Archive for the ‘Top Stories’ Category


India allows Chisti Pakistan trip

India's Supreme Court has allowed a Pakistani doctor, recently released on bail after serving 14 months in prison for a 1992 murder, to visit Pakistan.

Khalil Chishti, 80, was granted bail a day after Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari's trip to India last month.

The Supreme Court permitted the visit on humanitarian grounds, but he was ordered to return to India to attend his next court hearing on 20 November.

Chishti has always denied the murder charge and says he was framed.

Human rights groups have long campaigned for him to be allowed to return to his home city of Karachi in southern Pakistan.

When Chishti applied for bail he cited his poor health – he has a heart condition and is wheelchair-bound.

In January 2011 he was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment for killing a man after a fight in the Indian town of Ajmer in 1992

He was found guilty after an unusually long 18-year trial during which he was put under house arrest.

The doctor, who was born in Ajmer, was in Pakistan at the time of the partition in 1947 and did not return to India until 1992 when he came to visit his ailing mother. He has been either in jail or detention in India since then.

Thursday's directive from the court ordered Dr Chisti to surrender his passport to the Indian High Commission in Karachi when he gets there. He must return to India by 1 November in time for his next hearing.

© 2011 BBC News (www.bbc.co.uk)


China Property Investment Cools Further

SHANGHAI—Investment in property development in China slowed in April, as housing sales continued to be weak despite government campaigns to bring down prices and support first-home buyers, deterring would-be developers from purchasing land.

Property development investment grew 18.7% to 1.58 trillion yuan ($250.11 billion) in the January-April period from the same period a year earlier, data released Friday by the National Bureau of Statistics showed. That was slower than the 23.5% of January-March, which in turn was slower than the 27.8% of January-February.

A Dow Jones Newswires calculation showed investment rose 9.2% on year in April to 490.8 billion yuan, compared with 34.7% on-year growth in April 2011. China’s statistics bureau doesn’t issue data for individual months.

Land sales, which account for a significant portion of investment, declined sharply in April, calculations showed.

Overall property sales have fallen every month on a year-on-year basis since October, which is leading to a slowdown in property construction, one of China’s important engines of growth.

Residential property sales totaled 1.03 trillion yuan in January-April, 13.5% lower on year, the statistics bureau said.

In terms of floor area, overall property construction starts declined 4.2% to 544.7 million square meters. A Dow Jones Newswires calculation showed that in April alone, starts fell 14.6% to 145.2 million square meters.

Property developers are faced with high funding costs and weak sales projections due to ongoing home purchase restrictions imposed by the government, and so consequently are destocking.

“The decline in construction starts was slightly faster than I had expected, and I doubt there will be a pickup until inventory levels come off perhaps in the third or fourth quarter,” said Johnson Hu, an analyst at CIMB-GK.

“What the government worries about is whether sales volumes are stabilizing from the recent sharp falls, and it appears that Beijing may have to boost its current efforts to encourage first-time home purchases,” said Rosealea Yao, an analyst at GK Dragonomics. “The rebound in sales in March clearly wasn’t sustainable.”

Local media reported Monday that Industrial and Commercial Bank of China

has told its branches to stop offering discounts on mortgages for first-home buyers, though other banks said their discounts remained. Such discounts are in response to calls from the authorities to support first-home buyers in the face of high property prices, but analysts said some lenders may rather want to protect profitability.

Write to Esther Fung at esther.fung@dowjones.com

© 2011 Wall Street Journal (www.wsj.com)


Clooney Raises $15 Million for Obama

LOS ANGELES—Even as he struggles to rekindle the excitement of his 2008 campaign, President Barack Obama proved Thursday he still has the loyalty of Hollywood’s elite, pulling in nearly $15 million in a fundraising dinner at the home of actor George Clooney.

The event was a fusion of glamour and political power as the president made the case for his re-election to an audience packed with movie executives, agents and iconic entertainers. Barbra Streisand, sporting a black beret, sat at one of the 14 tables on Mr. Clooney’s basketball court, which was tented for the occasion.

