7 Quotes & Sayings By Peter Mallouk

Peter Mallouk was born in Mexico City, Mexico. He earned his degree in arts and sciences (Bachelor of Business Administration) from St. Johns University in Queens, New York. He is a professional speaker and has been a guest speaker at over 200 colleges and universities across the country Read more

Peter has been a corporate trainer for over 25 years. He is an author of numerous books including: Teach Yourself Teach Yourself Write Teach Yourself Presenting Teach Yourself Speaking Sell Yourself Selling Teach Yourself Speaking Successfully Teach Yourself Mastering Sales Successfully Teach Yourself Mastering Public Speaking Successfully Teach Yourself Mastering Your Body Learn How To Use Your Body Learn To Love Your Body Learn To Stop Worrying - Learn To Relax Learn To Read Learn To Speak French Learn To Speak German Learn To Speak Russian

1
...there should be no place in a portfolio for hedge funds. There are lots of reasons, but the main one is simple: Investing in hedge funds is a great way to increase the odds of underperformance. Peter Mallouk
2
I never use hedge funds because I am well aware of what drives future performance, and hedge funds start out with a great disadvantage in every major category: taxes, fees, risk management, transparency and liquidity. Peter Mallouk
3
The stock market cares about only one thing above all else: anticipated earnings. If companies make more money, their share prices eventually rise. The stock price is simply a reflection of a company's earning power. Everything else is noise. Peter Mallouk
4
Rather than be fearful and sell out at the worst time or get greedy when the market is way up, investors should control their emotions and not only avoid panic, but embrace the market volatility for what it is: an opportunity and a gift. Suffocate the instincts that want to make you a bad investor and rather embrace the chaos that normally causes them to rise to the surface. Peter Mallouk
5
Gold belongs only in the portfolios of fearmongers and speculators. If you own gold in your portfolio, expect to not get paid an income, pay higher taxes on your returns, take a more volatile ride than the stock market, and get a long-term return lower than bonds. Peter Mallouk
6
There is ample evidence that confirmation bias permeates throughout investors' decisions. For example, once an investor likes a stock, he is likely to seek out information that validates that stock. In a 2010 study, researchers showed that investors used message boards to seek out information that validated rather than challenged, stocks they owned (Park et al. 2010). If we own a stock, we tend to look for anything that validates our decision to buy it, and to reinforce why we should keep holding it. Peter Mallouk