Financial markets are neither logical nor 100% predictable. – especially short-term. When investing you assume some risks for a certain level of reward. If you chose not to invest, you also assume risks. If you put money under your mattress, or leave it in a savings account, the value of your savings may not keep up with inflation, making your savings less valuable. Therefore, it is important for you to know what risks you are willing to take. (Since this can change over time, review your investments annually based on your current risk tolerance.)
It was exciting to watch the financial markets reached an all-time high in July of 2024, before dropping the final week of the month. Hopefully, you are not watching your account values on a daily basis. That could drive you crazy! It also distorts your view. You cannot see the bigger picture when you are focused on the daily moves. The July pullback hurt, but most stocks were still well above their value just three months earlier. Now many stocks have bounced back towards their July highs.
The market sell-off was an emotional response to a change in market information. Investors feared a market correction, or believed a recession had arrived, because the downward revision of the new jobs numbers declined from 179,000 to 114,000. That was a larger than expected adjustment and with consumer spending already slowing, many investors reacted quickly to sell their holdings. They missed out on the quick recovery.
Investors listen to market analysts’ explanation of the probabilities, statistics and forecasts believing the numbers, charts, and formulas will reveal some logic to the market. This is they find comforting. However, many of the predictive tools are theories that have shown a strong correlation between a cause and effect, but they are not absolutes. They are observations and the ultimate timing of the move is speculative.
Even if analytics could prescribe a successful investment strategy, investors would disrupt the strategy by trying to capitalize on the strategy for their own gain. In turn, their actions would change the outcome of the original analysis. That is only one reason why markets are hard to predict.
It is important to understand that your emotions play a big role in the success of our investment outcomes. According to behavioral finance research studies, nearly 80% of investment decisions are psychological and can have a huge negative impact on your financial success if left unchecked.
The best way to protect yourself from emotional self-sabotage is to understand your emotional triggers. Below are some of the common behaviors that can get investors into trouble.
If you recognize any of these behavioral biases in your own investment decisions, think about how you can be more rational in the future. Know yourself. Then enact a waiting period before taking action. Be accountable to yourself regarding your emotional response to different market events and build guardrails into your investment strategy to minimize these responses.
Your financial advisor can be a great accountability resource. Make certain you ask them questions if you have concerns about the market or your individual investments