Private investors can learn a lot from the humbling of star fund manager Neil Woodford. Like, reputation counts for nothing. Dont believe fund manager marketing hype. Illiquid and non-quoted equities can be risky. Investors live or die by the stocks they pick. Falling knives can cut your reputation to ribbons.
I could probably go on all day, but Ive decided to focus on the following three.
1. Only buy what you understand
Woodford was a raging success when he focused on FTSE 100 blue-chip dividend-paying stocks, because thats what he understands.
By setting up his own fund management company he liberated himself to dabble in areas he didnt really get (even if he thought he did). It must have been intoxicating, for a while, being free to deploy his stock-picking genius on all those exciting unquoted companies and biotech minnows.
Then he came unstuck, making basic errors such as loading up a unit trust with the regulatory maximum 10% unquoted stocks, leaving him vulnerable to a rash of redemptions. Woodford Equity Income might be worth holding after it reopens, if he returns to what he knows.
Make sure you understand what you are buying as well. Woodford Equity Income wasnt the blue-chip fund many investors thought it was.
2. You can beat active managers
The big advantage you and I have over fund managers is that we dont have to answer to anybody but ourselves. No customers, no regulators, no journalists. If you buy an out-of-favour stock, you can give it as long as you like to recover.
Woodford thought he was an exception. Investors had given him time before, they would do it again. That was true, but only up to a point. With his fund down 18% over three years against a rise of 24% on the UK All Companies (truly lousy), they finally lost faith.
Then he was in trouble, because of all those unquoted/illiquid stocks he had to offload in a hurry. You wouldnt have to do that. Although hopefully, you wouldnt have bought them in the first place.
3. Dont think you know better
Ultimately, any fund manager is only as good as the stocks he picks. Woodford invested in disaster after disaster. And then when his bet backfired he doubled down, notably with stricken Capita and Provident Financial.
Other high-profile bombs include Kier Group and Purplebricks, and thats without mentioning the AA, Allied Minds,Eve Sleep,Northwest Biotherapeutics, Prothena, Theravance Biopharma, 4D Pharma, Redde, RM2 andUtilitywise. Even Imperial Brands, down 50% over two years.
Im only surprised he didnt own most ofCarilliontoo.
Everybody makes mistakes but why so many? It partly goes with the territory. Woodford is a value investor, looking for companies that others shun. That takes self-confidence bordering on arrogance and at some point, Woodford overstepped the mark.
It is well known that private investors overrate their ability to beat the market. This must have been multiplied in Woodford, who had beaten all comers for three decades.
Humility is an underrated virtue when it comes to investing. If Woodford shows some now, he may still bounce back.