Gordon Gekko
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There was already a 10 % correction in february in the space of a few days and a nearly 20% correction at the start of 2016 from which there was a rapid recovery, but you want to protect yourself from a measly 5%. Then if you go defensive presumably that means in euros, you protect the value of your fund denominated in euros, but then the euro crashes due to italy or greece wobbles. Then you worry about the euro so you try to switch to dollars or precious metal funds. This was exactly what was happening in 2010 when everyone was really worried about future of euroAsk the same question on the downside and I think there is better than a small chance the equities could fall 4-5% this year.
Yes if you are trying to time the market to the day and avoid all downside but I have used the free switches that my pension allows to be more defensive at times and more aggressive at others in my choice of funds. I might go three years without doing a switch and I might do two in one year but it has worked out for me. Thinking of going defensive again for the second time this year. Getting to the point where I would be happy to sacrifice lost upside to offset the risk of a major correction. Too many geo-political issues at the moment. Bexit, Italy, Iran, North Korea, Trade wars, Oil prices, rising volatility etc etc.....Doesn't mean that equities will tank in the next 6 months but I don't think the possibility of any potential gains compensates me for the downside risks.
And no, I am not trying to time the market. I accept I will miss out on potential upside and I also accept that I won't call the bottom when I come back in but generally speaking it works out well.
Sunny, you’re displaying all of the worst behavioural traits of private investors when left to their own devices.
You are highly likely to end up materially less well-off as a result of your approach.
The worst behavioral traits of private investors are feeling confident and buying when the market has done well and feeling pessimistic and selling when the market has done badly. Thus by definition buying dear and selling cheap.
This is the exact opposite of what Sunny is attempting, (wether successfully or not I do not know) to do.
I don’t know Gordon wether you don’t understand this basic point or are just repeating market insider nostrums without reading Sunny’s posts.
There was already a 10 % correction in february in the space of a few days and a nearly 20% correction at the start of 2016 from which there was a rapid recovery, but you want to protect yourself from a measly 5%. Then if you go defensive presumably that means in euros, you protect the value of your fund denominated in euros, but then the euro crashes due to italy or greece wobbles. Then you worry about the euro so you try to switch to dollars or precious metal funds. This was exactly what was happening in 2010 when everyone was really worried about future of euro
cremegg,
I understand perfectly what Sunny is claiming.
I don’t believe that it’s possible.
If Sunny can do what’s being claimed, then he/she shouldn’t be wasting time with us and should be off on a yacht in the Bahamas.
Stephen, funny enough just starting looking at the Prisma funds to see if it works. Trying to get historical information about what allocations have been since launch but hard to get any information. Curious to know how active it is managed.
Sunny,
Is Saxon Warrior going to win the Derby?
I’m tempted to lump on at Evens.
Gordon
Nobody has ever lost money investing in global equities over any 20 year period since records began. And I’m talking real, not nominal.
Nobody has ever lost money investing in global equities over any 20 year period since records began. And I’m talking real, not nominal. That should be the starting point for any investor, albeit de-risked depending on his/her risk tolerance.
Now let’s take your approach, Sunny, which is to chop in and out due to (say) the political concerns that you cited earlier. It’s a flawed approach and one that condemns you to poor returns unless you are the Messiah.
A couple of further points, the returns from that fund sound poor. Global equities should have delivered around 10% over those periods.
I for one congratulate Sunny for his wisdom and for sharing his experience
It was obvious back in 2008 when p/e was through the roof that equities were overpriced.
What Sunny is saying makes perfect sense and this is a game pension fund managers get paid to do world over
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