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#like damn let me just spend the entirety of my four day weekend traveling
sluttyten · 2 years
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if it was just up to me I’d be on my way home by now, but I’m staying with my best friend at her boyfriend’s house, and she told me last night that she wants to sleep in and go to a local mall this morning (which doesn’t even open until 11), and then we have to stop in another city because I promised an old coworker I was close with that we’ll stop and see her since we’re going that way anyway, but now I’m like probably not getting home until late afternoon, but if I left now, or like an hour and a half ago when I woke up, I’d be home by a little bit after noon, actually earlier than that because there’s a time change somewhere in there
#I tried telling her the other day when she first mentioned the mall that I don’t really want to go#but she really wants to#and it’s kinda annoying because it’s a little bit out of our way?#like it’s the same general direction that we’re going in but not really#and also she’s gonna be up here again in like two or three weeks? she can just go then#it’s not like she needs to go she just wants to see this one store that our mall at home doesn’t have anymore#and I just want to go home 😭😭 I barely wanna stop and see my friend in the other city now#but I also really do because I want to see where she works and that’s where we’re meeting her#but also if I get home at a decent enough time I might be going out of town again tonight lol because there’s somewhere my mom wants to see#that’s like a two hour drive away from home#like damn let me just spend the entirety of my four day weekend traveling#(I’m fine with it mostly) I just hate that right now I’ve been awake for an hour and a half just waiting#at least I’ve been writing#working on yesterday’s kinktober prompt#I think I’m nearly done and then I’ll start on the one that’s supposed to be for today#I don’t even know how I’m gonna post these now that I’m a few days behind#bc if I post them all at once then I feel like they’re just not gonna get notes#but we’ll see#I’ll probably post at least the day 14 and 15 tomorrow#hopefully 16 and 17 too but since those two still need to be written and I have to work tomorrow idk what’s gonna happen
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samuelfields · 6 years
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Q&A: What to do when you lose $113,000 in the market
When the stock market took a hit in October 2018, we saw the usual knee-jerk headlines:
Blip or downturn? What the market meltdown means for your money
Is it time to sell before we hit bottom?
Stock market meltdowns have become frighteningly common
Out of sheer curiosity, I decided (stupidly) to check how it impacted me. And … well, It didn’t look pretty.
Damn. That’s more than $113,000 lost because of a single bad day in the market! If anyone should be worried about this, it should be me … right?
Not at all.
I decided to reach out to a few publications to give my thoughts on the matter. One of those turned into a Q&A that didn’t get used. It had a lot of great information outlining my feelings on the issue though. That’s why I wanted to show you the Q&A in its entirety today.
Why I didn’t worry when I lost more than $113,000 in one day
Money is a very emotional thing, so what does it feel like to lose $100k in two weeks?
It feels like nothing. This was money that I had invested for the long term. If the market goes up or down, it makes no difference to me.
On a side note, notice most of the “hot” emotions we use to describe money: “guilt,” “worry,” “concern,” and “embarrassed.” Once you have a plan and you stay disciplined about it, those change into “cool” emotions like “confidence,” “empowerment,” “freedom,” and “security.”
Many experts say “don’t look at your statements,” but you looked … why is that?
Because I was stupid. I was reading Twitter (mistake #1) and saw a bunch of charts and words like “crash,” so, of course, out of morbid curiosity, I logged in to see how it affected my money.
The real lesson here is that no matter how much you think you “know” yourself, when the markets go down and the media starts blaring red alarms, you can’t predict how you’ll act. That’s why it’s so important to have a long-term plan that you trust.
Do you have specific numbers on what funds/sectors dropped the most, and did it make you rethink any allocations?
I didn’t touch a thing because we know that the market returns on average 7% to 8%. That means some years (or months) the market goes up, some years (or months) it goes down.
Typical human instinct in times of crisis is to do something. What is your strategy?
Basically I just close the window on my Vanguard account and go find the next episode of Better Call Saul on Netflix.
