
You’re Not Bad at Investing. Your Strategy Is. Here’s How to Fix It
Most high earners assume that if they follow all the traditional investing advice, everything will work out. You max out your 401(k). You buy index funds. You contribute to your IRA. You diversify. You stay patient. You trust the math.
That is exactly what I did for years.
But my results did not match what the data promised. I was doing everything right, yet my returns were nowhere near the 9 to 10 percent growth everyone talks about. It was frustrating, confusing, and honestly a little discouraging.
I eventually learned something that changed the way I invest:
The problem wasn’t me. It was the strategy.
Most investors, including high earners, leave thousands of dollars in returns on the table without realizing it. And it has nothing to do with intelligence or effort. There are structural issues inside the way we invest that hold us back.
Once you understand how these factors work, you can fix them. And when you fix them, the difference in your long-term returns is enormous.
Let’s break down the four biggest reasons your returns fall short of the market, and what you can do to fix them.
Why Your Returns Don’t Match the Market
Every investor eventually asks the same question:
“If the S&P 500 averages 9 to 10 percent, why am I not seeing that in my account?”
Most people assume the problem must be the funds they picked or the timing of their contributions. But the biggest factor behind underperformance is something far more basic:
You are investing at the wrong times without knowing it.
And no, this has nothing to do with trying to time the market.
The issue is how contributions happen.
Time-Weighted vs Dollar-Weighted Returns
Market performance is calculated using time-weighted returns. That means the performance assumes a lump sum invested on day one that stays untouched for the entire period.
But real people do not invest that way.
You invest gradually. You add money at different times. You contribute more later in life, not earlier.
This creates a different kind of return: the dollar-weighted return. And that is where the gap appears.
The Morningstar Gap
Morningstar looked at this difference over thousands of funds and found something striking:
The average fund return was 8.2 percent.
The average investor return was 7 percent.
That 1.2 percent gap adds up quickly. Over ten years, it wipes out roughly 15 percent of your total gains.
You did not do anything wrong.
But the timing of your contributions hurt you.
Let me show you how this plays out.
How Timing Quietly Lowers Your Returns
Imagine this simple three-year scenario:
Year 1:
You invest 1,000 dollars. The market grows 10 percent. You end with 1,100 dollars.
Year 2:
You add 1,000 more. Now you have 2,100 dollars. The market grows 10 percent again. You end with 2,310 dollars.
Year 3:
You add another 1,000 for a total of 3,310 dollars. The market loses 10 percent. You end with 2,979 dollars.
Now look at what happened:
The fund’s return over the three years is positive 2.9 percent.
Your return is negative 0.4 percent.
Same fund. Same time frame.
Completely opposite results.
Why?
Because small contributions were invested during the good years.
But the large balance was invested during the bad year.
This is how volatility destroys returns without you ever making a “mistake.”
Why Staying Invested Matters More Than Timing
Morningstar’s lead researcher put it simply:
“Do as little trading as possible. Time in the market is more important than timing the market.”
There is a reason for this.
Missing just 10 of the best days in the market can cut your returns in half. And the best days often occur immediately after the worst days. Many happen in the same week.
If you try to avoid the downturns, you often miss the recovery.
And that recovery is where the big gains happen.
This is why one of the most powerful things you can do is choose a strategy you can actually stick to.
But timing mistakes are only one part of the story.
There is another reason high earners underperform, and it hides behind a strategy that feels safe.
When Your Portfolio Is Too Conservative
Many high earners are invested much more conservatively than they realize. Target date funds are a perfect example. These funds automatically shift more of your money into bonds as you get older.
The idea sounds great: reduce risk as retirement gets closer.
But there is a tradeoff.
Lower risk means lower returns.
Stocks average 9 to 10 percent per year.
Bonds average 3 to 5 percent.
If your target date fund adjusts you to a 60 percent stock and 40 percent bond portfolio, your expected return drops to about 7.6 percent.
Over several decades, that difference is enormous.
Why Target Date Funds Drag Down Your Growth
Target date funds:
Sell high-performing stocks
Buy slow-moving bonds
Rebalance constantly
Diversify into lower-return asset classes
Add an extra layer of fees
They are designed for behavioral safety, not maximum growth.
If you are someone who benefits from that guardrail, target date funds make sense.
But if your goal is to grow wealth as efficiently as possible, they may not be the right fit.
Why Stock Picking Hurts More Than It Helps
Another common strategy that hurts returns is chasing winners. Most investors get interested in companies only after they have had massive success.
But by the time you hear about a superstar stock, the story is usually already priced in. You end up buying high and watching the stock stabilize or drop.
Why Index Funds Are the Better Choice
Over decades of research, index funds consistently outperform actively managed funds. This is because index funds:
Track curated lists of top companies
Keep costs low
Adjust automatically
Remove emotional decision making
Reduce timing mistakes
Increase diversification instantly
For most high earners, index funds should form the foundation of long-term investing.
The Silent Wealth Killer: Fees
Nothing quietly erodes your returns like fees, yet most investors have no idea how much they are paying.
These fees include:
Fund expense ratios
Front-end and back-end load fees
Bid ask spreads
Target date fund wrapper fees
Financial advisor fees
They add up quickly.
The Cost of a “Small” 1 Percent Fee
If you invest 100,000 dollars at 7 percent for 30 years, you end up with about 761,000 dollars.
If you invest the same amount but lose 1.7 percent each year to fees, your ending value drops to about 471,000 dollars.
That is a 300,000 dollar difference from fees alone.
And that is assuming you started with only 100,000 dollars.
With a million-dollar portfolio, this cost grows even faster.
Fees are one of the few things you can fully control, so it is important to be intentional about keeping them low.
How to Build a Smarter Strategy That Actually Works
A more effective investment strategy does not require complexity.
It comes down to a few critical adjustments:
Stay invested and avoid unnecessary trading
Reevaluate your asset allocation with intention
Use index funds as your core
Minimize unnecessary fees
Add non-correlated assets like real estate thoughtfully
These changes are simple, but the impact over time is transformational.
Final Thoughts
You are not bad at investing.
You are not missing something everyone else knows.
And you are not behind because you failed.
You were simply following a strategy that was never designed to maximize your returns.
Once you understand how timing, allocation, stock picking, and fees affect your performance, you can design a strategy that aligns with your goals and accelerates your path to financial freedom.
You are more capable than you think.
You simply need a structure that works.
Download the Smarter Investor Checklist
I created a simple checklist to help you:
Avoid timing mistakes
Improve your allocation
Reduce unnecessary fees
Strengthen your long-term plan