Reuters

President Barack Obama arrives at Bob Hope Airport in Burbank, California, before attending a fundraiser at George Clooney’s home in Los Angeles.

Tobey Maguire of “Spider-Man” fame was at a table with Mr. Clooney and his girlfriend, Stacy Kiebler, according to a press pool report.

The president, who flew to Los Angeles from a pair of fundraising events in Seattle, made his Hollywood visit at an auspicious time: A day before, he publically supported same sex marriage, to the delight of many members of the entertainment industry. Introducing the president, Jeffrey Katzenberg, chief executive of DreamWorks Animation SKG Inc.,

drew cheers when he made a reference to Mr. Obama’s support for gay marriage.

“Yesterday, he did the right thing,” said Mr. Katzenberg, who helped raise money for the event.

Mr. Obama made only the barest mention of the gay marriage issue. He said “obviously yesterday we made some news, but the truth is it was a logical extension of what America is supposed to be.”

Drawing a contrast with Republicans, he added, “It grew directly out of this difference in visions: Are we a country that includes everybody and gives everybody a shot and treats everybody fairly, and is that going to make us stronger?”

The fundraiser produced more money for Mr. Obama’s campaign fund than any he has held since becoming a presidential candidate in 2007, according to members of his fundraising team.

Most of the guests paid $40,000 apiece for tickets to the dinner at Mr. Clooney’s home in Los Angeles. But the Obama campaign raised millions more online by raffling off two free tickets to the dinner. The winners were Beth Topinka, a New Jersey science teacher, and Karen Blutcher, a Florida utility company employee. Both women came with their husbands. The two couples sat toward the rear of the tent.

The event at Mr. Clooney’s Tudor-style home, nestled in a wooded, hillside property, was concentrated on the basketball court. Visitors traveling up the winding drive to the house spotted one of Mr. Clooney’s personal additions to the property, a sign reading, “Pot-bellied pig Crossing,” for his late pet, Max.

Under a canopy of white paper lanterns, guests included actors Robert Downey Jr., Salma Hayek, and Jack Black. They sat around round tables featuring centerpieces of blue hydrangeas.

Mr. Obama circulated through the group, sitting at each of the tables to chat with guests, speaking about his children and some of his favorite television shows, including “The Wire,” according to one attendee.

Guests said the tenor of the event was joyful, particularly following Mr. Obama’s support of gay marriage on Wednesday. Optimism about the re-election effort, however, was kept in check.

“It wasn’t like four years ago; it wasn’t the hopeful thing. It was more realistic,” said Rick Rosen, head of the TV department at Hollywood talent agency William Morris Endeavor Entertainment, making a distinction between Mr. Obama’s re-election campaign and his bid as a candidate in 2008. “That was a little bit of lightning in a bottle,” he added.

Though the fund-raiser brought in a record sum for the president, it could invite a political backlash. Mingling with wealthy entertainment figures plays into a Republican narrative that Mr. Obama is himself a full-fledged celebrity who is detached from the struggles of everyday voters.

Mr. Obama kidded Mr. Clooney throughout the evening, at one point trading jokes about the aging process.

“There was a blog post about, ‘Look how wrinkly Obama is getting,”’ he said. “It was sort of distressing. George doesn’t have to go through these things.”

At that, the gray-haired Mr. Clooney said: “Look at me!”

“I like that in you, brother,” Mr. Obama said.

© 2011 Wall Street Journal (www.wsj.com)


Stevie Wonder ‘extortion plot’

Two people have been arrested in the United States and charged with trying to extort money from the singer Stevie Wonder.

Alpha Lorenzo Walker and his girlfriend Tamara Eileen Diaz threatened to reveal "embarrassing information" about the star, officials in Los Angeles said.

Both deny the accusations and are in custody awaiting a preliminary hearing on 16 May.

