
It wasn’t long ago that investors were lured by the
siren song of instant riches in the bull market. Frenzied commentators
and investors proclaimed that it was a new era for stocks, one that
would never go down again.
Now all we hear are the stock whiners—in some cases
the same people and publications that hyped stocks in the 1990s. Forget
equities and switch to U.S. Treasuries and certificates of deposit, they
warn. The bottom is nowhere in sight and we can’t trust companies to give
us honest numbers, so stay out.
But just as investors have cruelly learned that
stocks don’t return in the double digits every year, investors also need
to learn that stocks don’t tumble forever, either. If you realize now
there was a lot of hype about running with the bulls, why buy the hype
about running with the bears?
The problem, say many CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER®
professionals, is that investors tend to focus on the immediate past—“rear
view mirror” investing—instead of adopting a long-term view—driving by
looking out the front window. When stocks were booming, investors assumed
they would always boom. When stocks began to slide, they feared they would
slide forever.
Remember why you invested in the first place, say
financial planners—or at least why you should have been investing. People
should invest for longer-term goals such as college or retirement—not to
buy a car in six months or go on an expensive vacation in a year. Long
term should be at least five years away, and preferably ten years or more,
say many planners. Time and asset diversification can help you ride out
the inevitable downs that markets go through—even a long decline like the
current market is experiencing.
Selling now would turn paper losses into real losses.
In short, you could be selling out at the worst time. In some cases,
selling losers might be a smart tax move because you can use the losses to
offset other taxable income, but your tax benefit could be limited, so
employ this strategy judiciously. Of course, to be positioned for a market
recovery, you’ll want to reinvest the money in stock, not merely dump it
into a money market or CD.
Financial planners say that when worried clients call
and ask, should I sell my stocks, they often ask in return, “where will
you put the money instead?” As of August 2002, bank money market accounts,
which are protected from loss of principal but not from inflation, were
paying only 1.8 percent, while a one-year certificate of deposit was
paying around 2.4 percent, according to Bankrate.com. Two-year U.S.
Treasury bonds were paying only 2.25 percent.
Of course, these rates probably look great next to a
falling market. But bear markets don’t last forever, history and planners
remind us. Many planners believe the market is near bottom if not already
there, that it has wrung out the weakest investors. The market could
decline still more, they concede, but it’s difficult to imagine that it
will decline much further, having already lost over 40 percent from its
high.
Even if the market doesn’t rebound for a while, it
almost certainly will in time, and the only way to participate in that
rebound is to stick with your investment plan. Investors who hold true to
their investment plan will, in time, be able to recover at least some and
perhaps all of their lost ground.
Furthermore, investors who continue to invest
regularly during the low points will benefit even more when the market
rebounds because they will have, in essence, been buying stocks and stock
mutual funds on sale. Some planners are even advising clients with extra
cash to use it to buy stocks because they consider stocks a bargain. The
key, again, is to diversify investments and look long term.
Still, some investors may feel a strong
urge to abandon the market, even after hanging on this long. Perhaps the
thought of holding stocks is just too traumatizing, or the money may be
needed for near-term goals (which shouldn’t have been invested for in the
first place) and risking further decline may not be worth it. Some
investors may need to sell some stocks in order to readjust their
portfolio so that it better fits their financial needs or their previously
established asset allocation. Talk to your financial planner, however,
before committing to selling.
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September 2002 — This column is produced by the Financial Planning Association, the
membership organization for the financial planning community.