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Khalil F. Matta invesment Q&A
by Carol Schaal

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He may be a professor of management at Notre Dame, but that didn't keep Khalil F. Matta '80M.S., '82Ph.D. from making what he calls "boneheaded investment decisions." Although filled with humor, his Thou Shalt Not Invest Foolishly: Confessions of a Business Professor (1st Books) can be almost painful to read, as Matta again and again watches his investments go sour. But out of lemons, he had made lemonade -- and investors may profit from a sip.

ND: Why go public with your mistakes?

Matta: First and foremost I'm an educator and I thought there was a need for getting people educated on what can go wrong in the stock market. I always thought of myself as fairly smart, and I was really surprised that I could do such "primitive" mistakes. Then I saw that a lot of my friends and my colleagues shared my ignorance about investing. I though the general public might learn from the mistakes, and not experience the pain and suffering that I have.

ND What is the first thing you would advise investors?

Matta: The main theme of the book is that one should view investing as a means to build a long-term nest egg. I think most people confuse investing and speculating. You should think long term rather that short term.

ND: What should investors avoid?

Matta: One thing that you should never do is leverage your investments -- never borrow money to invest.

ND: The book was written before the bear market took hold. How do you view the current economic climate?

Matta: I think the lessons in the book apply anytime. Bear markets are a fact of life. They basically punish speculators more so than investors, because speculators have a short-term horizon. Investors should have a long-term plan.

 

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