Go read this article over at the blog
"A Wealth of Common Sense," "Regression to Lumpy Returns". It points out something that I think it is very important for investors to understand and that is that stock market returns are not constant. They are all over the board. A positive year can just as easily lead to losses the next. A large part of that has to do with the fact that stocks are long dated instruments and while humans care about returns on a yearly basis, markets do not. The main take-aways from the article are shown below.
{Highlights mine.}
-The worst 5-year total return since World War II occurred between 2004 and the spring of 2009 with a loss of 29% or annualized loss of around 6.6%. If the S&P 500 lost 30% of its value over the coming five years, the annual return from 2009-2022 would still be 6.8% per year. That's far better than you could have received from more fixed return oriented investments during the same period but obviously without the same volatility.
-Missing a bull market can be more detrimental to your long term financial health that taking part in a bear market.
-Stock market performance is lumpy. This should be obvious to anybody who's been at this for a longer period of time but needs to be constantly drilled home to investors. After a year like 2017 it is very easy to assume markets will always perform just like that and things will be rosy forever. They won't be.
At any rate a pretty good article and one I suggest everybody go read in full.
Posting schedule: I've mentioned a couple of times that I will be moving my office at the end of the month and that will necessitate a more limited posting schedule. I plan to post 2-3 times a week this week and next. After that through the end of May I will only commit to one posting a week. We'll figure out what the schedule is going to be over the summer as I have a better feel on my time commitments at that time. Back Wednesday and Thursday this week.
Long ETFs related to the S&P 500 in client and personal accounts. Short S&P 500 in a personal account as part of a separate individual strategy.
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