How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Market

Victor Haghani, James WhiteAdvisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

When is a good time to put more of your savings into the stock market? This question stresses us out because for as long as most of us can remember, the market has usually been in one of two states, neither of which feel great for putting our hard-earned money into the market. Either the market is at or approaching an all-time high, which can make it feel risky to invest, or it’s heading south, which can feel even worse.

The chart below confirms this impression. Over the past 75 years, the US stock market was within 5% of its all-time high about 60% of the time (the orange segments), and then another 25% of the time, the market was in or near a bear market (the red segments) as signaled by the market trading below its one-year moving average. That leaves only 15% of the time for periods when it would have felt comfortable, using these criteria, to invest in stocks (the green segments).

Stocks all time high graph

1Throughout we use “stocks” and the “stock market” interchangeably to refer to broad-market equity exposure, not the purchase of individual stocks.