A judge will decide if there is enough evidence for the two to stand trial.

LA district attorney spokeswoman Jane Robison said that Mr Walker contacted Stevie Wonder's representatives and claimed to have embarrassing information about the musician.

Detectives organised a sting operation and the pair were arrested, she said.

Officials said Mr Walker had identified himself as a relative of Stevie Wonder.

Police have not released any additional details about the investigation.

© 2011 BBC News (www.bbc.co.uk)


Haifa’s album in first place worldwide

Published May 11th, 2012 – 03:26 GMT

Production Company ‘Rotana’ has launched the latest album by Lebanese singer Haifa Wehbe “MJK”. Only two days after its release, the album is ranking number one worldwide on the internet website ITunes, which is a first for an album by and Arab singer.

According to the London based Elaph, ‘Rotana’ launched a huge promotional campaign for the album on ITunes, as well on the internet social networks Twitter and Facebook. In addition, a promotional campaign was launched via numerous media sources in the Arab world and abroad.

A television commercial was created for the album under the direction of Angy Al Jamal and was aired on ‘Rotana’s’ music channels and posted on ‘Rotana’s’ official page on YouTube.

The album features 14 songs sung in different dialects, including Lebanese, Egyptian and Gulf.

© 2011 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)


Tot on ‘no-fly’ list removed from plane

The parents, who reportedly would not disclose their last names for fear of repercussions, and their infant, identified only as Riyanna, had boarded JetBlue Flight 510 from Fort Lauderdale, Florida, to Newark, New Jersey, on Tuesday evening when they say an airline employee ask them to get off the plane.

“I said, ‘For what?’” Riyanna’s mother told CNN affiliate WPBF. “He said, ‘It is not you or your husband. Your daughter was flagged as no fly.’”

The family is of Middle Eastern descent and the mother wears a headscarf, but they say they are U.S. citizens and have lived in New Jersey all of their lives.

The government disputed the airline’s initial characterization.

“TSA did not flag this child as being on the no-fly list,” Transportation Security Administration spokeswoman Sterling Payne told CNN in a statement. “TSA was called to the gate by the airline and after talking to the parents and confirming through our vetting system, TSA determined the airline had mistakenly indicated the child was on a government watch list.”

The family declined to continue on the flight, saying they felt humiliated.

“We were put on display like a circus act because my wife wears a hijab,” Riyanna’s father said.

The airline says it was a technical mistake.

“We are investigating this particular incident. We believe this was a computer glitch,” JetBlue Spokeswoman Allison Steinberg said in a statement without elaborating. “Our crewmembers followed the appropriate protocols, and we apologize to the family involved in this unfortunate circumstance.”

“The whole situation was bizarre, it was completely bizarre and absolutely made no sense,” the mother added.

Steinberg said JetBlue crew members “are trained to address each situation discreetly, treating every customer with dignity and respect.”

The government maintains several databases of individuals who warrant extra screening when they fly. No one on the official no-fly list would be given a boarding pass, according to a TSA official who did not want to be named discussing the matter.

About 20,000 people are on that list, according to a counterterrorism official, including 500 Americans.

CNN’s Mike Ahlers contributed to this report.



Small Post Offices Spared By Postal Service

Story By: All Things Considered

The U.S. Postal Service announced a strategy Wednesday that will keep the doors open and the counters staffed at the country’s smallest post offices. Melissa Block talks with Debra Stadin. She collected signatures to keep the post office in Kerrick, Minn., from closing. She works at the bank next door to the post office, where her daughter Terri is “Post Officer-in-Charge.”



Tennessee kidnapping suspect dead, two girls alive: report


Thu May 10, 2012 9:22pm EDT

<span class="articleLocation”>(Reuters) – Adam Mayes, the fugitive charged with kidnapping two Tennessee girls and suspected of killing their mother and older sister, is dead and the two girls he was holding are alive, the Northeast Mississippi News reported on Thursday, citing Union County Sheriff Jimmy Edwards.

