Miss a Stock... Podcast Por  arte de portada

Miss a Stock...

Miss a Stock...

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A century-long study by Hendrik Bessembinder reveals a stunning truth about investing: while the U.S. stock market produced enormous overall wealth, the vast majority of individual stocks were losers, with just 46 companies responsible for half of all gains. Don and Tom unpack what this means for investors—namely, that stock picking is essentially a losing game driven more by luck than skill, and that broad diversification through index investing is the only reliable way to capture market returns. They also tackle a listener question on annuities vs. CDs, highlighting trade-offs between yield, safety, and liquidity, while reinforcing their long-standing skepticism of locking up money for marginal gains.

0:13 “Miss a day, miss a lot” — but missing the right stocks matters far more

1:09 Introduction to Bessembinder’s 100-year stock market study

2:35 30,000 stocks, 30,000% total return — but context matters

3:21 Median stock return is negative — most stocks lose money

3:55 60% of stocks destroy wealth; only a minority create gains

5:25 Just 46 companies generate half of all market wealth

6:24 The near impossibility of picking winning stocks consistently

7:01 Why stock picking is closer to lottery odds than skill

7:56 Broad diversification as the only reliable strategy

8:50 Owning the entire market captures the winners automatically

9:25 Active management vs. indexing — evidence vs. anecdotes

10:00 Skill vs. luck in outperforming managers (near zero true skill)

11:19 Behavioral flaws: confusing stories with evidence

12:25 Fundamentals vs. sentiment in long-term stock performance

12:59 Emotional investing pitfalls and the need for discipline

13:42 Listener question: annuity vs. CD for short-term cash

15:30 Risks of annuities vs. FDIC-insured alternatives

16:37 Liquidity trade-offs and current CD rate comparisons

18:05 Laddering CDs vs. locking into annuities

18:33 Listener question on podcast changes post-radio transition

19:36 Reflections on leaving live radio and moving fully to podcast

22:06 Free portfolio reviews and fiduciary advice offer

23:01 Call for listener support as big-name podcasts grow

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