will regret that they expected it to repeat every few years... That certainly seems to be the case for many people.

 

+1. 

 

I don't think this mode of thinking is limited to investors that started in the 08/09 vintage.  To me, it seems like the consensus opinion is that 08/09 is going to be a regular occurrence.  It is axiomatic that the next recession is closer today than it was a few years ago, but I am just not sure that it makes much sense as an investor to be positioned like the next financial crisis is happening tomorrow.  I think the most prudent action is to own shares in companies that can take advantage of whatever the future brings.  Given the namesake of the site, the obvious example is BRK - BRK stock will go down during a calamitous event, but there is ample liquidity to be deployed in such an environment that should ultimately result in a more valuable franchise.  Is the mark to market loss on BRK stock really that horrific?     

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The better question is ten years from now what will you regret not having done over the next ten years. Now obviously if one knew the answer to that question you would change things. So then the question is how can you get this information before hand.

 

Some suggestions:

 

1) you look at what people regret when they are 10 years older than you

2) you talk to people who are somewhat older than you to gain some perspective.

3) You remain fully aware of the opportunities around you.

 

Some possible regrets:

 

1) the person you marry or don't marry

2) not starting a business

3) not switching a bad job soon enough

4) not being aware of the opportunities around you.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My biggest regret in life was going to law school.

 

Most graduates of lower tier law schools are unemployed OR underemployed.

 

The schools are a scam.  They put out salary & employment figures that are absolutely false.

 

I work with dozens of younger attorneys.  The stories they tell would send a chill up your spine.  Some of them took over a year to get a job.  Some of them worked for $12/hour.  Some had terrible work conditions.  Some had combinations of all the above...

 

The industry is broken...When you factor in debt, most attorneys will be "working poor" all their lives.

 

Unfortunately, this is starting to spread to other areas of higher education.  People are graduating with such high levels of debt, they will never be able to pay it off....

 

It is a as simple as this...don't borrow more than a nominal amount ($20k) for an education.

 

Interesting. 

 

Does current cost of legal services follow this oversupply? 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My biggest regret in life was going to law school.

 

Most graduates of lower tier law schools are unemployed OR underemployed.

 

The schools are a scam.  They put out salary & employment figures that are absolutely false.

 

I work with dozens of younger attorneys.  The stories they tell would send a chill up your spine.  Some of them took over a year to get a job.  Some of them worked for $12/hour.  Some had terrible work conditions.  Some had combinations of all the above...

 

The industry is broken...When you factor in debt, most attorneys will be "working poor" all their lives.

 

Unfortunately, this is starting to spread to other areas of higher education.  People are graduating with such high levels of debt, they will never be able to pay it off....

 

It is a as simple as this...don't borrow more than a nominal amount ($20k) for an education.

 

Interesting. 

 

Does current cost of legal services follow this oversupply?

 

Not in my experience.  If there's an oversupply the legal consumer isn't reaping any benefit.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The better question is ten years from now what will you regret not having done over the next ten years. Now obviously if one knew the answer to that question you would change things. So then the question is how can you get this information before hand.

 

Some suggestions:

 

1) you look at what people regret when they are 10 years older than you

2) you talk to people who are somewhat older than you to gain some perspective.

3) You remain fully aware of the opportunities around you.

 

Some possible regrets:

 

1) the person you marry or don't marry

2) not starting a business

3) not switching a bad job soon enough

4) not being aware of the opportunities around you.

 

Good point. You reminded me of something. I used to have a computer desktop background that read: "What's the most important thing you could be doing right now and why aren't you doing it?"

 

Sometimes doing better is just about paying attention and not making too many choices by default...

 

I'm not saying that the desktop reminder worked and that I almost did the most important thing, but sometimes it did work, and made me realize that I wasn't consciously avoiding doing more productive stuff, I was just drifting away from it. It's cliché, but if you really want to get somewhere, keeping your eye on the ball at all times is the first step.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Couple of comments.

 

What is a regret changes radically with stage in life. Should have had 3 kids & a parrot (punk rocker) back in the day, is a great idea at 60; but sucks when you are 30-40 & trying to pay for it all.

 

A major regret was not realizing until very late, what my advantages as a young man were. Once you have been trained, you have nothing to lose, have no attachments, & have the whole world at your feet; but its only a limited time offer. Work for the most aggressive firm that will accept you, take the high risk options, always speak your mind, & thoroughly enjoy yourself. Speaking your mind will be the most valuable thing that you will do.

 

A second regret was delaying entry into private companies for far too long; playing the market was only supposed to be the vehicle that funded the lottery tickets. There are far more very smart people in private industry, & much of the agency corruption that takes place in a public company - just does not occur.  Nobody ever heard of a Capone having an employee agency problem.

 

SD

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Biggest regret (investing-wise): spending too much time on stuff like this thread (and other distractions) and too little time on actually valuing obscure companies.

 

I feel like i'm making the same mistake... However, on the flip-side, I have found great ideas on the forums and websites....  A few ideas have generated 50%+ returns.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 9 years later...

