Coronavirus as Proof of the Hoax of Market Timing
Adapted from article by Bob Veres
A lot of “smart” investors will tell you that you should never invest when the market has been moving up, but instead should wait until there’s a pullback in order to buy at a bargain price. But is that really a good strategy?
The biggest problem with this strategy is that you never know when the market will bottom out and start rising again. But what if you actually did? Would this strategy lead to incredible returns?
In a recent blog post, market analyst Nick Maggiulli decided to compare dollar-cost averaging against this perfect foresight of waiting to buy in until the markets hit a recent low, right before they started the next rise. He found that if you randomly picked any trading day for the Dow Jones Industrial Average since 1970, there was a 95% chance that the market would close lower on some other trading day in the future. That would be the time to buy, right?
Looking back, he found that just 1 in 20 trading days closes at a price that will never be seen again. Between those days, our astute investor would hoard the cash that would otherwise be invested, and put it all in at the low point. Maggiulli found that his hypothetical “buy at market lows” strategy would outperform a simple strategy of investing the same amount every day in the market by (get ready for this) 0.4% a year.
And remember, this strategy requires you to have perfect foresight—which, to be clear, none of us have. In the real world, you are 95% likely not to get the best possible price when you buy into the market. There’s no alternative but to accept this.
We recently saw the DOW drop over 600 points due to the fear that the Coronavirus outbreak would hurt the Chinese economy and the disruption would cause the global and US economies to suffer. After losing almost all in a one-day drop, we now have the DOW up better than 150 points. Coronavirus is still raging in China. The difference is the panic has lessened; economically, nothing has changed. The closing of Wuhan and surrounding cities is still in effect, and economic activity in China is decreasing.
So, what does this mean for you? It is good news. It means you don’t need a crystal ball to get pretty much the same returns that you would have gotten had the crystal ball somehow given you a view of the future. All you have to do is continue to invest in a disciplined manner from now until you need the cash (in retirement?), and if the past is any indication, the market itself will take you where you want to go.
We at Colman Knight have watched the ’87 crash, the 2000 crash (dotcom), the 2008 crash and all these experiences point to the same conclusion: having a well-diversified portfolio that meets your needs will get you there. Buying and selling is a fool’s game because there are so few days to “buy at the bottom” (20 out of 200). We continue to recommend you keep to the strategy we have created together to best meet your needs, and not try to time the market.
Source:
Of Dollars and Data