Set forth below is the text of a comment that I recently posted to the discussion thread for another blog entry at this site:
Rob: Do you believe that Robert Shiller’s Nobel-prize-winning research showing that valuations affect long-term returns is legitimate research?
Buy-and-Hold Goon: I believe in outcomes.


Outcomes are what pays the bills, not your interpretation of what you think is peer reviewed research.
Some outcomes are temporary, some are permanent. There’s all the difference in the world between real economic gains and irrational exuberance. If you count them as the same thing, you will end up getting the safe withdrawal rate wrong and causing a lot of early retirees to suffer an extremely serious life setback. What if you post at a discussion board that is populated by a lot of aspiring early retirees? It would seem to me that in time you are going to become friends with those people and desire to post honestly about the numbers that they are using ti structure their retirement plans.
I get it that the last 40 years of peer-reviewed research is viewed as a threat by the Buy-and-Holders. Still, we permit honest posting under our laws I believe that the Buy-and-Holders need to learn how to respect the laws of the country in which they live, They are free to follow Buy-and-Hold strategies if they please. They are free to recommend such strategies to others. They are not free to advance death threats and engage in acts of extortion. Each of us gets to decide for ourselves whether we will take the last 40 years of peer-reviewed research into account or not when deciding on our stock allocation at a particular point in time. Each Buy-and-Holder gets to make that choice for himself or herself. None get to decide for others by engaging in intimidation tactics that make people afraid to give voice to their honest thoughts re how stock investing works.
That’s my sincere take re these terribly important matters, in any event.
My best and warmest wishes to you and yours, Anonymous.
Rob
You have made countless predictions of doom, yet have been wrong every time. True buy and holders have faced market drops, followed by recovery and new highs. Meanwhile, we have yet to see one successful case of market timing. What we see now is that your reactions are based on envy, thus you either delete posts or make up stories about criminal acts. None of that will help fund your retirement.
It’s a logical impossibility that there could ever be a case of market timing (the long-term variety) not working. I mean, come on. Market timing is price discipline. What would you say to a car salesman who told you that it is not necessary to practice price discipline when buying cars, that’s it’s best to just leave your checkbook with the dealer and let him take out whatever amount of money he sees fit? You would think that that’s insane. Well, that’s just what our Wall Street Con Men friends are saying when they say that there might be some alternate universe where it is not always 100 percent necessary for all investors to practice market timing when buying stocks. Not this boy, you know?
I do wish you all good things, in any event.
Rob
“ It’s a logical impossibility that there could ever be a case of market timing (the long-term variety) not working.”
Really? You can’t even show just one successful outcome. It hasn’t even worked for you. As for your car analogy, you are proving my point. We know the price of stock when we buy it, just like cars, and the prices continue to rise in the long run. When was the last time you bought cars or stocks?
The last time I bought a car, I engaged in price discipline. I had a price that I thought was fair and that I was willing to pay. When the price that was offered me was too far above the fair price, I walked away.
That’s exactly how I believe people should go about buying stocks. If we all exercise price discipline (market timing!), we would never again see the sort of CAPE value that applied today. That means that we would never again see the economic crises that inevitably follow when our Wall Street Con Men friends are able to persuade millions of investors that this might be the first time in history when a pure Get Rich Quick/Buy-and-Hold strategy might work out well for one or two long-term investors.
There’s a reason why it has never happened. It is a logical impossibility that it ever COULD happen. The Bennett/Pfau peer-reviewed research just confirms that what our common sense tells us must be so really is so.
My sincere take.
And my best wishes to you.
Rob
“When the price that was offered me was too far above the fair price, I walked away. ”
Was the type of car you were looking for available at any dealer at a price you though fair?
Yes. That’s because the automobile market is FUNCTIONAL.
A market sets prices by trying different possibilities and seeing which one attracts buyers. If an automobile dealer tried to get away with charging an insane price, he would be put out of business. Buyers would learn that he was offering bad deals and would avoid him.
That’s how I would like things to work in the stock market. If we permitted honest posting re the peer-reviewed research, investors would understand that they need to lighten up on their stock allocation a bit when prices get out of hand. That lightening up would pull prices down until they were again at reasonable levels. So investors would always be able to purchase stocks are good prices.
It is the criminal behavior of you Goons that has brought on the insane CAPE level that applies today. Investors are not exposed to the information they need to make informed stock-buying decisions. So the market has become dysfunctional. A market is an information-transmitting system. When death threats and acts of extortion enter the picture, information cannot be transmitted effectively. So eventually the market collapses and we all suffer the consequences.
We all should want a functional stock market. We all should be speaking up in favor of the idea of opening every large investing site to honest posting re the past 40 years of peer-reviewed research in this field.
My sincere take.
Rob
The stock market is functional. A few moments ago I checked the price of Microsoft (MSFT), it was 299.32.
If someone tried to sell MSFT shares at say $350 they would not get any sales.
The quoted price of 299.32 means that someone thought that was a reasonable price to pay for 1 Microsoft share and someone else though that was a reasonable price to sell 1 Microsoft share.
Those people wouldn’t be having the same thoughts if we permitted honest posting re the last 40 years of peer-reviewed research at every site on the internet. There’s no way of knowing the accurate price for an individual stock today because the relentless promotion of the pure Get Rich Quick/Buy-and-Hold “strategy” has pushed the price of everything up too high. We know that the nominal price of the market as a whole is today at two times it real value. That suggests that the nominal price of most individual stocks is too high as well. The only way to find out for sure is to start applying the same laws that apply in every other field of life endeavor in the investment advice filed as well.
Rob
“ Those people wouldn’t be having the same thoughts if we permitted honest posting re the last 40 years of peer-reviewed research at every site on the internet. ”
……..Cuz all us moooorons are jez too stoopid, right?
I knew about the error in the Greaney retirement study when I put my first post to the Retire Early board. I didn’t say anything until three years later. I guess I must be pretty darn stoopid too.
A bull market is a liar’s market. When a large number of humans get together and say “why don’t we all pretend that we have a lot more money saved than we really do,” they call that a bull market. And the humans all have something inside them that makes them want to go along with the funny joke and not call out the b.s.
Yes, the humans are stoopid in some important ways, Anonymous. But Shiller helped us advance in a huge way in our understanding of how stock investing works when he published his Nobel-prize-winning resesrch. I think we should give ourselves permission to talk about it and begin living far richer and better lives as a result. Sue me, you know?
Rob
As the title points out, we know who is right by looking at outcomes. Market timing has never had a successful outcome. Buy and hold has never had a failure.
Okay, Anonymous.
I wish you all the best that this life has to offer a person, in any event.
Rob