1/6 Thread: Myth of the "average" investor
One of the common misperceptions I think is many believe they just need to be better than the "average" investor to beat the market in the long-term. The reality is very, very different.
Let me explain.
2/6 Imagine 10 people started actively managing their money today. They all have $100. They invest for 30 years and they all generate different return over that period.
Three got completely wiped out. Five people generated between 1% and 5% CAGR.
3/6 Of the initial 10 people, you have 8 of them who have generated anemic returns over 30-yr period.
If you make better than 5%, you will be among the top 20 percentile. You can also *feel* much better than the average investor.
4/6 Wait a minute. We have still two people left.
It turns out one of them is reincarnation of Warren Buffett. That person makes an eye-popping 25% CAGR.
What about the one other person? He/she makes a respectable 12% CAGR over the same period.
5/6 The initial pool of capital of $1K for these 10 people would be 85x over 30-yr period, implying 16% CAGR.
Alas, only one person would beat the market in this scenario. Here's what it looks like.
6/6 Investor "A" made >2x higher CAGR over 30-yr than 80% investors in this hypothetical market, yet underperform the "index" by ~400 bps.
So if you are actively managing your money, your competition isn't the "average" investor. It's typically the best of the best.
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