Hi username
I believed it myself until a few years ago when someone on askaboutmoney pointed out the nonsense that it is.
Loads of articles online to show that it's complete bunkum.
This is a fairly good one:
Myths and Fallacies of Dollar Cost Averaging
Because a quick look at some average P/E ratios would suggest reasonable prices rather than 'massively over priced' as you seem to think.
timing is the key difference between great investors and the majority , there are thousands of great companies out there , getting them at the right price is the trick , take VW , its still a great company but anyone who bought last week or worse three months ago , has made a horrible call
Hi Landlord
I think Brendan is absolutely right when he says that you have learned something about yourself from this experience - you have learned that you actually have a very low risk tolerance.
Hi landlord
I don't think you learned anything materially new about the market in those 6 weeks. You did learn something important about yourself, though.Brendan
I dont see where the massive overvaluation is, maybe some of the US tech companies were. Its not 2000 or even 2008. I think there is alot of fear with the Chinese shenanigans before that the Greek crisis and now the refugee crisis. I think the political instability is the backround to the big stock market swings. Also the there is much more money now trading in the markets and exagerating the volatility. I think 20 years ago you would not have seen such big daily movements and you probably would not have been able to view them minute by minute.
Who can get the timing right all the time. Warren Buffet, the greatest investor there has been doesn't engage in it.
VW is a great example of luck...or bad luck. They could have looked like a great value stock but who was to know they were rigging the diesel tests on their cars? There's no timing in that, it's illegal activity.
Steven
http://www.bluewaterfp.ie (www.bluewaterfp.ie)
I really don't understand why all these people you read that say the stock market is over valued don't just short sell the stock market and after the crash they can buy back at a fair price and make a killing. The stock market is there for buyers and sellers. The weight of money will decide the price of VW and other stocks , my guess would be it is not value to buy it now and it was not a bad buy last week , it's going to incur a significant loss now so the weight of money has valued it now at a fair price.
VW stock price might come back to what it was within a year or so (nobody knows) but people will probably say it was great value after it lost 40% and everyone should of bought it , but I be more inclined to think its now a high risk stock likely to be volatile if you buy it your taking on a risky asset so rewards but also losses should be greater.
VW is an extreme example but great investors can spot trends which are outside the basic rules of thumb when it comes to valuations ( PE , BV , PEG ) , its how full time traders are able to make a living , they sell great companies with tremendous growth prospects all the time , they would have sold apple @ $134 earlier this year and bought it back in the mid nineties august 24 th ( the day markets had a ten minute huge dip )
in the short term , the markets are rigged and regular people cannot make money due to stocks being shorted etc , take bank of ireland , its currently around 14% below where it was at peak in early summer , this despite a great set of results a few months ago and the irish economy going from strength to strength , an average investor might have bought it @ 38 cents in jun , a good investor would have waited for a pull back to where it is now
if you have enough patience ( ten years plus ) , everyone will do fine
Therefore the average investor should just ignore all the drama then. I read that the huge sell off on August 24 where the dow dropped 1000 points within minutes of opening was caused by computers all doing the same thing, basically they were all programmed to sell when the market opened, computers dont go drinking at the weekend so none of them knew that they were all going to do the same thing monday morning. This software was created by smart people but they all ended up doing the same thing like a herd jumping off a cliff.
during a stampede of selling like happened august 24th , many big institutions will have been shorting the market like hell , only to then buy back with the same vigour
during a stampede of selling like happened august 24th , many big institutions will have been shorting the market like hell , only to then buy back with the same vigour
Who can get the timing right all the time. Warren Buffet, the greatest investor there has been doesn't engage in it.
Steven
http://www.bluewaterfp.ie (www.bluewaterfp.ie)
So, the take away is simply that retail investors should only invest for the long term and ignore the noise in the intervening period. Market timing is a fool's game.
Which institutions would those be and how are they 'shorting the market'?
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