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MYBLACKJACKET.COM
- ARTICLE

How
To Manage Your Investments In Turbulent
Times
-Dollar Cost Averaging
- Beat the Market
- by doing
nothing In turbulent times, resist the urge
to mess with your retirement plan and you'll
come out ahead.
By Janice Revell, Money Magazine senior
writer October 24 2007: 2:31 PM EDT
NEW
YORK (Money) -- With the stock market back
near highs after a particularly rough summer,
it would be nice to think that gut-wrenching
turbulence is behind us.
But
who are we kidding?
With
dreary news coming out of the banking and
real estate scenes almost daily, and the
dreaded "r" word (as in recession)
getting tossed around, roller-coaster madness
is the new normal in the stock market.
It's
a scary situation. But it doesn't have to
wreck your retirement.
The
single most important thing you can do in
a turbulent market is stick to your 401(k)
game plan - that means contributing regularly
and definitely not panicking and selling.
In
fact, if you had stayed the course when
the stock market was tanking in July and
August, you actually would have made a far
better return on your money than if the
stock market had stayed flat - or even increased
modestly.
The
reason comes down to dollar-cost averaging.
Let's say, for example, that you contribute
$500 from your paycheck every two weeks
to your 401(k). Of that amount, let's further
assume that you are allocating 80%, or $400,
to a low-cost stock fund, such as Vanguard's
S&P 500 index fund.
Looking
back at the third quarter, you would have
made seven contributions (assuming you get
paid every other Thursday). Each $400 allocation
to the index fund would have purchased a
different number of shares. (see table)
On
July 19, for instance, when the fund was
trading at $143 per share, you would have
bought 2.8 shares. On Aug. 16, when the
price had tanked to $130, you would have
picked up 3.1 shares. All told, by the end
of the quarter you would have purchased
20.46 shares for a total cost of $2,800.
How
did the market overall do during that time?
By the end of September, it had just barely
recovered from the 10% plunge it took in
July and August, when the credit crisis
was in full swing. As a result, the Vanguard
S&P 500 index fund managed to eke out
a gain of just 0.8% for the third quarter.
But
you would have done much, much better. On
Sept. 27, the 20.46 shares you purchased
were worth $141 each, for a total of $2,885.
That translates into a 3% gain on your 401(k)
contributions for the third quarter - a
return that most professional money managers
would have killed for.
And
you would have gotten it because you had
the courage to keep buying as the market
fell.
By
the way, you would had gotten the same type
of great returns if you had been buying
stocks right after the Crash of 1987 - or
after any other big drop. As long as your
investing timeframe is long enough to allow
the market to climb back from a potentially
severe plunge - about 7-10 years - then
you will usually be far better off contributing
to your 401(k).
That's
not to suggest that dollar-cost averaging
alone is a panacea for anything that might
ail your 401(k). If we get another prolonged
bear market and you don't have a lot of
time on your side (if you're planning to
retire in 5 years' time, for instance),
your stock investments are going to take
a hit no matter what.
So
to be truly shock-resistant, your 401(k)
must hold a diversified mix of stocks and
bonds. And you have to rebalance every year.
I'll get into those issues in future columns.
In
the meantime, just remember that if you
have a decent time horizon and you're diversified,
your best bet in a volatile market is to
simply let your 401(k) do its thing. Resist
the urge to mess with it. You won't regret
it.
To
arrange a mortgage planning consultation
on strategies discussed in this article,
please call MYBLACKJACKET.COM
at (949) 481-9026
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