Did I ruin my chances by missing the bull run and starting late?

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  • #130211 Reply
    Shawn

      Everyone feels that way at some point in their investing journey, the very skittish drop out, never get back in and insult the stock market the rest of their life.

      Don’t be that guy.

      DCA every check into something cheap and diversified. Like VTI.

      Unless the whole country goes bottom up, You’ll be happy you did.

      #130212 Reply
      Mark

        I got shaken out in 1987. I got shaken out again in 2001. After that I did have an overweight in bonds which helped me psychologically stay invested through 2008/2009 even though I was unemployed (retired, but didn’t know it at that time) and if you look at the market since 2009 you can see I did well by remining in the market.

        Of course I would be about 500% better off had I stayed in the market in 87 and 01 and invested regularly, but I am ok now only because I finally learned my lesson.

        #130213 Reply
        Warwick

          I did the same. Put rental house sale proceeds of $650k in Feb and now I’ve lost $150k. Gutting.

          I’m 55 so only have 10 years before I need it

          #130214 Reply
          Tracy

            Hold the line and keep investing as it sinks. Be sure you have a decent emergency fund and enough that’s not volatile to last 5-10 years as you get closer to retirement.

            #130215 Reply
            Sheila

              Go back and reread the chapter “There’s a major market crash coming”

              #130216 Reply
              Allen

                You needs to sell ASAP! Jump back in when the market collapses.

                #130217 Reply
                Steph

                  I found an investment the other day that allows you to get the gains if it goes up and they refund you a portion if it goes down.

                  That’s where I’ll be.

                  #130218 Reply
                  Tom

                    You got the formula buy and hold, over and over. We are comfortably retired after 33 years of investing.

                    I’ve lost track of number of dips, crashes, periods of volatility we went through to get here.

                    Even now we are down 210k in the last few days. Is it fun, no. But it is part of investing.

                    Down times make the good times just that much sweeter.

                    Hang in there, this shall pass.

                    #130219 Reply
                    Tom

                      Stay the course! I had a similar experience with the Covid sell off. Mindset gets better the more time goes on.

                      In 20 years I can almost guarantee you will be happy you invested that initial amount.

                      #130220 Reply
                      Jeff

                        Entered in multiple buy orders today. S and p Bounced at -10% about to bounce at -20% . And if it blows through it will bounce at -35%. Bigger positions the lower it goes.

                        These levels have been respected many, many, many times..

                        #130221 Reply
                        Dew

                          I think the one big take away here is that you were not unlucky. If that’s your conclusion then you’ll just run into the same issue again and again.

                          The problem is that you tried to time the market.

                          Now I suppose the unlucky part is having a bad financial advisor who encouraged you to do that.

                          But timing the market doesn’t work, so the situation you’re in is exactly what we should expect from a market timer.

                          You should be optimistic and zoom out. Imagine yourself several years from now with a much bigger portfolio after staying invested in the market.

                          That’s the mindset to have to be a successful investor.

                          #130222 Reply
                          Kristin

                            How are the tariff setting. You back? Stocks have dropped and now you’re buying them on sale.

                            Doesn’t that put you ahead once they recover?

                            #130223 Reply
                            Anca

                              You should still have an advisor. I do know more than the average person about investing, and also do research like crazy, but I still have a guy I can bounce ideas off of.

                              You don’t need to have ALL of your investments with him. Just a thought.

                              Also, there’s plenty of time to buy.

                              There’s a consensus that this is still not the bottom…. Give it another 6-8 weeks

                              #130224 Reply
                              Scott

                                You are 3 months from retiring, or you’re already retired. Otherwise, sitting on the sidelines or selling, is just crazy stupid.

                                You haven’t lost a dime unless you sell.

                                Everything you buy right now is on sale relative to 10 yrs from now. You’re not unlucky, every penny you invest now will pay off in spades.

                                People selling when crap like this happens always wind up being broke and telling a story about how they used to be in the market, but the whole thing is rigged and it’s someone else’s fault why they’re broke.

                                Don’t be that person. Keep working, and keep buying. You’ll thank yourself 10 yrs from now.

                                #130225 Reply
                                Tom

                                  Chin up. You can now buy stocks at 2023/24 prices so you haven’t missed out on anything.

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                                Reply To: Reply #130222 in Did I ruin my chances by missing the bull run and starting late?
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