Listen

Description

Quick – name the world’s greatest market timer in all history.

This is a question I often raise with investors who want to act on their impulse to get out of the market at the first sign of a hiccup or put all their money into AI stocks for fear of missing out.

The typical reaction is a blank stare. Now we can debate the greatest tennis players or the pantheon of great chess players throughout history. Everybody can cite statistics about the greatest hitters in the history of Major League Baseball, and you can have your opinions about the top pop stars and performers.

But market timers? Has anybody, anywhere, at any time in history, created an amazing track record of knowing the best times to get into and out of the market? Have you ever heard anybody debating the merits of this market timer versus that other amazing one?

Any activity that provides us with zero successful examples ought to be examined carefully and skeptically, and of this market timing might be the best example. Thus, rating the top market timers is not unlike rating the top individuals who have flapped their arms and flown away. There just aren’t any candidates.

The point is that if the world’s top economists, hedge fund managers, Wall Street traders, and TV market pundits haven’t achieved notable success in this endeavor, it’s fair to ask whether any of the rest of us are likely to outwit the psychologically driven twists and turns of share prices. We have seen a great example of this recently: pundits and economists were predicting smooth sailing for the markets and the economy right up until a sudden, unexpected 3% one-day drop in the S&P 500. Then the headlines were all about how the market was headed for a bearish stretch, and the headlines continued while the market recovered its lost ground and reached new highs. Now who could have predicted that?

The answer, based on history, is nobody.

Disclosure Notice: The Wealth Conservatory® is a Registered Trade Mark of Comprehensive Planning Associates, Inc. - a Registered Investment Advisor with offices in New Hampshire, California, and Missouri. The Conservatory is not licensed to and does not engage in the practice of rendering legal or tax advice. Any discussion of either is for informational purposes only and you are strongly encouraged to seek appropriate counsel prior to taking action. The Conservatory and its representatives are in compliance with the current registration and notice filing requirements imposed upon SEC Registered Investment Advisors by those states in which the Conservatory maintains clients. The information contained herein should not be construed as personalized financial or investment advice unless the recipient has an executed and active client or member engagement with the Conservatory. The Wealth Conservatory® is a Registered Trademark of Comprehensive Planning Associates, Inc. Thank you.