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Market Volatility Shouldn't Rattle a Good Financial
Plan
On Feb. 27,
2007, the Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 416 points,
the biggest drop since the market reopened after the
9/11 attacks. By early May, the market had more than
made up those losses and stood at record highs.
How did you
react? Did you turn off the news? Did you call your
broker in a panic? Or did you call your financial
planner to see if your plan was solid?
It's easy to
succumb to the urge to sell if the market takes a
header or buy if it's headed upward. But sudden action
is usually a mistake. In the late 1980s, Harvard psychologist
Paul Andreassen made news with a research project
that found that people who listened to market news
actually made lower returns. Why? Because those who
sold – or bought – during a market swing probably
found a day later that the market was really running
on hype, not fundamentals.
You pay a financial
planner to devise a financial strategy that matches
your risk tolerance and long-term financial goals.
No, there is absolutely no way to guarantee that you'll
never lose money. But if a plan truly matches you,
the noise level on TV shouldn't make a difference.
So the next time the Dow spikes or slides, ask yourself:
What's
my plan? If you've worked with a good financial
planner, you should be able to articulate those goals
all by yourself or refer to an investment policy statement
you made together. Much of the riskiest investing,
overbuying and panic selling during the late 1990s
and early 2000s could have been avoided if individual
investors had sought advice for achieving long-term
specific goals such as retirement or a college education.
What's
my risk tolerance? At your first meeting
with a planner, you should have discussed – and later
filled out – a form asking you a number of questions
about how you handle risk and what your expectations
were about investment returns. You might have had
to do this more than once if your risk tolerance was
low but your investment expectations were high – low-risk
investors can't expect the highest returns. That's
part of the education process when you visit a planner.
Am
I prepared to stay invested – no matter what? We
all remember the “Tech Wreck” of 2000. At the worst
of that downturn, investors bailed out of the stock
market or drastically cut back, only to get back in
after they were “convinced” that the market was rebounding.
In reality, they missed out on stock market gains
during the early stages of recovery, and that's costly
in the long run. Of course, some investors looking
for that late 20 th century investment high also got
into the real estate market, and they perhaps learned
a similar lesson when that market started heading
south two years ago.
In 2004, SEI
Investments studied 12 bear markets since World War
II. Investors who either stayed in the market through
its bottom, or were fortunate to enter at the bottom,
saw the S&P 500 gain an average of 32.5 percent
(not counting dividends) during the first year of
recovery. Investors who missed even just the first
week of recovery saw their gains that first year slide
to 24.3 percent. Those who waited three months before
getting back in gained only 14.8 percent.
Am
I diversified? The NASDAQ lost 39 percent
of its value just in 2001, and another 21 percent
in 2002. Meanwhile, real estate investment trusts,
which performed poorly in 1998 and 1999 when stocks
were booming, had banner years in 2000 and 2001, performed
so-so in 2002, and had an excellent 2003. Bonds also
returned well during the bear market. Your planner,
based on your risk profile, should have you in diversified
investments that fit your goals.
Do
I still feel the same way I used to about returns?
Having a long-term investment plan doesn't mean make
the plan and leave it to gather dust. You and your
planner should decide when it's time for a review
of your investment goals and your feelings about them.
An annual conversation makes sense if nothing's going
on, but life events like death, divorce, kids moving
out and illness are good reasons to do a head-to-toe
review of a financial plan.
May
2007 – This column was authored in cooperation with
Financial Planning Association.
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