Should You Invest in Down Markets?
Most seasoned investors know, on an intellectual basis, that they capture what Ben Graham calls a “basic advantage” when they stand pat, and even put new money to work after the market has lost ground. But, the decision to invest — the pledging of hard-earned dollars — does not take place in the mind, but rather, in the gut.
When the market hits a rough patch in response to news about war, recession, home prices or unemployment, many investors are challenged to tune out that nagging little doomsayer ever chanting “it’s different this time.”
Truly, it takes a gutsy investor to shake off worry and stand firmly entrenched in investments when they have lost value; in some cases, a lot of value. In Graham’s view, this is capitalizing on that basic advantage — holding on for the long-term expected returns that we rely on capitalism to deliver.
Capitalism is alive and well. It is not suffering and it is not ill. It is simply doing its job. It is absorbing the decisions of all free market participants as they digest news about local, national and global events that occur on an ongoing basis — every minute of every day. These free markets rise and fall as investors express their confidence in the markets as they are impacted by such events.
Most often, the global markets absorb similar degrees of positive and negative news. As a result, markets are not significantly impacted in the short-term one way or the other, and they continue their slow and relatively steady increase over time. However, once every few years, the markets receive really big news that sends them much higher or much lower. Lately, credit worries have dominated the news, and the markets have responded negatively, with both the Dow and the S&P having reached the cusp of bear market territory with nearly 20% declines from their highs.
Those investors who panic and sell in such times will likely look back to realize that they permitted themselves to be stampeded, to borrow Graham’s phrase. In other words, their guts couldn't take it, and they lost faith in the markets, reacting to the illogical fear that there will be no future good news to move the markets forward.
Take a look at the chart below, it shows that over the past 69 years, capitalism has delivered 21 significant market downturns. Certainly, human nature being what it is, the sentiment “it’s different this time” was just as difficult to shake off during each of those events as it is right now. But, history shows that those who had the guts to put their faith and trust in long-term capitalism were ultimately rewarded.
(For better quality and full disclosure for the chart, please click to see the PDF document)

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