The two girls, Alexandria Bain, 12, and Kyliyah Bain, 8, were safe and on their way to an emergency room, the newspaper said.

(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Peter Cooney)

© 2011 REUTERS (www.reuters.com)


Estudantes sortudos podem fazer Buffett de bobo – e ele gosta

Com um anel de noivado de diamante na mão, Warren Buffett se ajoelhou e pediu Alexa Tavasci em casamento.

“Por favor aceite. Por favor me aceite”, implorou o bilionário de 81 anos em meio a uma saraivada de cliques de câmeras fotográficas, num restaurante de sua cidade, Omaha, no Estado de Nebraska, na região central dos EUA.

Stephanie Sinclair for The Wall Street Journal

Alexa Tavasci sendo pedida em casamento por Buffett.

Tavasci, de 21 anos e estudante do terceiro ano da Universidade do Norte do Arizona, aceitou o pedido de mentirinha, que foi ideia dela. Aí ela devolveu o anel de diamante a uma amiga que estava por perto.

“Tudo que ouvi ao meu redor foram risadas”, lembra Tavasci, estudante de contabilidade que leu a biografia de Buffett em preparação à visita.

Quando se trata de investir, o diretor-presidente da Berskshire Hathaway Inc. é um homem sério. Mas coloque Buffett diante de uma câmera com um geração futura de líderes empresariais e o Oráculo de Omaha — como ele é conhecido por seus conselhos de investimento — vira um cara bem engraçado.

Stephanie Sinclair for The Wall Street Journal

Buffett faz pose com Stephanie Vogel, da Universidade Gonzaga. O investidor recebe estudantes selecionados que passam um dia ouvindo seus conselhos – e encerram o programa com uma foto séria e outra engraçada.

Buffett convida várias vezes por ano estudantes de administração dos Estados Unidos inteiros para um dia de visita à sede da sua holding em Omaha. Ele passa duas horas respondendo às perguntas deles e depois os leva para visitar empresas locais controladas pela Berskshire, como a nova loja de móveis gigantesca da Nebraska Furniture Mart e a cadeia de joalheiras Borsheims.

Buffett também leva os estudantes para almoçar suas comidas favoritas, como frango à parmigiana. Alguns estudantes mais sortudos conseguem até passear com ele em seu Cadillac.

Stephanie Sinclair for The Wall Street Journal

Antonio Espinoza, da Universidade de Notre Dame, em pose com Warren Buffett.

Buffett dá lições de vida durante o dia, dizendo aos estudantes para escolher a pessoa certa para casar e se cercarem de pessoas melhores do que elas.

Sobre os princípios que o tornaram o investidor mais famoso do mundo, ele recomenda aos estudantes que “fujam do dinheiro emprestado e fujam das emoções das multidões”.

O ritual sempre termina com uma sessão de fotos. Cada estudante pode tirar duas fotos com Buffett. A primeira é séria e a segunda é numa pose divertida escolhida pelo convidado.

Stephanie Sinclair for The Wall Street Journal

Warren Buffett imita o grito de “Esqueceram de Mim”, por sugestão de sua visitante Patricia Pan, da faculdade de administração Kellogg.

Buffett diz que fica feliz de fazer tudo isso. “Essas pessoas vieram de longe, faço tudo que eles querem, mas meu limite é se pedirem que eu peça um homem em casamento”, diz ele.

As sessões de fotos de Buffett começaram por volta de 2005, quando Verna Grayce Chao e seus colegas da Universidade de Chicago posaram com Buffett ao lado do carro dele antes de irem almoçar.

Ele puxou a carteira e fingiu que a estava entregando ao grupo.

“Foi totalmente espontâneo”, diz Chao, agora com 35 anos e diretora de marketing da divisão de saúde e ciências da saúde da Dell Inc. Ela guarda a foto num álbum em casa.

