I completely agree with what is being pointed out here, that by the time you see recovery, you could have already missed out on some of your portfolio's biggest gains....
There is a lot of money waiting on the sidelines right now, and they're all waiting to see who will take the first plunge before following suit.
This is strictly just my personal opinion, but I don't think we have seen the bottom yet either.... We still have a housing glut, unemployment is still high, we are still going through bailouts, Fed interest rate just hit 0% with Bernanke talking tough about "more drastic measures", and Obama is still planning a massive second stimulus package. And the market is being surprisingly upbeat about all this? Well, I can see why, but if you think about it, none of this points to an economy that has fundamentally shifted towards recovery. All this points to efforts to try to stop a wagon that is still slipping backwards.
Ah, but the problem for me is, how do I know how far it will slip and for how long? And that's assuming that I am correct that it will slip some more to begin with. So, rather than worry about timing the bottom somewhere, I simply stay the course and keep contributing as I already have been and leave it at that.
Fact is, most stock investments at this level is already pretty dirt cheap. So, if it goes down some more, I will be buying it at an even more discount, and if it doesn't, I didn't miss the train. At least that's how I choose to look at it.
There is a lot of money waiting on the sidelines right now, and they're all waiting to see who will take the first plunge before following suit.
This is strictly just my personal opinion, but I don't think we have seen the bottom yet either.... We still have a housing glut, unemployment is still high, we are still going through bailouts, Fed interest rate just hit 0% with Bernanke talking tough about "more drastic measures", and Obama is still planning a massive second stimulus package. And the market is being surprisingly upbeat about all this? Well, I can see why, but if you think about it, none of this points to an economy that has fundamentally shifted towards recovery. All this points to efforts to try to stop a wagon that is still slipping backwards.
Ah, but the problem for me is, how do I know how far it will slip and for how long? And that's assuming that I am correct that it will slip some more to begin with. So, rather than worry about timing the bottom somewhere, I simply stay the course and keep contributing as I already have been and leave it at that.
Fact is, most stock investments at this level is already pretty dirt cheap. So, if it goes down some more, I will be buying it at an even more discount, and if it doesn't, I didn't miss the train. At least that's how I choose to look at it.

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