Fads, 'FOMO,' and Financial RuinBy Porter Stansberry
Red Flag No. 1: Popular media outlets push the new trend. Media-sponsored events and "investment conferences" typically encourage investors to invest large sums immediately, pushing a combination of "FOMO" (fear of missing out) and promises of high, fast returns.
Red Flag No. 2: The returns don't align with historically average market returns. Fads typically lack fundamentals, strong business models, revenue streams, and developed markets. Instead, they rely more on hype than substance.
Red Flag No. 3: The "peanut gallery" is buzzing. Watch to see if people with a shallow knowledge of investing get excited about an opportunity. If your cousin – who can't balance a checkbook – starts trading Dogecoin on his cellphone, that's a bad sign.
Red Flag No. 4: The business operators make bad decisions. In addition to the investment, you must look at the people who are operating the companies... and see if they have a weak track record or a history of failed ventures in various businesses. A person who was working in cannabis in 2019, angel investing in 2020, jumped to blockchain in 2021, and then ran a non-fungible-token ("NFT") company in 2022 probably isn't your ideal CEO.
Red Flag No. 5: The regulators are cautious. If you can't spot fads independently, regulatory agencies like the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") or Commodity Futures Trading Commission occasionally issue alerts about potential investment scams or fads.
As a masterclass in fads, consider one-time wunderkind investment manager Cathie Wood...
Wood has notoriously invested in unprofitable companies with terrible fundamentals. They usually do great... for a while... until they collapse.
In 2023 alone, 21 SPACs went bankrupt, according to Bloomberg. All told, those bankruptcies wiped out $46 billion in shareholder equity from their peak market capitalizations.
Source: Daily Wealth
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"