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9 Things Golf And Investing Have In Common

How Golf Can Improve Your Investing

People that love golf will tell you they love the challenge, being outdoors, and the relaxed pace golf offers. While golf and investing might seem like totally disparate activities, they actually share many similarities. If you can improve at one, it's likely that you can improve at the other. See what golf and investing have in common.

1It Takes Time To Become Skilled

Becoming a good golfer requires a lot of effort and time. So does becoming a skilled investor. It takes time to build up your investing skills.

2Both Require Expert Instruction

Expert instruction is needed to reach your potential. Even the best golfers have a coach. You might not hire expert instruction directly for your investments, but you can purchase books and other sources of information.

3It's Easy To Get Into Trouble

One golf shot into the water or out of bounds can be disastrous. One poor investment might not destroy your portfolio, but it can come close if you don't handle the mistake quickly and properly. Indeed, you can easily get into trouble with investments.

4You'll Need To Control Your Thoughts

To be successful in both golf and investing, you need to control your thoughts. This doesn't mean that you shouldn't be thoughtful and intelligent. It means that emotions can force you to make poor decisions. Nearly all investors have made at least one terrible financial decision due to emotion.

5Both Will Require Patience

Hurried decisions are often poor decisions. Take the necessary time to make a good decision. Rushing a golf shot rarely turns out well. Jumping to conclusions about an investment leads to similar results.

6Sophisticated Tools Are Not The Answer

Golf technology improves by leaps and bounds every year. Courses that held professional tournaments in the past are frequently too short now to accommodate the better clubs and balls. However, the average player doesn't seem to improve his score with this advanced technology.

Investing theories, tools, and software become more sophisticated each year, too. These tools have never been shown to improve the results of the average investor. Both investing and golf require more than sophisticated tools for you to succeed.

7Short-Term Results Don't Mean Success

One great shot doesn't mean that you're suddenly a great golfer. One horrible game doesn't suddenly mean that you're a horrible golfer. In the same way, just because a stock has gone up tenfold in the last several years doesn't mean that it can't go even higher!

8It's All About Risk Management

The best golfers are great at hitting the ball, staying cool, and managing risk on the course. It's not always easy to decide whether to hit a lay-up shot or go for the flag. Risk is a significant part of investing, too.

9Casual Advice Is Often Bad Advice

Every golfer has had a friend, stranger, or playing companion provide advice on his swing. The usual investing advice is about as useful. If you're going to take advice, be sure to take it from a real expert!

In both investing and playing golf, you need to know where you want to go. If you don't know where you're going, how will you end up in a good place? Each shot on the golf course requires a target. This target is chosen based on the obstacles and the location of the hole. Your investing must have a target as well; what are your investing goals?

Golf and investing might not seem to have a lot in common in one look, but they actually do share many similarities. The same ideas that allow a golfer to become great will allow an investor to do the same. Planning, patience, and expert instruction are great ways to improve your odds of success.



About Author

John Quintana

John Quintana is a proud Cuban, a lifelong resident of Miami, Florida, where he lives surrounded by a loving family. When he's not writing, he spends his time either fishing or in the kitchen.