Should I Sell When the Stock Market Wobbles? Some Advice: Stuart Trow

A little more than a week ago financial markets appeared on the edge of a precipice, about to be overwhelmed by the delta variant’s insidious spread and the plateauing economic recovery. Yet just days later, the S&P 500 put in back-to-back record highs.

Such market tremors and uncertainty are disconcerting for market professionals. But they are particularly nerve-wracking for private investors, especially perhaps for the 15% who only began investing last year.

The question for non-professional investors is, when the storm clouds gather, should you stick or twist?

If your main priority is progressing toward future goals such as retirement, there are several things you can do to limit the fallout from market stumbles, while remaining true to the principles of long-term wealth accumulation.

The guiding principle of any successful long-term investor is the old adage, “time in the market, not timing the market.” The impressive compounding of investment returns is only possible if you remain invested. At the same time, trying to pick a market’s top or bottom is a fool’s errand.

In practical terms, this means recognizing that, as brutal as some of the sell-offs have been over the years, the recoveries have tended to be swift.