Blog | Paper Assets, Real Estate

Rich Dad Scam #8: “Build a diversified investment portfolio for the long term”

Why the rich focus on diversity of the asset classes

Read time ...

the online game that increases your financial iq - play now

Summary

  • There are multiple types of asset classes that everyone should diversify in

  • Don’t rely on a financial planner to “diversify” your money

  • True diversification requires financial intelligence


This is the final post in a series called Rich Dad Scams, scams designed by the rich to keep you in your place. They are the “rules” you’re supposed to follow that will keep you an employee and keep you from getting rich while the rich get richer.

The reason why so many people buy into these scams is because some of them, like working harder and saving money, used to actually work. If you followed them, there was a reward, but not anymore.

As we’ve seen in other scams like get out of debt , live below your means, and save money, the Rich Dad Scams identified in this series keep you from truly putting your money to work. They keep you from turning your money into more money. In other words, they keep you poor.

Today, we’ll take a look at Rich Dad Scam #8, “Build a diversified investment portfolio for the long term.”

The portfolio diversification myth

“Diversification is for Idiots” -Mark Cuban

Warren Buffett, one of the greatest investors alive, says, “Diversification is a protection against ignorance.”

Why would these rich and successful entrepreneurs say such things? Because it’s true.

The well-known British economist John Maynard Keynes once said, “In the long run we are all dead.” What he meant by this was that it was foolish to assume the economy would always balance out. This is why, for better or for worse, the Federal Reserve is always tinkering with financial policy. They believe you have to intervene to create growth in the economy.

Oddly, the financial industrial complex does not think this way when it comes to your finances. Instead they preach the mantra to “invest in a diversified portfolio of stocks, bonds, and mutual funds for the long term.” By this they mean “let me manage your money by buying paper assets that you never sell in the hopes that the markets always go up…for a fee, of course.”

This diversified investment portfolio myth goes something like this: if you spread your investments over stocks, bonds, and mutual funds,, and do not touch it but let it grow for years and years, you will have enough money to retire. This comes from the unshakeable belief that over time markets rise like magic.

If there is anything to be learned from the history of the financial markets, both long ago with the Great Depression and more recently with the Great Recession, it’s that nothing is guaranteed (except death and taxes). And that includes all the long-term investments that your financial planner will encourage you to buy, such as mutual funds, stocks, and bonds. Many people who were counting on the consistent, long-term growth of these markets had a horrible realization that short-term market effects can devastate you financially if you’re not prepared to act. Many people who were ready to retire during the Great Recession were instead financially ruined after years of buying into the advice to build a diversified investment portfolio for the long term.

It’s worth noting that financial planners didn’t exist until about forty years ago, when people were forced to take control of their own retirement funds through vehicles like the 401(k).

Financial planning is an industry created by the banks to make money off the financially illiterate. It takes only thirty days of training to become a financial planner. Meanwhile, you have to go to school for more than a year just to become a massage therapist. The diversified investment portfolio myth is, at the end of the day, simply a very effective sales pitch that the financially illiterate have bought into hook, line, and sinker. In the process it has given birth to a $75 trillion industry.

What true portfolio diversification looks like

Nearly every financial planner will tell you that in order to be financially secure, you must diversify. By this they mean to invest in stocks, bonds, and mutual funds. Unfortunately, this is not true diversification. Rather, it is diversification in only one asset class, paper assets—the class where banks make big money in the form of fees. Virtually ignored are the other asset classes, real estate, commodities, and business.

When everything you’re invested in is still on paper, it’s based on the same fragile economy and the same investment model. When the stock market goes down, it goes down everywhere, not just in certain places. Investing in Microsoft and McDonald’s won’t make any difference if the market tanks and everything goes down. Widely investing in different mutual funds spreads that risk around even more, but the risk is still the same and the hit will be the same when things go south.

True diversification is investing across different asset classes, not different stocks. This holds true with any of the asset classes. If you’re invested in condos, apartments, and houses, your portfolio looks diverse, but they’re all still real estate assets.

Instead, you need to have true diversification; real estate assets, commodities assets like gold and silver, business assets like companies, and yes, some paper assets as well.

Four Asset Classes

True diversification is investing in all four asset classes, which are:

  • Business: Owning a business that creates cash flow.

  • Real estate: Having investment properties that create cash flow.

  • Paper assets: Trading paper assets with technical investments.

  • Commodities: Hedging against markets with commodities such as gold, silver, oil, and more.

  • Crypto: Having an alternative method of payment and investment with cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin.

As an investor, you should be in all four asset classes, and you should be specializing in one or two. Most people are only invested in paper assets, and they have no knowledge about what they’re investing in, so they listen to financial planners and hold a basket of paper assets for the long term, hoping the market goes up.

And that’s a good idea – if, like Warren Buffett says, you’re ignorant. Or, if like Mark Cuban says, you’re an idiot. Their words, not ours.

If you want to be rich, however, it’s a bad idea.

Financial education is the path to true portfolio diversification

The real issue here is that by buying paper assets at all, you’re putting control of your money in someone else’s hands. A CEO makes a bad decision, and you’re left holding the bag for his mistake when the stock drops. The only control you have over paper assets is to sell them. Holding on to them, you’re just playing a waiting game and crossing your fingers. And it’s even worse if you put those paper assets into a 401(k), you have even less control, they’re locked in, and you’re penalized for taking those funds out or borrowing against them.

True diversification requires financial intelligence, which comes from financial education. If you don’t have the desire to increase your financial intelligence, then by all means continue using your financial planner and investing in only paper assets, as those investments are set up so that even a monkey could do them.

If, on the other hand, you want to be rich, ignore Rich Dad Scam #8, “Build a diversified investment portfolio for the long term,” and instead increase your financial education and begin working towards true diversification.

Original publish date: May 03, 2013

Recent Posts

Ring in the Holidays with the Gift of Budgeting Well
Personal Finance

Ring in the Holidays with the Gift of Budgeting

If you understand a few basic principles of budgeting "like a rich" person, you can master your money.

Read the full post
Tax Loopholes for Millennials
Personal Finance

Tax Loopholes for Millennials

The CASHFLOW Quadrant separates income earners into four quadrants. On the left side are the employees (E) and the self-employed individuals (S). On the right side are big business (B) and investors (I).

Read the full post