Stephanie Sinclair/VII for The Wall Street Journal

Alex Williams escolheu ser estrangulado por Buffett em sua foto engraçada com o Oráculo de Omaha.

Se tivesse outra oportunidade de foto com Buffett, Chao poderia escolher o tradicional instantâneo com orelhas de coelho. “Seria o melhor cartão de Natal de todos os tempos”, diz ela.

Tavasci, a estudante do Arizona que Buffett “pediu” em casamento, diz que sua foto gerou muitas risadas com a família e os amigos, e acrescentou que “tudo mundo quer saber se eu disse sim”. Uma cópia da foto foi colada no mural da loja onde ela trabalha.

Buffett não se importa, mesmo com as fotos geralmente indo parar no Facebook e no Twitter minutos depois de tiradas.

“A ideia é fazer isso de modo divertido e informativo”, diz ele. “Se posso agradar me fazendo de idiota no Facebook, tudo bem”.

© 2011 Wall Street Journal (www.wsj.com)


The Mistakes We Make—and Why We Make Them

What was I thinking?

If there’s one question that investors have asked themselves over the past year and a half, it’s that one. If only I had acted differently, they say. If only, if only, if only.

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Yet here’s the problem: While we know that we made investment mistakes, and vow not to repeat them, most people have only the vaguest sense of what those mistakes were, or, more important, why they made them. Why did we think and feel and behave as we did? Why did we act in a way that today, in hindsight, seems so obviously stupid? Only by understanding the answer to these questions can we begin to improve our financial future.

This is where behavioral finance comes in. Most investors are intelligent people, neither irrational nor insane. But behavioral finance tells us we are also normal, with brains that are often full and emotions that are often overflowing. And that means we are normal smart at times, and normal stupid at others.

The trick, therefore, is to learn to increase our ratio of smart behavior to stupid. And since we cannot (thank goodness) turn ourselves into computer-like people, we need to find tools to help us act smart even when our thinking and feelings tempt us to be stupid.

Let me give you one example. Investors tend to think about each stock we purchase in a vacuum, distinct from other stocks in our portfolio. We are happy to realize “paper” gains in each stock quickly, but procrastinate when it comes to realizing losses. Why? Because while regret over a paper loss stings, we can console ourselves in the hope that, in time, the stock will roar back into a gain. By contrast, all hope would be extinguished if we sold the stock and realized our loss. We would feel the searing pain of regret. So we do pretty much anything to avoid that pain—including holding on to the stock long after we should have sold it. Indeed, I’ve recently encountered an investor who procrastinated in realizing his losses on WorldCom stock until a letter from his broker informed him that the stock was worthless.

John Weber

Successful professional traders are subject to the same emotions as the rest of us. But they counter it in two ways. First, they know their weakness, placing them on guard against it. Second, they establish “sell disciplines” that force them to realize losses even when they know that the pain of regret is sure to follow.

So in what other ways do our misguided thoughts and feelings get in the way of successful investing—not to mention increasing our stress levels? And what are the lessons we should learn, once we recognize those cognitive and emotional errors? Here are eight of them.

No. 1

Goldman Sachs is faster than you.

There is an old story about two hikers who encounter a tiger. One says: There is no point in running because the tiger is faster than either of us. The other says: It is not about whether the tiger is faster than either of us. It is about whether I’m faster than you. And with that he runs away. The speed of the Goldman Sachses of the world has been boosted most recently by computerized high-frequency trading. Can you really outrun them?

It is normal for us, the individual investors, to frame the market race as a race against the market. We hope to win by buying and selling investments at the right time. That doesn’t seem so hard. But we are much too slow in our race with the Goldman Sachses.

So what does this mean in practical terms? The most obvious lesson is that individual investors should never enter a race against faster runners by trading frequently on every little bit of news (or rumors).

Instead, simply buy and hold a diversified portfolio. Banal? Yes. Obvious? Yes. Typically followed? Sadly, no. Too often cognitive errors and emotions get in our way.

