Investors Need to Prepare for Chaos
Donna Skeels Cygan, CFP?, MBA
After a 22 yr. career in financial planning, I am writing my 2nd book "Becoming Enriched." I speak publicly, do podcasts, and help journalists with articles.
Uncertainty is always present. It impacts our health, our family and friends, and our investments. We can control many factors involving our finances—such as our saving and spending, maintaining an emergency fund, and avoiding credit card debt. But we can’t control the stock and bond markets. Lately, the chaos feels much greater than normal.
The situation in Washington, DC, feels turbulent. As I write this on February 24, 2025, many U.S. government workers don’t know if they have a job. Many countries in Europe are facing economic turmoil, and parts of the Middle East feel like they are ready to implode. The folks near Los Angeles who lost their homes in the January fires likely feel more uncertainty and chaos than we are feeling, but no one knows what natural disaster (or act of aggression) may happen next.
Investors like steady, positive returns. The U.S. stock market often reacts negatively to chaos, although it has been amazingly (or, should I say, eerily) calm in recent months. The S&P 500 has averaged an 11% return over the past 10 years. Some experts predict low returns over the next 10 years, but no one knows for sure.
How Can You Prepare?
The best thing you can do is follow your plan and manage your money wisely. This may seem simple, but it requires that you have a plan (many do not), and that you manage your investments rather than neglect them in prosperous times.
Let’s focus on these two issues.
What Is Your Financial Plan?
As you create your financial plan, be aware that investors have many biases that interfere with making wise decisions; one of the strongest is called “recency bias.” This is a tendency to (often unconsciously) place more emphasis on recent experiences rather than on pertinent events that occurred further in our past. Humans tend to have short attention spans, and this can negatively impact our investment decisions.
The S&P 500 declined 18% in 2022, but it increased 24% in 2023 and 23% in 2024. It seems reasonable that we would remember the positive returns of the past two years and assume the future returns will be positive. However, I would argue that an investor should remember that the S&P declined 54% between October 2007 and March 2009. During the “2008 Financial Crisis” many people lost their jobs and their homes, and the U.S. economy was in a total meltdown. The U.S. government doled out $700 billion in a bailout program called TARP (Troubled Asset Relief Program).
Is it reasonable that we could experience something similar to the 2008 Financial Crisis again? Mark Twain famously said, “History doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes.”
Manage Your Investment Accounts (Don’t Neglect Them)
Managing your investments will be easier if you educate yourself on financial topics. Consider the following books: How to Retire, by Christine Benz; The Four Pillars of Investing, by William Bernstein; and The Psychology of Money, by Morgan Housel.
If the U.S. stock market remains calm and favorable for the next 10 to 20 years, all investors will be thrilled. However, if it becomes turbulent next month or next year, you will be better prepared if you take the above steps. Investors are never guaranteed a smooth ride.
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Donna Skeels Cygan, CFP?, MBA is the author of The Joy of Financial Security, and her upcoming book Becoming Enriched. She owned a fee-only financial planning firm in Albuquerque for over 20 years before recently retiring. She welcomes emails from readers at [email protected].
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Author of "A Richer Retirement"
1 周Notice that "Chaos" scores a lot higher than "Order"! Scrabble provides some perverse incentives!