Investors With Stockholm Syndrome: How It Affects Their Retirement

 | Dec 01, 2022 10:38AM ET

In an article I wrote earlier this month, I introduced the concept of investors suffering en masse from a form of Stockholm Syndrome.

Traditionally, this term has been applied to hostages when they develop empathy for their captors. The hostages begin to identify and even assist with their captors' cause. The most famous case, and what arguably brought it to mainstream understanding, was that of Patricia Hearst, a kidnapped newspaper heiress who, during her captivity, was brainwashed into robbing banks with her captors in the mid-1970s.

Being that my brain always has one dial tuned toward trading and investing, I noticed a line of thinking beginning to form surrounding many of the conversations with investors and the psychology behind Stockholm Syndrome.

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I recently spoke with an investor on the phone who was interested in learning more about how I invest my capital. During our conversation, he told me about what he does for a living and how he accumulated his $1-million-dollar investment account. This man worked a blue-collar job his entire life, put away a few thousand dollars every year for 30+ years, and followed the buy-and-hold strategy. It worked for him to build wealth because time was on his side, but it wasn’t sunshine and roses.

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While the buy-and-hold worked during the first half of his life, it was challenging ib bear markets along the way. For example, when stocks topped out in early 2000, the stock market took more than seven years to get back to break-even. During the bear market, he spoke with his adviser for investment advice, and he was told to sit tight, ignore the falling price, and if he held through it, he would be fine. But the financial distress, sleepless nights and relationship issues he had to endure when he was down more than 50% in only two years was a struggle and not pleasant, to say the least.

He then painfully watched his account claw its way back up for another five years, as the stock index reached its previous high. But the rollercoaster ride was far from over. Within a month of reaching a new high, the stock market collapsed again for another 1.5 years. This was the 2008 global financial crisis in which he had to watch his investments fall more than 55%.

Once again, he called his adviser for support, but he was much more stressed and concerned this time. He was told the same thing by his adviser, which cost him his marriage during the last bear market. The advice was to ignore the bear market, hold and don't sell; everything would be all right once the market recovered.

After 13 painful years, the stock market returned to a new high in 2013. This poor man suffered a total of 13 years with no growth and paid his adviser every year for the terrible life-changing experience. And even though the stock market returned to the previous high, the investor was still down 15% because of the AUM fee.

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Investors around the world are challenging and breaking free of the status quo buy-and-hold strategy.