No. 2

The future is not the past, and hindsight is not foresight.

Wasn’t it obvious in 2007 that financial institutions and financial markets were about to collapse? Well, it was not obvious to me, and it was probably not obvious to you, either. Hindsight error leads us to think that we could have seen in foresight what we see only in hindsight. And it makes us overconfident in our certainty about what’s going to happen.

Want to check the quality of your foresight? Write down in permanent ink your forecast of tomorrow’s stock prices. Do that each day for a year and check the accuracy of your predictions. You are likely to find that your foresight is not nearly as good as your hindsight.

Some prognosticators say that we are now in a new bull market and others say that this is only a bull bounce in a bear market. We will know in hindsight which prognostication was right, but we don’t know it in foresight.

When I hear in my mind’s ear a voice that says that the stock market is sure to zoom or plunge, I activate my “noise-canceling” device rather than go online and trade. You might wish to install this device in your mind as well.

No. 3

Take the pain of regret today and feel the joy of pride tomorrow.

Emotions are useful, even when they sting. The pain of regret over stupid comments teaches presidents and the rest of us to calibrate our words more carefully. But sometimes emotions mislead us into stupid behavior. We feel the pain of regret when we find, in hindsight, that our portfolios would have been overflowing if only we had sold all the stocks in 2007. The pain of regret is especially searing when we bear responsibility for the decision not to sell our stocks in 2007. We are tempted to alleviate our pain by shifting responsibility to our financial advisers. “I am not stupid,” we say. “My financial adviser is stupid.” Financial advisers are sorely tempted to reciprocate, as the adviser in the cartoon who says: “If we’re being honest, it was your decision to follow my recommendation that cost you money.”


In truth, responsibility belongs to bad luck. Follow your mother’s good advice, “Don’t cry over spilled milk.”

Where am I leading you? Stop focusing on blame and regret and yesterday and start thinking about today and tomorrow. Don’t let regret lead you to hold on to stocks you should be selling. Instead, consider getting rid of your 2007 losing stocks and using the money immediately to buy similar stocks. You’ll feel the pain of regret today. But you’ll feel the joy of pride next April when the realized losses turn into tax deductions.

No. 4

Investment success stories

are as misleading as

lottery success stories.

Have you ever seen a lottery commercial showing a man muttering “lost again” as he tears his ticket in disgust? Of course not. What you see instead are smiling winners holding giant checks.

Lottery promoters tilt the scales by making the handful of winners available to our memory while obscuring the many millions of losers. Then, once we have settled on a belief, such as “I’m going to win the lottery,” we tend to look for evidence that confirms our belief rather than evidence that might refute it. So we figure our favorite lottery number is due for a win because it has not won in years. Or we try to divine—through dreams, horoscopes, fortune cookies—the next winning numbers. But we neglect to note evidence that hardly anybody ever wins the lottery, and that lottery numbers can go for decades without winning. This is the work of the “confirmation” error.

What is true for lottery tickets is true for investments as well. Investment companies tilt the scales by touting how well they have done over a pre-selected period. Then, confirmation error misleads us into focusing on investments that have done well in 2008.

Lottery players who overcome the confirmation error conclude that winning lottery numbers are random. Investors who overcome the confirmation error conclude that winning investments are almost as random. Don’t chase last year’s investment winners. Your ability to predict next year’s investment winner is no better than your ability to predict next week’s lottery winner. A diversified portfolio of many investments might make you a loser during a year or even a decade, but a concentrated portfolio of few investments might ruin you forever.

No. 5

Neither fear nor exuberance are good investment guides.

A Gallup Poll asked: “Do you think that now is a good time to invest in the financial markets?” February 2000 was a time of exuberance, and 78% of investors agreed that “now is a good time to invest.” It turned out to be a bad time to invest. March 2003 was a time of fear, and only 41% agreed that “now is a good time to invest.” It turned out to be a good time to invest. I would guess that few investors thought that March 2009, another time of great fear, was a good time to invest. So far, so wrong. It is good to learn the lesson of fear and exuberance, and use reason to resist their pull.

