In October 2018, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, a widely followed measure of stock-price performance of 30 of the largest U.S. companies, dropped 1,380 points in just two days. While that sounds scary, it was just a 5% move, taking the index back to mid-July 2018.
Still, you might have noticed that when your funds have been doing well, you feel pretty euphoric, but when they’re down, you feel a lot worse than the pleasure you felt when they were doing better. This is a psychological effect known as loss aversion, and it’s believed to be hard-wired into our brains.
The best way to respond to these emotional swings is to try to take emotion out of the equation altogether. Over long market cycles historically, markets have moved up, although, as always, they fall eventually. It’s that long historic sweep that you should focus on, not short-term movements.
You should also pay attention to the things you can control in investing and ignore what you cannot change. Here are a few tips to keep in mind:
On balance, investing for retirement should be a fairly boring exercise. After all, it’s a process where results unfold over decades, not weeks or months. Often, the most important thing you can do when markets fall is… nothing. But you should do so only if the decision doesn’t keep you up at night.
¹ Diversification does not assure positive return or protect against losses in a declining market. All investing involves risk, including principal loss.
² Source: https://blog.circleblack.com/should-you-be-afraid-stock-market-crash. An investor needs to consider carefully the ability to maintain a regular investment program during an extended market downturn. Past performance does not guarantee future results.