Stock Market News Boosts Tips to Buy Stocks
Stock Market News Boosts Tips to Buy Stocks
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Why I' m Buying Stocks This Week
How to react to the worst opening five days in the history of the U S market
Istock Next steps for investors after the worst U.S. stock market opening in history. It's official — last week was the worst opening week ever for the U.S. . The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 1,079 points. The broader S&P 500 index shed 122 points, or nearly 6 percent. Hyperbolic headlines are fanning the flames of investor anxiety and stock aversion. Even famed investor George Soros is making parallels to 2008, when stocks plunged. As for me, I'll be buying stocks, specifically stock index funds. Not because I'm a glutton for punishment, but this is far from my first rodeo and I've learned a thing or three.AARP Discounts
as an AARP member. First, nobody knows whether this is a tiny blip in stocks after a very boring 2015, with both stocks and bonds virtually flat for the year and lower-than-average volatility. Even in a boring year like that, the S&P lost over 229 points in five trading days in August. That's nearly twice the loss of last week. Time will tell if this is just another in a series of market blips like last August or the beginning of the next market plunge. Second, though the capriciousness of the stock market makes it unpredictable, the same cannot be said about human nature. When it comes to money, people are very predictable. If stocks plunge, people will panic and sell. If they surge, people will get greedy and buy. Individual typically lag the market through poor timing. Third, the common wisdom of Black Friday — that it's better to buy things on sale than at full price — is as true for stocks as it is for flat-screen televisions. Thus, it's better to buy stocks after they go on sale, as they do in the wake of a plunge, than after a surge. I maintain a pretty conservative portfolio that provides me the intestinal fortitude — and cash available on the sidelines — to buy when the herd is selling. Buying stock index funds this week is a far easier proposition compared to late 2008 and early 2009, when stocks had a half-off sale. If stocks continue to slide, it will get progressively harder. (By the way, I'm 58 years old and have roughly 55 percent of my portfolio in fixed-income and cash, and 45 percent in the stock market.)More From Allan Roth
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