Wow.  I was trying to start a new thread, and found this instead, and thought it's an appropriate place to revisit this, seeing the OP was started about a decade ago.

 

This is essentially asking the same question, but a slightly different take:

Now that you've 'made' it (however you want to define it), what would you wish you had done when you were younger in regards to making spending/savings tradeoffs?  This assumes when you were younger, you had to trade off spending less to get more saving.  Was it worth it 10-20-30+ years later?  If you were younger, what would be worth robbing the future self to pay your current self, or the opposite, what should you have gifted your future self by depriving your current self?

 

I'll start with some of mine:

No regret: 'Splurging' on trips traveling with my wife pre-kids.  So much fun.  Was able to do occasional long weekend trips to Europe, and splurged on more exotic cruises that checked off so many things on the list.  The small regret is probably not doing a bit more.

No regret: Small splurging of time and resources on the little ones.  Spend to make sure things are done right.  So so worth it when they're young.

Regret: Not learning about health and the forces driving it from big sugar/processed food/farm until it's harder to fight it with more exercise and better diet through higher quality but more costly food.

Regret: Not discovering meditation earlier.  Could've gone through a significant chunk of my life less angry, and but it does cost time.  No need to spend for some fancy app/class but do need to be consistent to really make a difference.  To me, this was one of the many significant life-changer for me.  Once practiced past a certain point, it's bliss on tap (amongst other benefits).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 12/19/2014 at 2:33 AM, rukawa said:

The better question is ten years from now what will you regret not having done over the next ten years. Now obviously if one knew the answer to that question you would change things. So then the question is how can you get this information before hand.

 

Some suggestions:

 

1) you look at what people regret when they are 10 years older than you

2) you talk to people who are somewhat older than you to gain some perspective.

3) You remain fully aware of the opportunities around you.

 

Some possible regrets:

 

1) the person you marry or don't marry

2) not starting a business

3) not switching a bad job soon enough

4) not being aware of the opportunities around you.

👍👍👍

 

Glad this thread was resurrected. The post form @rukawa contains timeless wisdom. I have found all of what he wrote to be true.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wish I had taken better care of my body, and mind in my 20's. I drank way too much, slept too little, and ate like shit. Now that I am healthier I am much more productive and have a much better mind set. 

 

I'd also consider alternatives besides college. I was good at it, but did not enjoy it. I didn't put effort into getting scholarships, studying for SAT's, or going to the best college to fit what I wanted to do. If I had to do it over again I would put 110% effort into going to college or not at all. Going half heartily just gets you a huge pile of debt, and a really rough start to your working adult life. 

 

I probably won the lottery finding the right partner in college. Having a spouse that has similar views money, kids,  life, politics, and religion makes a huge difference. I'd highly recommend people spend more time figuring this out. 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Biggest regret was probably getting married too young. Neither of us wanted kids, we always kept our finances totally separate, but being labelled "married", we both stuck around in a decaying relationship far longer than if we were just "partners". Now I think unless there's a practical reason to get legally married (kids, some financial/tax/citizenship angle), there's no real benefit.

 

Looking forward the next ten years, I'm in my mid thirties and so these are probably the last years I'll have to be fully physically capable. I imagine in my 50s I'll have to tune it down a bit, so I aim to travel and have as many physical experiences (skiing, climbing, etc.) as possible. Although I see some old guys on the chair lift in their 70s, still ripping it. And the older guys posting here about their climbs to Everest and such...it gives me hope!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, LC said:

I'm in my mid thirties and so these are probably the last years I'll have to be fully physically capable. I imagine in my 50s I'll have to tune it down a bit . . .

 

Nah. 

 

You have to work a little just to maintain your capabilities, but you certainly can.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Posted (edited)
20 minutes ago, james22 said:

 

Nah. 

 

You have to work a little just to maintain your capabilities, but you certainly can.

+1

 

I am 35 and in the best shape of my life. I plan on consistently working on it until I am no longer here, and can see myself being in even better shape in my 50's+. The hardest part is starting, but once when you do it amazing how good you feel. 

Edited by coffeecaninvestor
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I’ve always viewed it in phases. 15-30 give or take was about pure hedonism with financial independence underlying the motives on the back end of that stretch. I definitely aced those objectives.

 

30-55 or whatever is purely about being the best parent possible for my kids. Doing well on that front, so far.

 

55+ I have always kind of valued way less than the first two phases. I’m honestly not even sure what I’d want for myself outside of lower quality experiences I had in the first two phases. Maybe that changes, idk. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Gregmal said:

I’ve always viewed it in phases. 15-30 give or take was about pure hedonism with financial independence underlying the motives on the back end of that stretch. I definitely aced those objectives.

 

30-55 or whatever is purely about being the best parent possible for my kids. Doing well on that front, so far.

 

55+ I have always kind of valued way less than the first two phases. I’m honestly not even sure what I’d want for myself outside of lower quality experiences I had in the first two phases. Maybe that changes, idk. 


55+ can be great if you’re healthy. Less all around responsibilities. If you are financially ok - then you realize you got maybe 25-30 years left - so you better live it up! It’s back to being a kid again.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



×
×
  • Create New...