Breaking News from The Globe and Mail
Don't assume the worst is over
Rob Carrick
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
OTTAWA —
Don't be fooled by this morning's stock market resurrection......with the stock market falling over 600 points yesterday and regaining more than 500 points today, it's just a game of yo yo. I would expect this to continue over the course of most of 2008.
Central banks strapped an oxygen mask onto the stock markets this morning, and the S&P/TSX got right up off the floor. The U.S. markets were still down close to 200 points, but that's only because were playing catch-up with yesterday's global market decline. By the standards of what happened on Monday, the U.S. markets have today sustained a mere paper cut
...just a note: yesterday the US stock markets were closed due to Martin Luther King day...then last night there was an emergency meeting with the Federal Reserve discussing the world markets and their huge declines. The U.S. decided to lower the federal central bank's interest rate by .75% , and this avoided mass carnage of the US stock market today, but they still had a decline of 128 points. Canada lowered it's Bank of Canada interest rate by .25%. For both countries, this is just a temporary fix, and will not fix the credit problems nor avert a recession.
The biggest mistake an investor could make right now is to assume that the worst of this market decline is over. This is no time to do some power shopping in the bargain bin. .
the other biggest mistake an investor can do right now is to sell, or bail out of the market. That's like jumping off a tall building, when there really is no reason to. Remember, take the emotion out of all of this, and it's just a 'market down turn'... and we all know that if markets can go up, they also can go down.
Nibble, yes. Buy a taste of a stock you've had your eye on. But don't get carried away because the markets are going to go lower before they go higher. This morning, one of the bigger bulls on Bay Street conceded this point.
“Despite some buffeting from globally leveraged energy and materials stocks, the TSX now faces the prospect of sustained selling pressure over the next quarter and possibly as long as the next six months,” said Jeff Rubin, chief economist and market strategist at CIBC World Markets.
Mr. Rubin sees a mid-year low of 11,000 for the S&P/TSX composite,
.(...so do I. Really folks...it's so possible...and it's not just a Canadian thing, it's global...I show you below) which implies a 10-per-cent decline from today's level. He then expects a 2,000-point rally by year's end, and
more gains ahead in 2009.
Some investors are going to be tempted to sell now and buy back at the bottom of the market. Unfortunately, likely to completely miss the market bottom and end up costing themselves money.
The better plan: take some cash and add to your best stocks and funds every so often over the next few months.
This strategy is called dollar-cost averaging and its main purpose here is to allow you to catch stock prices at low levels while preventing you from committing all your new money just as the market plunges anew. There are academic studies showing that making lump-sum contributions to your investments is a better strategy on the whole than dollar-cost averaging.
But here we're looking at the psychological aspect of things as well as the financial.
If you make the sensible move of buying stocks when they're falling in price, it's best for your piece of mind if you risk only a bit of money at a time.
© The Globe and Mail
Look at the global stock markets here: as of today, Tuesday January 22, 2008
S&P/TSX +508.75 12640.88
DJIA -128.11 11971.19
S&P 500 -14.69 1310.50
Nasdaq -47.75 2292.27
Venture +75.41 2465.93
DJUK
+7.18
242.46
DJGER
+.43
293.55
Nikkei
-752.89
12573.05
HSeng
-2061.23
21757.63
Ok... TSX mid February last year (2007) mid 13,400
HSeng (hong kong) just a few months ago was sitting at 29,000
Nikkei (Japan) also just last summer was sitting at around 18,000
Our Nasdaq was doing so nicely when it flirted with a high of 2700..not so long ago!
So... you can see that yes, markets around the world are having a tough time... and it's a great thing, as now it's a good time to buy into market, but in bits and pieces over time (dollar cost averaging)!!!
Hang in there everyone. This is NOT the end of the world, it's just a normal part of the economic cycle!!