Market Timing
The simple fact is no one can know 100% for
sure when it is the proper time to get out of a stock. Those
highly invested in Technology at the turn of the century were
clearly devastated by their decision, and this is precisely why
you should diversify.
Of course you know it's good strategy to buy
low and sell high. All the professionals know how to and even
have cutting-edge software to help them know when to take
advantage of the market trends and do so optimally, as well you
should too. I just hope you can see that in the long run, it's
not as important a factor as one might think, simply because
the scale is expanded so much more over time. Day traders have
to look out for the $0.01 changes during a daytime trading
session, but if you are investing in the long term, you only
need worry only about $1 losses, not 1 penny... So do the
technical analysis, and if you see the time is right, take
advantage when you can... Just don't sweat it in the long run,
even if the market behaved unexpectedly… Over 30 years, it HAD
to have come way up and by the end you won't even remember the
little bit of stress you had today.
I can't stress this point enough, really...
Too many people lose sleep at night over such a silly thing.
Sure, the indicators are there, but the message they convey to
you is not some huge landslide that will set you up for life.
It's only an indication of change, not of fortune. It makes me
laugh all the time when I see such a mess made about market
timing. For instance, here's some popular books out right now
that seem to make a huge deal over the importance of market
timing:
New Market Timing Techniques by
Thomas R. DeMark
New Look at Technical Analysis by
Bob McCullough
The New Science of Technical
Analysis by Thomas R. DeMark
Streetsmart Guide to Timing the Stock
Market by Colin Alexander
Go ahead and look at them, you won't hurt my
feelings. Buy one if you like, there's bound to be some good
advice in there somewhere. However, many universities such as
Harvard and Oxford have done numerous studies into market
timing, and none have ever shown that the bother is worthwhile.
Certainly not on the micro scale, and that's what makes day
trading so risky. Take away the invariance of the
moment-to-moment uncertainty and you are left with a market
trend of 17% growth per year on average. Why doesn't everyone
see this? Are we really all so greedy as not to see these
simple facts?
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