Daily Press (Sunday)

IS THIS THE TOP?

- By Elliot Raphaelson The Savings Game Elliot Raphaelson welcomes your questions and comments at raphelliot@gmail.com.

Trying to predict end of bull market can trip up investors

The bull market in stocks has lasted almost 10 years. Is it time to take profits and leave the stock market?

In recent years, many experts have predicted incorrectl­y that it is time to reinvest somewhere else. Frankly, I have no idea when this bull market will end, and neither does anyone else with certainty.

Jason Zweig, a financial analyst who I respect, wrote a relevant column recently in the Wall Street Journal. He pointed out that since the bull market started, the total return for stocks has been more than 400 percent. However, he pointed out that U.S. stocks are not cheap now, selling at about 32.8 times their long-term average earnings, adjusted for inflation, according to data from economist Robert Shiller at Yale University.

Zweig also pointed out that analysts expects interest rates to rise, that some large technologi­cal companies are faltering, trade wars seem to be spreading, and emerging market economies are struggling. Despite all these factors, Zweig believes that the right thing for longterm investors is “to do nothing” most of the time.

Zweig goes on to reference Nobel prize winner Daniel Kahneman, a psychologi­st, who has often said that one of the keys to successful investing in the long run is “minimizing your future regret.”

Zweig interprets that to mean that

“the bigger, more frequent steps you take, the more opportunit­ies you create to look back and regard them as mistakes.” He believes that “all your actions should be small, gradual and reversible.”

His advice is sound, and I have followed this approach for almost all the years I have been investing.

When I retired about 20 years ago, I developed a portfolio of approximat­ely 50 percent in bond funds and 50 percent in diversifie­d common stock funds, mostly index funds. After determinin­g the amount that I had to withdraw to meet recurring living expenses, I made regular monthly withdrawal­s primarily from the bond funds. At least once a year, I rebalanced my portfolio.

Because almost all of my investment­s were in retirement accounts, I could rebalance without incurring any capital gains taxes. I have followed this approach throughout my retirement, which included both good and bad years for the stock market.

Using this approach, whenever the stock market did poorly in a particular year, by rebalancin­g at the end of the year I was investing more in common stocks and less in bonds. I never tried to outguess the market, and this approach has worked for me.

During the last nine years, by rebalancin­g at the end of each year, I took some profits from the common stock side of my portfolio and re-investing them into bonds. Naturally, if I had advance knowledge that the stock market would do so well, my portfolio would be worth more today without rebalancin­g.

I have no regrets, however, because I know I will never be able to predict high and low points, and I don't have confi- dence that anyone else can.

Since I retired, I have been able to earn some income through teaching and writing. I have used dollar-cost averaging for this income into diversifie­d common stock funds, never trying to predict tops and bottoms. This approach has worked well for me even though there have been years in which stocks underperfo­rmed.

Many investors, facing a drop in the market about 10 years ago, sold all their stocks and never came back, thus losing the potential gains of the last nine years. They decided not to take small gradual steps, but instead made one large step, trying to out-guess the market. Even Warren Buffett doesn't try to guess tops and bottoms.

If you want to succeed in the markets, decide how much risk you are willing to take, structure your portfolio accordingl­y and take a long-term approach, making gradual steps. Don's try to predict tops and bottoms. No one can.

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