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11/16/2008 6:59:56 PM
http://ftalphaville.ft.com/blog/?p=18150I mostly agree that buy-and-hold has had too many holes shot in it to follow through with it. Obviously, now is a good time to buy, but the thing is - normal investors won't get in at a time like this, and are much more likely to get in during a bubble when other people tell them to and loose all their money.But honestly, there are people on both sides of the spectrum that frustrate me. For one, brokers that tell you to buy and hold and that given enough time, you will be shielded from the volatility of the market. This is simply not true. There have been 5 times in the last century when a 10 year investment in the entire stock market would have been outperformed by 30 year T-bills. This is an entirely normal outcome - to invest over the long term and essentially get screwed. It's happened before and it will happen again.On the other side of things, the vicious short sellers and doomsters are not wrong in thinking that there is no long term growth to be spoken of. Nonetheless, we're currently seeing a lot of models crashing into the ground right now that were built of the idea of continued growth in the 90s that just can't hold true anymore.The behavior we're seeing now (1998-2002-2008) is similar to what the 70s saw. Get used to it. The market follows HUGE swings as well as small swings. And right now, we have to brace for a huge paradigm shift, at the end of which, we are all a lot less well off than we thought. The good news is, the markets may have already corrected for this. The bad news is, we can't be sure if it did so enough.You see the market dividends on that chart? What kind of idiot would think that a market could sustainably operate while paying out dividends of less than 2%? That behavior is simply built for a model that no longer applies - rapid expansion of the economy. We've had out growth, it's time to start writing paychecks, but the companies don't get it yet. They still want to reinvest into faltering sectors.Anyway...Buy and hold is no different than market timing. It just implies a different time scale.
11/16/2008 7:29:47 PM
11/16/2008 8:09:43 PM
11/16/2008 9:20:08 PM
11/16/2008 9:44:24 PM
easy on the quotes d00d
11/16/2008 9:54:44 PM
yeah, probably best for all involved to just let this one die
11/16/2008 11:13:17 PM
11/16/2008 11:48:05 PM
11/17/2008 12:24:42 AM