Sometimes the best thing you can do is nothing. In fact, in investing, that’s almost always true. Research by Dalbar showed that investors get below-average returns because they try to time the market.
Pick a solid asset allocation for your age, automate your money, and just keep investing, month in and month out. Investing should be boring. That’s when it’s profitable.
What behavioral tricks do you adopt to keep yourself from panicking?
Four things:
I don’t log in to check, except once a month, or in some cases, once every six months.
I’ve spent the time up front to get my asset allocation nailed down. I’m in my mid-30s, so my portfolio is more aggressive than that of someone in their 60s.
I’ve built my savings up — automatically — every month for years. This is the power of having a strong set of financial habits and automating my finances.
I remember to live life outside of the spreadsheet. If you sit at your computer all day, agonizing over you portfolios and investment calculators, of course you’re going to easily become obsessed over the highs and lows of the stock market and react irrationally.
Many media headlines are designed to play to our emotions, so how can people avoid feeling scared?
We’ve seen headlines like:
“Let Me Count the Ways Stock Markets Are Tanking”
“Stock market drops again, wiping out 2018 gains for the Dow and S&P 500”
“Yesterday’s Stock Market Plunge Points to More Trouble Ahead”
You know what’s funny? These articles love talking about the “tanking” week — but if they zoomed out and showed you the last 10 years, one week’s drop hardly registers at all. Those articles sell clicks, not good information.
I suggest being careful about where you get your news. It’s like that saying that you’re the average of the five people you hang out with the most. Well, your knowledge about the world around you is the average of the five sources of news that you’re reading. That’s why you should choose carefully when it comes to your news diet.
We have enjoyed one of the longest bull markets in history … are people dealing with “recency bias,” i.e. expecting that the market will always go up and up?
When your dimwit uncle is telling you about a “sure thing” you need to invest in (cough, crypto), that’s a very good red flag.
By the way, I hear a lot of people saying, “The market is too high right now, so I’m going to wait it out.”
Index Fund Advisors did a study where they found that over a 20-year period, investors would have earned a 7.2% return. However — and this is amazing — if they missed the 5 best-performing days, that return would have dropped to 5.02%. If they missed the 20 best days, that dropped to 1.15%.
This means that successful investing is not about timing the market, it’s about time in the market.
You have a big online community, so what mistakes have you seen others make in times of big market drops?
They get scared and sell.
They stop investing. Many people did this in 2009 and missed some of the best returns of their lifetimes.
How can investors reframe these moments in their heads as potential buying opportunities?
Think about it this way:
When the price of toothpaste drops, that’s good. When the price of milk drops, that’s good. When the price of stocks drops, if you’re a long-term investor, that’s also good.
But be careful. I’m not saying you should take all your money and go in all the way. The key is to automatically invest every single month — regardless of what the market does. By having a system in place that does it for you, you don’t have to worry about the day-to-day happenings with the market.
You are newly married, so what advice do you have on sharing bad money news with your spouse and staying on the same page?
I’ve been married for three months so now I feel qualified to give everyone in America marriage advice.
My advice is to make money a regular topic of discussion. For example, I’ll send my wife an article I read about millennial investors and we’ll talk about it over dinner. We do a monthly review of our finances. We’re building the habit of talking about money regularly so it’s not a taboo topic.
What’s the best advice you ever got about coping with this kind of market turmoil?
It’s easy to get swung by the whims of the market — left, right, whatever is trending. That’s the recipe for an unhappy life and poor returns.
A better way to spend your time and energy is to sit down one weekend with a good personal finance book, automate your finances, and move on with your life.
The key to living the Rich Life you want and not worrying about your gains and losses in the day to day is to live life outside of your spreadsheet.
Win the game of advanced personal finance
If you’re a high-earner who is:
Maxing out their 401k and Roth IRA
Automating their savings
Earning more than six-figures each year
… you probably have a lot of questions that don’t apply to an average investor. That’s why I want to offer you the chance to join my course How to Win the Game of Advanced Personal Finance.
