The Safety Strategies to Embrace NowInvestors should follow these eight guidelines, while keeping an eye on their long-term investment goals.
Investors should:
1.
Stay in the Game: With such a dour near-term prognosis, it might be tempting to bail out of stocks indiscriminately. Do so at your own risk.
As Fitz-Gerald likes to say,
"you miss 100% of the shots you don't take. Staying in the game if at all possible always has been, and always will be, the pathway to profits."
2. Ta
ke What the Market Gives You: Bull markets aren't the only places you can make profits. The key is being nimble enough to recognize that the tide has changed.
3.
Consider Alternatives: An example of other profit opportunities right now involves commodities - most notably
gold and oil - which are worth buying on pullbacks (like we're getting now).
China and India, for instance, have both dramatically increased their resources purchases in recent years.
4.
Think Globally: The conventional wisdom used to be that you'd put 5% of your portfolio into "foreign" stocks. It's a new ballgame now, and some advisors say
the right number is actually 30% to 40%. 5.
Sell Strategically: Capture profits and protect your capital using
"trailing stops" that are gradually ratcheted up over time. This will help you raise cash ( which can be used to buy into the rebound when it eventually happens) without the emotional turmoil that causes most investors to make rash decisions that doom them to years of sub par profits.
6.
Hedge Your Bets: Use specialized inverse funds to hedge downside risk that will accompany the rollover to the downside and rack up significant gains at the same time.
7.
Deal in Dividends: Dividend-paying stocks pack a punch - no two ways about it.
8.
Keep Your Pencil Sharpened: Bear markets create bargains - often lots of bargains. Keep a shopping list of the companies you hope to buy, then wade in.
If market conditions remain uncertain, change up your tactics. For example, consider averaging into your position over days, weeks, or even months, to make sure you don't overpay. That can help you take advantage of lower prices while also keeping you in the game.
Think of it as a form of offensive defense. "Discipline never goes out of style," Fitz-Gerald says.
"Your best friend right now is a
carefully thought out, pre-planned investment program that helps you eliminate the kinds of knee- jerk reactions that are going to skin most investors for the third time in a decade - once on the way down, once because they buy in at the wrong time or with too much money, and once because they get left on the sidelines (again) when things eventually sort themselves out."
http://moneymorning.com/2011/09/26/inve ... ket-crash/
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"