It’s a truth investors often struggle to admit: the more you trade and time the market, the less you may ultimately earn.
Recent Morningstar research confirms it. Their “Mind the Gap” study unveils a troubling trend: investors who trade frequently capture far less of their portfolio’s total return compared to those who stay disciplined and hold steady.
Why Overtrading Undermines Your Portfolio
Think of your investments as a marathon, not a sprint. Trading too often may feel proactive, but it comes at a cost:
- Fees, taxes, and timing pitfalls: Even in zero-commission environments, indirect costs, like slippage, spreads, and capital gains taxes, chip away at your gains. Warren Buffett emphasized this in his famous 10-year bet: a simple low-cost index fund easily outperformed more expensive, active alternatives, largely thanks to lower friction.
- Real-world data backs it up: Academics Barber and Odean studied over 66,000 households and found that the most active traders earned 11.4% annually, while the broader market returned 17.9%, and that’s before trading costs are applied.
- Scientific confirmation: A 2021 study reports that households trading infrequently achieved an average annual return of 18.5%, compared to just 11.4% for frequent traders, a difference that compounds significantly over time.
Behavioral Biases
This is more about psychology than about economics.
- Return-chasing: Investors tend to pile into recent winners and bail out of laggards, even though market reversals often follow periods of momentum. This chasing behavior reduces long-term returns.
- Disposition effect: We hate admitting losses and love locking in gains but this leads us to sell winners too soon and hold losers too long, often harming performance.
- Overconfidence: Research shows that investors who believe they’re savvy are more likely to trade and underperform.
Why the Smart Investor Trades Less
Studies of ETFs, mutual funds, and daily trading all point to the same truth: low-turnover strategies outperform. Morningstar found that ETFs with the least trading activity consistently outdid their peers in return capture. Their broader findings also show investors “missed out” on roughly 1.7% per year of potential gains between 2013 and 2022 simply due to poor timing.
Putting It in Perspective
Frequent trading may feel active, but it often amounts to dragging your net returns down. It’s not about eliminating trades entirely but about making them strategically, not emotionally.
A better approach is disciplined, global, and diversified:
- Let your portfolio grow across geographies and asset classes.
- Use rebalancing, not reacting to excessive noise.
- Focus on long-term objectives, not short-term alerts.
A Gentle Reminder
Your strategies should be structured to capture global opportunities, reduce unnecessary turnover, and stay aligned with your long-term goals, helping you keep more of what you earn.
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