During a bull run, any investment makes us look like Warren Buffet, but what happens when the market inevitably turns south, as experts are predicting for this year?
Of course, it’s never a good idea to panic and sell your investments, but you should prepare yourself to navigate the stock market when stock prices are dropping. So where should your money be? Below are a few bear market investing tips from financial experts.
The Cycle Continues
Many new investors will hear the phrase “timing the market,” meaning you should buy stocks at their lowest price and sell at their highest prices. The first piece of advice for any serious investor is to understand that you nor any other investor can accurately time the market.
Scot Johnson (CFA, Principal & Chief Investment Officer) of Adell, Harriman & Carpenter Inc. notes, “Investors, whether professional or part-time, would be wise to avoid thinking they can accurately and consistently predict the onset or the end of recessions and bear markets.”
Scot says that bear markets are simply an inevitable part of the natural economic cycle. So instead of attempting to time the market, investors should focus on “quality” investing from the start. Investors will build a durable portfolio that can withstand economic downturns by focusing on quality.
Additionally, Scot adds, “We can apply a quality filter across every economic sector of the stock market. When we look for quality, we look first for consistent profitability. We also look for what we term “high-quality earnings,” where earnings and the cash flows they produce are fairly tightly aligned.”
Part of Scot’s investment strategy is to find shareholder-friendly companies. Companies that pay regular dividends and raise their payouts consistently would fall into this category.
Another quality aspect is finding stocks that have embraced share repurchase plans. By adopting these repurchase plans, companies allow “management more flexibility in execution than a dividend commitment, but still benefit shareholders by buying back undervalued shares, returning excess cash to shareholders and managing the number of outstanding shares.”
To further bolster a high-quality portfolio, Scot recommends investing in companies that provide “necessity” goods and services as these tend to be more resilient during poor market conditions. Historically, the Consumer Staples, Healthcare, and Utility Sectors provide stability as we can’t live without them regardless of market conditions.
Companies in these sectors can often be among the more generous dividend payers. Despite their falling stock prices, paying out substantial dividends makes investments in these companies even stronger and more attractive during difficult times.
Stay the Course
Blaine Thiederman (MBA, CFP), Founder and principal advisor at Progress Wealth Management, has a similar outlook on bear market investing.
“Everyone is looking for a magical place that rebounds faster and is an optimal place to invest your funds. The issue is, no one really knows for sure the best place to invest your money at all points in time. What’s really important is focusing on what we know for sure.”
Blaine point to rising interest rates and the conflict with Russia. The Fed will likely raise interest rates again before too long, and the conflict currently spooking some investors should be short-lived.
Because of this, he believes it’s likely markets will rebound, and this year will end in a positive.
Blaine states, “With every investor that I work with, I’m having them stay focused, disciplined, and not paying attention to this short-term correction because objective logic (not luck) is what helps reach our goals. If you invest in a less than diversified portfolio during a correction, you could guess wrong and regret this decision indefinitely.”
For this reason, Blaine recommends his clients stick to a passive, indexed portfolio. He reiterates, “Because investment decisions, like our healthelated decisions, need to be objective, testable and provable. Without this, our ability to reach our financial goals in life is based on a hope and a dream, and that’s not good enough.”
For financial goals that are 3+ years away, Blaine recommends a well-diversified and boring portfolio that utilizes low-cost index funds. For significant purchases less than three years from now, using a high-interest rate bank account that offers a deposit bonus is the safest place for your money.
For any investor, attempting to time the market will likely lead to more failures than successes. Instead, it’s best to prepare for poor market conditions by already investing in safe, solid, well-established companies and index funds. By being proactive, instead of reactive, you can rest assured you’ll be able to weather any economic storms that may come.
Originally published at Wealth of Geeks
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