On-again, off-again tariffs, mass government layoffs, funding cuts and immigration crackdowns have seriously spooked Wall Street, which is emphatically rejecting President Donald Trump’s chaotic economic agenda.

  • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    Timing the market is virtually impossible. I’ve believed that Trump would be bad for the US economy overall, but when to pull out? And even more important, when to put back in? You pull out too early and miss potentially massive gains. Assuming you time the withdraw perfectly, you wait to long to put back in and you miss out on the recovery.

    I should have pulled my 401k (retirement plan) on Jan 1. I didn’t. I lost 17% since then

    Jan 1 is an arbitrary date. Why Jan 1 for your measure? trump was elected on Nov 5th and inaugurated Jan 20. The S&P500 closed at 5782 on Nov 5th. At its peak since then it was at 6144 (Feb 19th). Jan 1 was a holiday so the market was closed anyway, so I’ll assume you meant Jan 2 which closed at 5868. By that measure the S&P500 has only lost 4.2% from Jan 2 to now. I understand your portfolio likely doesn’t match the S&P500 perfectly and you have more exposure in some sectors and less in others.

    Will go back in maybe June.

    It may be worse then, it may have recovered. No one can know. If it is worse then, you’ll be buying on the cheap. If we’ve had a recovery you will have lost out because you’re out of the market when the recovery occurred. Looking at past historical recoveries, I can tell I would have NOT guessed the recovery was going to happen at that moment. That tells me I would be equally bad at predicting when the next recovery will occur.

    If you are close to retirement, you should have withdrawn perhaps 5 years of living retirement expenses already from the market years ago into boring safer bonds or even straight cash (you would have missed out on the 35%ish increase in value from being in the market the last two years though). If you’re far enough away from retirement, then this is the risk that comes with volatile investing. If someone doesn’t have the comfort with this amount of risk, I completely understand that, but this is where the larger gains come from. Investments with little to no risk also offer little to no returns.

    The TLDR, I’m not smart enough to time the market. I don’t have confidence in those that claim they do.

    • Carmakazi@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      I won’t say that this isn’t good advice, but I’ve always thought the subtext of this advice was

      Please keep your money in The Market so we can keep leveraging it.

      Please keep your confidence in The Market.

      PLEASE don’t start a run on our banks and clearing houses.

      Trying to time the market is risky, but ignoring your money isn’t zero-risk either. Nothing grows forever no matter how much Capitalism insists it does.

      • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        I won’t say that this isn’t good advice, but I’ve always thought the subtext of this advice was

        Please keep your money in The Market so we can keep leveraging it. Please keep your confidence in The Market.

        We’re not talking about designing systems for our society. We’re talking about the options available to today’s individuals. As individuals, you have two choices:

        1. Use the established patterns and rules and extract value from investing
        2. Ignore the established patterns and try to “roll your own”.

        If you go with #1, you’ve got a set of assumptions.

        • financial system that is mostly functional since 1929ish.
        • this system delivers consistent returns (over a long enough timeline)
        • an amount of transparency required by law enforced by the SEC, FINRA, and other agencies
        • government will provide regulation and liquidity to keep the system afloat
        • most importantly, regular inflation will slowly eat away at the value of a person’s money so a moderate return is required simply to maintain today’s buying power with the money you have

        If you go with #2:

        • you have few if any government regulatory protections on your investments
        • likely no injection of liquidity if a financial crisis occurs.
        • investment opportunities available to you will be highly speculative or “wild west”
        • still required to chase a return that at least equals inflation, except you’ll have no protections

        PLEASE don’t start a run on our banks and clearing houses.

        You can choose to invest and save under the assumption that bank runs will occur. It will deny you the most historically safe and highest returning investment options available to regular individuals that has worked approximately for the last 100 years. Storing cash or gold under your mattress carries its own risks far above anything in the market.

        Trying to time the market is risky,

        Agreed.

        but ignoring your money isn’t zero-risk either.

        Also agreed. Where did I suggest ignoring your money? Instead I even called out that if you are closing in on retirement, then a portion of savings should be removed from the market because of the risk of short term volatility. How are you taking my statements as ignoring your money?

        Nothing grows forever no matter how much Capitalism insists it does.

        Well sure, the heat-death of the universe is a known absolute end. Even prior to that there will be an infinite amount of things that would end growth sooner. Do you, as an individual in the USA (401k reference from OP), believe you should plan you retirement savings assuming capitalism will stop working in your lifetime?