Over the last few weeks, professional financial planners have been fielding calls from clients who are asking the kinds of questions that every professional investor hates to hear. The Dow has reached (and then fallen back below) 20,000. Should I take money off the table?
My preferred candidate didn’t win the election, and I think the world is going to hell in a handbasket. Don’t you think I should sell my stocks now before it’s too late?
The first question is the easier one to answer. It seems to be human nature to have a strange fascination with round numbers. Why should Dow 20,000 be any different, from a pure investing standpoint, then Dow 19,774.83 or Dow 20,093.65? The questions about this magic number become even sillier when you realize that the Dow is made up of just 30 out of many thousands of American-based companies.
As to the second question, the real issue is the eternal question: what’s coming next in the markets? The only truthful answer to that question, however it’s phrased, is: we don’t know. As investors, we need to take that answer very seriously.
After President Obama was elected, financial planners were fielding questions from their angry and frightened conservative clients, who were asking to bail on their stock portfolios in anticipation of the country going to hell in a handbasket. But ask yourself: how did that
Then, for the last five years at least, the experts were certain that bond rates were just about to rise dramatically, and many professional investors stayed ultra-short to avoid the losses. How did that
For the last four years at least, people have been saying that the current bull market is long in the tooth, what with the markets testing new highs. Over and over they felt like it was a good time to take their winnings off the table. How did that
So now we have a situation where the other half of the country is still reeling from the election results and predicting that the country is going to hell in a handbasket. Advisors are doing everything they can to keep clients from acting emotionally rather than rationally.
The rational way to frame the question about taking money off the table is: can you afford to lose some percentage of your assets—and that percentage figure depends on how aggressive is your asset allocation—before the markets recover? Will you have time to recover?
If you’re withdrawing money in retirement, or just approaching retirement, that percentage you can afford to lose will be lower than it would be for a millennial investor or somebody late in retirement. Whatever that amount is, you should look back historically, take a hard look at the darkest days for your particular mix of assets, and note the times it breached that floor. (Hint: check out early 2009.) Then see if you want to change your allocations to something more conservative.
Risk versus growth a key to re-balancing
If you CAN afford to dip down as far as your current portfolio would seem to allow, then you will inevitably be rewarded by new market highs at some point after the bear (and there will be a bear) is over. There will inevitably be a 100% swing in the markets, and history suggests as markets recover, a new high will be reached due to long-term historical economic growth, interrupted by recessions, followed by recovery.
The opinions voiced in this material are for general information only and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual. All performance referenced is historical and is no guarantee of future results. All indices are unmanaged and may not be invested into directly.
Blog No. 107 – How to
Sources: Dow Jones Industrials, Bob Veres Inside Information and Google News
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