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Final Approach
I hate seeing them drop so much but I know the advice is to let it ride. Just makes me sick to see my money evaporate.
David
David
The evaporation is virtually certain to be temporary. This is just mild turbulence -- 10% over a few days. It isn't "advice" to let it ride, it is historical data that says letting it ride is a winning strategy.I hate seeing them drop so much but I know the advice is to let it ride. Just makes me sick to see my money evaporate ...
The evaporation is virtually certain to be temporary. This is just mild turbulence -- 10% over a few days. It isn't "advice" to let it ride, it is historical data that says letting it ride is a winning strategy.
When my stuff is going up I follow the market. When it's going down I am a long term investor. This attitude has served me well. I was 100% equities for the 1987 crash (23% 1-day) and didn't make a move. About 75% equities for 2007/8 (50%) and didn't make a move. Right now I am 50% equities and sitting on a bunch of cash hoping for a Dow 14,000 buying opportunity. I think we're overdue for a 20%+ correction. If it happens I'm a buyer. If not, 50% is not a bad allocation for where we are in life.
For confidence, read anything by William J. Bernstein. http://www.efficientfrontier.com/
From Bill Bernstein:It still hurts.
I hate seeing them drop so much but I know the advice is to let it ride. Just makes me sick to see my money evaporate.
David
... sure thing ...
Conoco Phillips, six year low right now, dividend yield 7.5%. Dividends can change, but not likely very much. Petroleum stocks not a good idea for the long term, but here's a short term sure thing that'll net you 7.5% return.
Conoco Phillips, six year low right now, dividend yield 7.5%. Dividends can change, but not likely very much. Petroleum stocks not a good idea for the long term, but here's a short term sure thing that'll net you 7.5% return.
Agreed. This is a great time to buy. If you can.It's all in your mind. Keep buying, don't stop.
I am recently retired, so I am not contributing any more. So this really really hurts. I lost ~$40k today and around $200k this week.
This really hurts.
But I did just buy a new house on the river for cash, so that is cash that won't devalue much in the long term.
Isn't Buffet buying COP?
I had actually purchased some COP last year, chasing that 6% (at the time) dividend.
Liquidated it a few weeks ago, taking losses in it in 2015 to offset gains elsewhere.
I've been in the market since before the Dow broke 1,000 for the first time. Through ups and downs. Using dollar cost averaging to my benefit. Overall, with patience, it's worked out.
So far.