Blood on the Street

I won’t sugarcoat it. This is bad.
The markets spoke to this shock. US stocks were in free fall on both Thursday and Friday. The S&P 500 Index lost 10.5% over two days. The Nasdaq 100 lost over 11%. It was the fourth worst two-day stretch for US stock markets since 1950. I won’t sugarcoat it. This is bad.
What is a long-term investor to do?
Refrain from decisions made based on emotions. No good investment or trading decision ever comes under heated emotions. In times of fear, your brain latches on to negative information. It is easy to rationalize that things will get much worse for markets before they improve. They likely will, but here’s the thing ….
There are no magical strategies to avoid the pain. I wish I could tell you there’s a way to prevent the pain while still earning market returns. It is the most natural reaction in the world to want to do this. We know things are bad now, so why not sell out and wait for the smoke to clear? Because you have two chances of being wrong - when to sell and when to buy back in. It’s buying back in, which is harder. The market doesn’t wait for the news to get better. When the news improves, it’s too late. COVID is the perfect example. The stock market rally began in April 2020, long before the COVID death rate peaked and years before life returned to normal.
Give yourself a pressure release valve. Everyone learns their true risk tolerance in a crisis. If you need to do something to release the pressure or sleep at night, consider more minor changes. Perhaps you can raise enough cash to cover a year of expenses and put it in a high-yield savings account. Or you can reduce your stock exposure from 80% to 60%. By all means, do something at the margins, but don’t sell out.
Invest Cash on the Sidelines. No one knows how long this will last or how deep it will be. But the best time to buy stocks is when they scare you the most. The data supports this. Potential returns in the next 1, 3, and 5 years increase as the selloff grows. If you have cash intended for long-term investment, now is the time to start putting it to work. You do not need to go all at once. Divide it into 1/3rds or 1/4ths and devise a plan to invest it over time or at key market levels.
No one knows the future. Not even the smartest pundits on TV. This crisis could end on Monday or stretch for years as an escalating trade war and global recession. Long-term investing requires optimism about the future. Companies will find a way to produce the goods and services we want and need and sell them at a profit - no matter how the new rules shake out. Your success never required knowing the future - only your fortitude to stick to your plan. Dorothy didn’t need the Wizard of Oz to take her home to Kansas. All she had to do was click her heels.
Take a deep breath. This could go on for a while. Settle in. Find whatever coping mechanisms work for you. I recommend turning off the TV and reducing your overall news consumption. I heard FoxNews took the market ticker off their screens mid-day on Thursday. Investment returns are earned, not given. I am reminded of one of my all-time favorite investing quotes:
In bear markets, stocks return to their rightful owners. —J.P. Morgan himself