Featured entries from our Journal

Details Are Part of Our Difference

Embracing the Evidence at Anheuser-Busch – Mid 1980s

529 Best Practices

David Booth on How to Choose an Advisor

The One Minute Audio Clip You Need to Hear

Category: Philosophy

Slide of the Month

Click image for detail.
Click image for detail.

The slide of the month is a reminder that patient investing provides the ultimate payoff. Though our daily lives require near-term focus, successful investing demands a completely different vantage point. Click here for the full detail behind the image.

Interviewing a Legend

40 years ago, Charley Ellis published a paper in The Financial Analysts Journal that was decades ahead of its time. He wrote:

“The investment management business (it should be a profession but is not) is built upon a simple and basic belief: Professional money managers can beat the market. That premise appears to be false.”

He’s a legend in the investment world, a hero to Hill Investment Group, and recently participated in a podcast with Bloomberg that we’ve shared below. It’s one of our favorite interviews to date. Please consider listening to this gem of an interview.

https://soundcloud.com/bloombergview/cfa-charley-ellis-masters-in

As a Hill Investment Group Client, I Believe…

1. That no one can accurately predict the market:

  • in advance,
  • consistently,
  • or for decades at a time.

2. That trying to pick individual stocks or active managers is a loser’s game. Winners buy the world in bulk at a fair price and let capitalism work its magic.

3. That delegating the activity and attention of my personal investing to someone that knows me:

  • is liberating,
  • has higher expected returns, and
  • frees me to pursue my unique abilities.

4. Investing based on the data and evidence shown in decades of market returns and peer-reviewed academic research beats:

  • picking stocks,
  • gurus,
  • black boxes, and
  • Las Vegas.

5. Focusing on the things that matter and that I can control are most important, e.g.:

  • asset allocation,
  • spending, and
  • investment expenses.

6. That managing my investing behavior is MORE important than tracking short-term investment performance.

7. That there will always be an apocalypse du jour, so “taking the long view” reminds me that the multi-decade trend of the global stock market is UP.

Featured entries from our Journal

Details Are Part of Our Difference

Embracing the Evidence at Anheuser-Busch – Mid 1980s

529 Best Practices

David Booth on How to Choose an Advisor

The One Minute Audio Clip You Need to Hear

Hill Investment Group