mighty58 wrote: ↑Sun Jan 02, 2022 12:42 pm
Tkydon wrote: ↑Sun Jan 02, 2022 5:36 am
Might be time to take some of the wonderful profit off the table, lock in the gains, and wait for a more reasonably priced market to reinvest.
"...wait for a more reasonably priced market to reinvest" eh? Can you define "reasonably priced", and exactly how long one should wait for it? It's all easy to say such things when talking in hypotheticals, or in hindsight while looking at historical chart movements, but it's another thing to try and call it in real time. So if you can't answer those questions, and if you don't need the cash right now, it's better to just stay invested. People who tried to follow this sort of advice over the last 3-5 years have been losing out big time.
... but the last time the market was like this - New Year 2000 - the market crashed and it took 13 years for the S&P-500 to come back, (16 years if you take into account inflation) touching 50% of its Jan 2000 level twice in that 13 year period... I rode it all the way up and all the way back down again.
You cannot view the world through the lens of the last 3-5 years... To ignore the mistakes of the past is to repeat them.
No-one knows how high it will go, but trees do not grow to the sky. If an investor wants to take some profit off the table, the investor needs to have someone who is still willing to pay the high price to buy from him/her... So the seller needs to leave a bit of upside for the buyer...
My personal view: I think we are primed for a huge correction in both the Equities and Bond Markets around the world.
I am not "talking in hypotheticals". I will take some profit off the table within my tax advantaged accounts (so no Capital Gains Taxes) and hold the proceeds in Cash equivalents so that I am ready to buy back in to the markets when the prices are more to my liking,
"reasonably priced": When interest rates and yields are higher, P/Es are more reasonable by historical standards, the Shiller P/E ratio is lower, and the Yen is stronger (Yes, I think the Yen may get weaker first, but then will get stronger...)
"exactly how long one should wait?": I am willing to wait for a couple of years if necessary. I will continue to Dollar Cost Average in my monthly contributions, but I will have some locked and loaded dry powder...
I will write a longer answer why I think we are primed for a huge correction later, with references to Ben Graham's book.
Your view of the future is no more sure than mine. You can take a punt that your 3-5 year chart will continue going up and to the right and let your chips ride, and I can take a punt that my 25 year chart will repeat itself, and preserve some of my profits to date by taking some of my chips off the table. There have to be opposing views or there wouldn't be a market. One of us will probably be right, but I will be pleased either way. I make my best profits in correction markets, and I need to have the cash on hand to do so...
It's no good selling when the prices have gone down to buy back in at the same or higher levels...
Back in the spring of 1720, Sir Isaac Newton owned shares in the South Sea Company, the hottest stock in England. Sensing that the market was getting out of hand, the great physicist muttered that he “could calculate the motions of the heavenly bodies, but not the madness of the people.” Newton dumped his South Sea shares, pocketing a 100% profit totaling £7,000. But just months later, swept up in the wild enthusiasm of the market, Newton jumped back in at a much higher price—and lost £20,000 (or more than $3 million in today’s money). For the rest of his life, he forbade anyone to speak the words “South Sea” in his presence.
Benjamin Graham, The Intelligent Investor - Revised Edition (Harper & Row), p. 13.
John Carswell, The South Sea Bubble (Cresset Press, London, 1960), pp. 131, 199.