This course takes you inside my advanced personal finance system and will show you “what’s next” once you’ve handled the fundamentals.
You’ll learn:
How I use a “Personal CFO” to manage my finance — stress-free — without losing control.
The psychological changes of managing money at advanced levels.
Advanced tax optimizations.
How much you should spend on your financial advisors (don’t spend more than this!)
The red flags to watch out for when hiring a CPA.
How to “lean into” where you want to spend more — whether it’s convenience, luxury, travel, charity, or relationships.
We’re opening How to Win the Game of Advanced Personal Finance until Monday, November 12, at 11:59pm Pacific. Check out the full product breakdown here.
Q&A: What to do when you lose $113,000 in the market is a post from: I Will Teach You To Be Rich.
from Finance https://www.iwillteachyoutoberich.com/blog/qa-what-to-do-when-you-lose-113000-in-the-market/ via http://www.rssmix.com/
0 notes
mcjoelcain · 6 years
Text
Q&A: What to do when you lose $113,000 in the market
When the stock market took a hit in October 2018, we saw the usual knee-jerk headlines:
Blip or downturn? What the market meltdown means for your money
Is it time to sell before we hit bottom?
Stock market meltdowns have become frighteningly common
Out of sheer curiosity, I decided (stupidly) to check how it impacted me. And … well, It didn’t look pretty.
Damn. That’s more than $113,000 lost because of a single bad day in the market! If anyone should be worried about this, it should be me … right?
Not at all.
I decided to reach out to a few publications to give my thoughts on the matter. One of those turned into a Q&A that didn’t get used. It had a lot of great information outlining my feelings on the issue though. That’s why I wanted to show you the Q&A in its entirety today.
Why I didn’t worry when I lost more than $113,000 in one day
Money is a very emotional thing, so what does it feel like to lose $100k in two weeks?
It feels like nothing. This was money that I had invested for the long term. If the market goes up or down, it makes no difference to me.
On a side note, notice most of the “hot” emotions we use to describe money: “guilt,” “worry,” “concern,” and “embarrassed.” Once you have a plan and you stay disciplined about it, those change into “cool” emotions like “confidence,” “empowerment,” “freedom,” and “security.”
Many experts say “don’t look at your statements,” but you looked … why is that?
Because I was stupid. I was reading Twitter (mistake #1) and saw a bunch of charts and words like “crash,” so, of course, out of morbid curiosity, I logged in to see how it affected my money.
The real lesson here is that no matter how much you think you “know” yourself, when the markets go down and the media starts blaring red alarms, you can’t predict how you’ll act. That’s why it’s so important to have a long-term plan that you trust.
Do you have specific numbers on what funds/sectors dropped the most, and did it make you rethink any allocations?
I didn’t touch a thing because we know that the market returns on average 7% to 8%. That means some years (or months) the market goes up, some years (or months) it goes down.
Typical human instinct in times of crisis is to do something. What is your strategy?
Basically I just close the window on my Vanguard account and go find the next episode of Better Call Saul on Netflix.
Sometimes the best thing you can do is nothing. In fact, in investing, that’s almost always true. Research by Dalbar showed that investors get below-average returns because they try to time the market.
Pick a solid asset allocation for your age, automate your money, and just keep investing, month in and month out. Investing should be boring. That’s when it’s profitable.
What behavioral tricks do you adopt to keep yourself from panicking?
Four things:
I don’t log in to check, except once a month, or in some cases, once every six months.
I’ve spent the time up front to get my asset allocation nailed down. I’m in my mid-30s, so my portfolio is more aggressive than that of someone in their 60s.
I’ve built my savings up — automatically — every month for years. This is the power of having a strong set of financial habits and automating my finances.
I remember to live life outside of the spreadsheet. If you sit at your computer all day, agonizing over you portfolios and investment calculators, of course you’re going to easily become obsessed over the highs and lows of the stock market and react irrationally.
Many media headlines are designed to play to our emotions, so how can people avoid feeling scared?
