Working
Ellen McCarty
HE IS
The Money Maverick
MUTUAL RESPECT
The 42-year-old Huntington Beach native doesn’t use the classic balsa
surfboard hanging above his desk at Fabian Investment Resources -- he’s
moved on to fiberglass and foam -- but he uses his deep knowledge of
history as he navigates the sometimes rough waves of the stock market.
His radio show, “Fabian on Funds,” hit the airwaves last March. It has
since doubled its audience to about 26,000 listeners.
Unlike most financial shows, Fabian isn’t dry.
“This guy called in about Y2K and said, ‘It’s no big deal. I’m going to
take all of my cash, buy a gallon of tequila and have a big party,’ ”
Fabian said. “I just said, ‘Have a great time, man.’ ”
STOCK JOCK
“We don’t make many friends in the industry,” said Fabian’s producer,
Michael Tomlinson. “He’s (Fabian) a Wall Street insider, but he
approaches it from the outside. He tells it like it is.”
Most controversial is Fabian’s “Lemon List.”
“On my show, I call it ‘Broker Horror Stories,’ ” Fabian said. “And then
I scream, ahhh!”
Nationally recognized by the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal,
the Lemon List, also posted online at https://www.fabianlive.com, targets
bad mutual funds brokers and “beats them to a pulp for 90 days,” Fabian
said.
His investigations have exposed sloppy brokers who, over the last three
years, have again and again poorly invested their clients’ money.
“They’re driving around in Porsches, and they don’t know what they’re
doing,” Fabian said.
RISKY BUSINESS
Investing independently is scary because it involves risk, Fabian said,
but only if you’ve never done it before. About 80% of his talk show,
which airs on KLSX-FM (97.1) Saturdays from 8 to 10 a.m., involves
advising callers how to sort through their baggage of stocks.
“I tell them what to get rid of, what to keep and what to buy,” he said.
Many people keep weak stocks much longer than necessary. “The universal
truth that you should buy a stock and hope it makes money is universal
B.S.,” Tomlinson said. “We take conventional financial wisdom and turn it
on its head.”
The Internet has changed everything, he added. “The public has more
access to company information than they ever did before,” he said. “They
no longer need a broker to do the legwork.”
DINERO TIME
Fabian learned the financial ropes from his father, Dick, who pioneered
the concept of being an “independent investor” in Huntington Beach in
1977 when he launched a mutual funds newsletter.
Before that, Fabian attended Marina High School and Goldenwest College,
where he was on the water polo team and worked for a few years as a
woodcarver in Huntington Beach.
Although he never earned a degree in finance, Fabian said his learning
began the day his dad gave him his first assignment: to chart the history
of the stock market as it was affected by world events.
“I just fell in love,” he said. “It was fascinating.”
His love grew when he stepped onto the floor of the New York Stock
Exchange in 1982, a landmark event that sealed his confidence in his work
and the market.
“From afar, it looks so chaotic,” he said. “But down on the floor with
the brokers, I watched the actual transaction of stocks and it was the
coolest of cool. The market was so weak that day they said it fell out of
bed, but nobody panicked.”
THE MONEY GAME
On the radio, Fabian talks about stock market trends the way he talks
about surfing, he said.
Mirroring lifeguard signals, he uses a green flag to mark a good day to
invest in any stock on the market, yellow to be alert and cautious and
red to “stay out of the water.”
Everyday, before sharing investment news, he gives a report about the
local surf.
“If the water’s cold and there are no waves, I tell the listeners to get
a cup of coffee and listen to me instead,” he said.
Investing is more important than ever for younger generations, Fabian
said, because Social Security and job pensions are no longer guarantees.
“It’s up to us to secure our retirement,” he said. “I can’t believe we
don’t teach kids in school how to invest.”
His own kids, ages 17, 15, 7 and 5, will all have a good understanding of
the market, said his wife, Karen, who is a financial analyst, but they
make sure money is just as fun as playtime.
“Moran is 7 and she already has a savings account,” she said. “But Jordan
is only 5 and he’s a little hopeless at this point. He just wants us to
buy him Lego.”
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