No. 6

Wealth makes us happy, but wealth increases make us even happier.

John found out today that his wealth fell from $5 million to $3 million. Jane found out that her wealth increased from $1 million to $2 million. John has more wealth than Jane, but Jane is likely to be happier. This simple insight underlies Prospect Theory, developed by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky. Happiness from wealth comes from gains of wealth more than it comes from levels of wealth. While gains of wealth bring happiness, losses of wealth bring misery. This is misery we feel today, whether our wealth declined from $5 million to $3 million or from $50,000 to $30,000.

We’ll have to wait a while before we recoup our recent investment losses, but we can recoup our loss of happiness much faster, simply by framing things differently. John thinks he’s a loser now that he has only $3 million of his original $5 million. But John is likely a winner if he compares his $3 million to the mountain of debt he had when he left college. And he is a winner if he compares himself to his poor neighbor, the one with only $2 million.

In other words, it’s all relative, and it doesn’t hurt to keep that in mind, for the sake of your mental well-being. Standing next to people who have lost more than you and counting your blessings would not add a penny to your portfolio, but it would remind you that you are not a loser.

No. 7

I’ve only lost my children’s inheritance.

Another lesson here in happiness. Mental accounting—the adding and subtracting you do in your head about your gains and losses—is a cognitive operation that regularly misleads us. But you can also use your mental accounting in a way that steers you right.

Say your portfolio is down 30% from its 2007 high, even after the recent stock-market bounce. You feel like a loser. But money is worth nothing when it is not attached to a goal, whether buying a new TV, funding retirement, or leaving an inheritance to your children or favorite charity.

A stock-market crash is akin to an automobile crash. We check ourselves. Is anyone bleeding? Can we drive the car to a garage, or do we need a tow truck? We must check ourselves after a market crash as well. Suppose that you divide your portfolio into mental accounts: one for your retirement income, one for college education of your grandchildren, and one for bequests to your children. Now you can see that the terrible market has wrecked your bequest mental account and dented your education mental account, but left your retirement mental account without a scratch. You still have all the money you need for food and shelter, and you even have the money for a trip around the country in a new RV. You might want to affix to it a new version of the old bumper sticker: “I’ve only lost my children’s inheritance.”

So here’s my advice: Ask yourself whether the market damaged your retirement prospects or only deflated your ego. If the market has damaged your retirement prospects, then you’ll have to save more, spend less or retire later. But don’t worry about your ego. In time it will inflate to its former size.

No. 8

Dollar-cost averaging is not rational, but it is pretty smart.

Suppose that you were wise or lucky enough to sell all your stocks at the top of the market in October 2007. Now what? Today it seems so clear that you should not have missed the opportunity to get back into the market in mid-March, but you missed that opportunity. Hindsight messes with your mind and regret adds its sting. Perhaps you should get back in. But what if the market falls below its March lows as soon as you get back in? Won’t the sting of regret be even more painful?

Dollar-cost averaging is a good way to reduce regret—and make your head clearer for smart investing. Say you have $100,000 that you want to put back into stocks. Divide it into 10 pieces of $10,000 each and invest each on the first Monday of each of the next 10 months. You’ll minimize regret. If the stock market declined as soon as you have invested the first $10,000 you’ll take comfort in the $90,000 you have not invested yet. If the market increases you’ll take comfort in the $10,000 you have invested. Moreover, the strict “first Monday” rule removes responsibility, mitigating further the pain of regret. You did not make the decision to invest $10,000 in the sixth month, just before the big crash. You only followed a rule. The money is lost, but your mind is almost intact.

Things could be a lot worse.

–Mr. Statman is a professor of finance at Santa Clara University in Santa Clara, Calif. He can be reached at reports@wsj.com.

© 2011 Wall Street Journal (www.wsj.com)