Gardening Guide To Better Portfolio Returns In 2025

As we head into 2025, investors are giddy over the market returns of the last two years. As shown, the annual returns, while elevated, have come with only average volatility along the way.

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However, while most analysts and investors expect 2025 to be another bullish year, there is always a risk of a more disappointing outcome. This is because unexpected, exogenous events can cause a reversal in earnings expectations. Note the words “unexpected” and “exogenous.” It is often stated that “markets climb a wall of worry” because markets “price in” concerns such as geopolitical, monetary, fiscal, or economic concerns. However, when an event occurs that is entirely unexpected, the markets can rapidly reprice. This is particularly an issue when investors take on excessive portfolio risk due to increased overconfidence from a running bull market.

Such was the topic of an article from ARS Technica:

“There’s extensive academic literature on the risks faced by investors who are overly confident of their ability to beat the market. They tend to trade more often, even if they’re losing money doing so. They take on too much debt and don’t diversify their holdings. When the market makes a sudden lurch, they tend to overreact to it. Yet, despite all that evidence, there’s no hard data on what makes investors overconfident in the first place.”