InvestorsFriend Inc. Newsletter
June 29, 2010
The UP-SIDE of DOWN
The Canadian stock market
lost 3% today (Tuesday June 29). And it's down over 8% from its recent
highs.
Most investors will see that
as bad news. But a drop in stocks is both bad news and good news.
For most investors, it's probably
good news.
Now obviously if you are
planning to cash out of the markets tomorrow to buy a house or something it
is bad news.
And if you are retired and
living off a 100% equity portfolio it's generally bad news especially the
older you are. That's because you would have no cash to invest in stocks at
lower prices.
But for most investors, lower
stock prices are good news.
Consider a young investor
just starting out, cheaper stocks are obviously unadulterated good news.
And consider a 50-year old
who plans to keep investing for ten more years and then retire. Lower prices
hurt the current portfolio value but also allow purchases at lower prices.
In ten years today's market dip is likely to be a distant memory. The
portfolio is likely to recover and so it's only impact will likely be the
fact that it allowed some bargain purchases. Basically, volatility is an
investors friend. It is something to be taken advantage of rather than
feared.
Will stocks continue to
plunge? Maybe they will, maybe they won't. I don't know and I don't think
anyone else really knows either.
Will stocks ultimately
recover and move to new highs? Almost certainly although it may be a while.
My strategy during this
latest market dip is to slowly add to positions in stocks I like. Many
investors would question the sanity of buying into a market correction. But
my belief is that no one knows when stocks will go back up. If I am to buy
at lower prices then buy I must. I don't need to spend all my
available cash all at once. But if I am to take advantage of lower stock
prices then I have to pull the trigger and buy at some point.
Remember March 2009, when
portfolios were decimated by losses? That really hurt. But it was also the
golden opportunity of a lifetime to invest at low stock prices. To those who
could see the opportunity, who had the funds to act and the bravery to buy
went the spoils.
Warren Buffett's Advice
I have read Warren Buffett's
advice over the years. His advice has been remarkably consistent over the
years.
Recently I summarized the
advice that he gave in his earlier investment years. In those early years he
was investing smaller sums of money and it is instructive to see what his
thinking was. You can get some understanding of how he though about bull
markets (dangerous) and bear markets (opportunity). You can review my
summary of Buffett's
early letters to investors here.
END
Shawn Allen, President
InvestorsFriend Inc.
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