Inevitable Wealth Coaching
3350 Township Line Rd.
Drexel Hill, Pa. 19026
Ph. 610-446-4322
Fx. 610-789-4927
e-mail address: brendan@coachgee.com

Thursday, January 7, 2016

Basketball Coaches, Investors-It Just Takes Once


Once Is All It Could Take To Ruin Everything
By: Brendan Magee

Like just about everyone else, I have seen the video above involving Neshaminy High School Basketball Coach, Jerry Devine and the ref, who according to your interpretation of the video head butted or chest bumped the ref causing him to fall to the court. As of today reports are that Mr. Devine has been suspended from his coaching duties pending further investigation.

According to all the talk of the local radio shows Mr. Devine has been a respected member of the school's faculty and basketball coach for 10 years, and nothing on his record shows behavior that would be of concern. It's just that in the heat of the moment, he crossed the line, and from this point on his life will be changed forever. The dust hasn't settled yet and the outcome is still to be determined. Who knows, he may lose his coaching job. He may face a law suit or criminal charges. That is all to be determined.

One thing is for sure though, incidents of this sort will eventually fade from the public conscious, but from this point on Mr.Devine's life will not be the same. Should he apply for any other coaching job, this incident will be taken into consideration. When he walks into a social function and talks to people about what he does for a living the incident will come up again. I have never met Mr. Devine and have no reason to question his moral integrity.People don't stay in coaching and teaching positions for any length of time unless they are competent and well thought of.

At this point, I only have the video, and you can't help but have an interpretation about Mr. Devine. Some times all it takes is once, have your emotions get the better of you, you react, and from that point everything changes. Unfortunately, the consequences of those changes can last for a lifetime.

Any where there is human involvement, there will be emotional reactions. This is true whether it be basketball games or investing. Similar to basketball coaches and referees, the same can take place between investors and their advisers. You sit down with an adviser to go over your portfolio. You have a lot of pride in what you have been able to save and feel good about your nest egg. During the meeting your adviser points out a few short comings in your portfolio or decision making process.

You think you have a conservative portfolio and he or she points out you have 60% in U.S. Large Company  Stock and gives evidence that your portfolio is not nearly as conservative as you thought. You don't like hearing your decision making process is flawed. You might not head butt the adviser, but in your mind you are saying, "Screw you. Get out of my office!" 

Another example, you think you've got the inside track on the next Micro Soft. You are not seeking constructive criticism as much as validation of your investing genius. Your adviser tells you it's a bad idea to put all your eggs in one basket. He reminds you that in spite of all the research you have done, your decisions about the stock are speculative. You don't know what the future is going to bring and what the impact will be on your stock pick. He reminds you that you made a commitment to hold your current portfolio for 20 years and you are dumping it after just five years. "Well who the hell are you to tell me what to do with my money! I made it. I'll do what I want with it!"

Staying with a fundamentally flawed portfolio or putting way too much of your money in one stock can have dire consequences on not only your financial security, but your life as well. Ask yourself, when you are under financial stress, are you the father, mother, sister, employee, boss, friend, you should be? Do others feel the impact of your stress? Some times not only is the money and financial security affected, but the relationships can be damaged forever as well.

I don't know if Mr. Devine's assistant coaches could have prevented him from going after the ref or not, but if they would have, his day today would be going a lot differently than it is now. Investors who have a coach who they entrust to keep their money from being impacted by their instincts and emotions would be well served as well.

Brendan Magee is the founder and president of Inevitable Wealth Coaching. With questions or comments e-mail brendan@coachgee.com or call 610-446-4322. For more educational material go to www.coachgee.com.

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Eagles Didn't Sign Kiko For One Year

Eagles Didn't Sign Kiko For One Year
by: Brendan Magee


Perhaps no story defines the Eagles season better than the trade involving star running back Lesean McCoy. The Eagles traded all time leading running back Shady McCoy to the Buffalo Bills for linebacker Kiko Alonso.They gave up so much proven talent to get back a linebacker who this season was far from productive. No doubt, if the trade involved just this one year, the Eagles are the loser. They should simply cut Alonso and move on.

However, I do not believe the Eagles made the trade with just this one year in mind. They most likely made the trade with the next five to seven years in mind, and this is where the Eagles need to be very careful and investors can learn a valuable lesson.

How many teams in history made quick judgements on players and lived to regret it? Does the name Johnny Unitas ring a bell? The Pittsburgh Steelers cut him.They only showed who may have been the greatest quarterback in history the door after a tryout. How about Ryne Sandberg? The Phillies let a future all star second baseman go to the Chicago Cubs for nothing and didn't get a good second baseman until Chase Utley arrived some 25 to 30 years later.

Now, I don't know if Alonso will turn into the next Lawrence Taylor or Izel Jenkins (Remember Toast?), but I know that it is too early to say one way or the other. The Eagles need to have patience and not give into impulse roster moves.

No doubt remembering and living by decisions that are supposed to play out over a long period of time can be difficult. The grass always seems to be greener and going for the quick fix is tempting, but there is a reason teams like the Steelers have multiple Super Bowls and are always competitive. They do the best job of sticking to fundamentally sound principles, not the latest and greatest fad. Have you ever known a Steelers team that didn't block and tackle well?

The same lessons need to be remembered by investors. 

There is a reason why the overwhelming majority of investors struggle with investing. They make decisions that are meant to be played out over 25 to 30 years and if expectations are not met within a one, two,or at best a three year period of time, changes have to be made to their portfolios.

"My friend's fund got 20% last year and I only did 8%! To hell with this! I want his broker's phone number." "We just got back from Disney and the place was packed. I am loading up on Disney stock. How can I lose?" "The past two years I haven't earned a penny and my broker is earning how much in fees?  What a thief!"

Now when the impulses and emotions get the better of us, what is sold? The under performing investment is out the door and what I buy is the five star fund or the hot stock. Now when that tanks the whole process is repeated and the investor's financial future is in a death spiral. When in the heat of the moment, the wrong move always seems to be the right one.

Statistics show that the average investor is barely breaking even with the rising cost of living in the past 20 to 25 years. It's not the market that is broken! Investors are consistently doing the wrong thing at the wrong time.

So how do investors get out of their own way? First, admit policing their own behaviors is too big of a task. They get engaged in a conversation for prudent long-term investing with a like-minded group of people. I can't tell you how much better I do when I work out with people who are committed to health and fitness.

As an investor, you need to tap into the power of a group rather than go it alone. You need to share when you are wavering from what you know is the right thing to do and ask for help. Know that there are people out there who profit from you doing the wrong  thing at the wrong time and they are experts in the art of seduction. You will never see them coming and holding them off will be a life long job.

The Eagles and investors need to know that there emotions will always be there. You can't get away from them. They will always make the wrong seem right and you can always find people who support the wrong decision. They profit from it. When it comes to championships and financial security it will take the opposite of what you are seeing to come out ahead.

Brendan Magee is the founder and president of Inevitable Wealth Coaching. With questions or comments e-mail brendan@coachgee.com or call 610-446-4322. For additional educational info go to www.coachgee.com.