I’ve posted Entry #677 to my weekly Valuation-Informed Indexing column at the Value Walk site. It’s called Stock Losses Are a Real Setback Even Though One Day Prices Will Recover.
Juicy Excerpt: Stock prices will recover. They will return to where they were before they crashed and eventually rise to new highs. This is the story that Buy-and-Holders tell investors who are worried about suffering losses. No! It’s your money on the line. Do not fall for the trickery!


When did stocks drop and then not recover? It is funny how you say that when considering buy and hold that only the drops should be counted, yet we should not factor stock increases or recovery. The fact remains that over any 30 year period, buy and hold has always worked. Drop have always recovered and stocks have gone on to hit new highs. Meanwhile, we have never seen even one successful outcome with market timing and have seen how you went broke.
Stocks always return to the price level that applied on the day before a price crash. How could they not? There are real economic gains of 6.5 percent real per year. Eventually, the accumulation of real economic gains are going to overtake the effect of any price drop. That has always happened and that must always continue to happen for so long as the U.S. economy remains productive.
That’s a very far cry from saying that there is no need for every investor to always, always, always remember to practice market timing. Irrational exuberance gains are not real. They are an illusion created out of investor emotion. If you want to Stay the Course in a meaningful way, you MUST lower your stock allocation when there has been a flood of irrational exuberance pumping stock prices up to crazy, unsustainable levels. If you fail to do so, you are permitting your risk profile to change for no good reason. Huh?
Real gains and losses should both be counted. The fantasy/irrational exuberance stuff should be ignored. We all possess a Get Rich Quick/Buy-and-Hold impulse that makes us long to treat irrational exuberance gains as real. We should all be doing everything we can to help other investors appreciate that irrational exuberance is dangerous garbage and should not be counted. That’s the opposite of what the Buy-and-Holders do. They treat irrational exuberance gains as if they were real. They don’t even subtract for the effect of irratioanl exuberance when reporting the safe withdrawal rate. Not this boy, you know?
The Bennett/Pfau research shows that Valuation-Informed Indexing (Buy-and-Hold with market timing added) has been trouncing Buy-and-Hold for as far back as we have records of stock prices. Surprise! Sutprise! It’s a logical impossibnility that it could ever turn out any other way. Price discinpline is absolutely essential to the functioning of every market that has ever existed. All that Shiller did with his amazing, Nobel-prize-winning research is to show that the stock market works in the same manner as every other market that has ever existed.
I hope that that helps a tiny bit, Anonymous.
Rob
“ The Bennett/Pfau research shows that Valuation-Informed Indexing (Buy-and-Hold with market timing added) has been trouncing Buy-and-Hold for as far back as we have records of stock prices. Surprise! Sutprise! It’s a logical impossibnility that it could ever turn out any other way. Price discinpline is absolutely essential to the functioning of every market that has ever existed. All that”
That is not the case. In fact, Evidence posted the numbers from Wade’s study and asked you to discuss it, but you refused. Since Wade’s study, the market has continued its rise faster than the VII model, making the gap even wider to the favor of buy and hold. You even acknowledge that by saying that the market is not behaving like you thought it would based on history. Thus, your own words disprove the market timing model.
High stock prices have remained in place a lot longer than I expected. That’s a stone cold fact.
Rob
And that is the critical flaw in your timing scheme.
I don’t think so.
People certainly need to know that short-term timing doesn’t work. And some may elect not to engage in any form of timing at all as a result. That’s their choice. I don’t have any problem with that.
But others will choose long-term timing if they are able to hear advocates of both Buy-and-Hold and Valuation-Informed Indexing make their case. We are already at 10 percent of the population. Once we open every site to honest posting re the research, I am confident that we can get to 20 percent within six months. It will take longer to get to 40 percent. But we will get there in time.
Every investor should be able to hear both sides and decide for himself which way to go. I am going to advocate Valuation-Informed Indexing. I have no problem being friends with Buy-and-Holders or with showing them the respect they merit for their many important contributions. But I am not going to say that I personally believe that Greaney included a valuation adjustment in his retirement study. I do not believe that he did. So I am going to tell people that I believe that his retirement study lacks a valuation adjustment.
Rob
It is simple math, Rob. Also, 20 years is not short term timing.
It’s not 20 years. Prices crashed in 2008. They returned to high levels in late 2009. It’s now late 2023. That’s 14 years.
Once we open every site to honest posting re the research, we can get that number down. The more people there are who practice market timing, the quicker prices will correct. If everyone practiced market timing, there would be no irrational exuberance. It wouldn’t be an issue. We would just price stocks properly. What a concept!
Rob
Anyone sticking to buy and hold over the last 20 years has had a successful retirement. Anyone holding to VII has failed. I use this as an example as it is applicable to our respective ages. Feel free to suggest another timeframe.
Adjust the numbers to reflect the effect of irrational exuberance and you get the opposite result. You’re saying “fantasies are amazing so long as no one ruins them by telling the truth.” I’m saying “fantasies hurt people, so it is best to tell the truth as soon as possible.”
Rob
My adjustments show that I should have twice as much in the next decade.
Okay.
I wish you the best of luck with it, Anonymous.
Rob
Since your book is going to be finished in July, will you be getting a job at that time?
It’s possible. I’m leaning toward taking six months to spread the word re the book first.
Rob
So you will now be getting a job about 1 year from now, correct?
That’s how things lookl at the moment. That obviously changes if we experience the onset of the next Buy-and-Hold Crisis sometime during 2024.
Rob
Unfortunately for you, we have been living under a market timing crisis.
You seem like a very thorough guy Rob. Have you kept track of all your previous estimates of when your book would be finished? What would that data suggest about there likelihood of your current estimate being accurate?
Unfortunately for you, we have been living under a market timing crisis.
Good one, Anonymous.
Rob
You seem like a very thorough guy Rob. Have you kept track of all your previous estimates of when your book would be finished? What would that data suggest about the likelihood of your current estimate being accurate?
I don’t keep track of those. The general point you are making is a fair one. I have failed to meet target dates a number of times. My experience with this book has been consistent with my experience with my first book. It’s a very hard thing to do to write a book. I think there’s an inclination to be optimistic when setting a target date because there is such a great desire to finish. But things always take longer than one would think. But progress is being made all along and the thing does get finished in the end.
I wouldn’t bet $1,000 that I’ll meet the target date. I think it’s a realisitc date. But, yes, I suppose that it is possible that there will be difficulties that I am not today expecting. I certainly will not have the book printed until I feel that it is perfect. I don’t blame you if you are skeptical re the target date. But I am certainly not in the same place where I was a year ago. There obstacles that I have been blasting through. There are large portions of the book where I haven’t felt a need to change a word in several years. So things are moving along. Just a lot more slowly than I would like.
Rob