We’ve seen headlines like:
“Let Me Count the Ways Stock Markets Are Tanking”
“Stock market drops again, wiping out 2018 gains for the Dow and S&P 500”
“Yesterday’s Stock Market Plunge Points to More Trouble Ahead”
You know what’s funny? These articles love talking about the “tanking” week — but if they zoomed out and showed you the last 10 years, one week’s drop hardly registers at all. Those articles sell clicks, not good information.
I suggest being careful about where you get your news. It’s like that saying that you’re the average of the five people you hang out with the most. Well, your knowledge about the world around you is the average of the five sources of news that you’re reading. That’s why you should choose carefully when it comes to your news diet.
We have enjoyed one of the longest bull markets in history … are people dealing with “recency bias,” i.e. expecting that the market will always go up and up?
When your dimwit uncle is telling you about a “sure thing” you need to invest in (cough, crypto), that’s a very good red flag.
By the way, I hear a lot of people saying, “The market is too high right now, so I’m going to wait it out.”
Index Fund Advisors did a study where they found that over a 20-year period, investors would have earned a 7.2% return. However — and this is amazing — if they missed the 5 best-performing days, that return would have dropped to 5.02%. If they missed the 20 best days, that dropped to 1.15%.
This means that successful investing is not about timing the market, it’s about time in the market.
You have a big online community, so what mistakes have you seen others make in times of big market drops?
They get scared and sell.
They stop investing. Many people did this in 2009 and missed some of the best returns of their lifetimes.
How can investors reframe these moments in their heads as potential buying opportunities?
Think about it this way:
When the price of toothpaste drops, that’s good. When the price of milk drops, that’s good. When the price of stocks drops, if you’re a long-term investor, that’s also good.
But be careful. I’m not saying you should take all your money and go in all the way. The key is to automatically invest every single month — regardless of what the market does. By having a system in place that does it for you, you don’t have to worry about the day-to-day happenings with the market.
You are newly married, so what advice do you have on sharing bad money news with your spouse and staying on the same page?
I’ve been married for three months so now I feel qualified to give everyone in America marriage advice.
My advice is to make money a regular topic of discussion. For example, I’ll send my wife an article I read about millennial investors and we’ll talk about it over dinner. We do a monthly review of our finances. We’re building the habit of talking about money regularly so it’s not a taboo topic.
What’s the best advice you ever got about coping with this kind of market turmoil?
It’s easy to get swung by the whims of the market — left, right, whatever is trending. That’s the recipe for an unhappy life and poor returns.
A better way to spend your time and energy is to sit down one weekend with a good personal finance book, automate your finances, and move on with your life.
The key to living the Rich Life you want and not worrying about your gains and losses in the day to day is to live life outside of your spreadsheet.
Win the game of advanced personal finance
If you’re a high-earner who is:
Maxing out their 401k and Roth IRA
Automating their savings
Earning more than six-figures each year
… you probably have a lot of questions that don’t apply to an average investor. That’s why I want to offer you the chance to join my course How to Win the Game of Advanced Personal Finance.
This course takes you inside my advanced personal finance system and will show you “what’s next” once you’ve handled the fundamentals.
You’ll learn:
How I use a “Personal CFO” to manage my finance — stress-free — without losing control.
The psychological changes of managing money at advanced levels.
Advanced tax optimizations.
How much you should spend on your financial advisors (don’t spend more than this!)
The red flags to watch out for when hiring a CPA.
How to “lean into” where you want to spend more — whether it’s convenience, luxury, travel, charity, or relationships.
We’re opening How to Win the Game of Advanced Personal Finance until Monday, November 12, at 11:59pm Pacific. Check out the full product breakdown here.
Q&A: What to do when you lose $113,000 in the market is a post from: I Will Teach You To Be Rich.
from Money https://www.iwillteachyoutoberich.com/blog/qa-what-to-do-when-you-lose-113000-in-the-market/ via http://www.rssmix.com/
0 notes