Missing the Bus

Missing the Bus

Imagine waiting for a city bus to take a ride across town. You’re not doing anything important, perhaps just going out to do some shopping. It’s 11:55 am and you are five minutes early to catch a ride at noon. According to the schedule, the bus should come every 15 minutes. As you wait, a few people are already waiting for the 12:00 bus, and more join in.

Noon comes and goes, but the bus is nowhere to be seen. Some people get annoyed and start making calls to inform others of their delay. A small group gives up and calls for taxis or rideshares. Since you have no urgent plans, you decide to wait for a while. Ten minutes pass, then 20, then 30. Finally, at 12:50, a bus arrives and begins picking up passengers. But now, due to the delay, and three missing buses, there's not enough room for everyone waiting at the stop. You consider waiting for the next bus. The question is…when will it arrive?

Perhaps there was some severe traffic congestion that held up every vehicle on the road. It is possible that the next three buses (the ones scheduled for 12:15, 12:30, and 12:45) could be coming along right behind this one. That assumes that the bus currently loading is the 12:00 that arrived 50 minutes late. The other possibility is that this is the 12:45 bus and it is only five minutes behind schedule. That would mean that something more substantial than traffic occurred, and maybe the three missed buses are never going to show up. You simply don’t know when the next one is coming.

There have been 27 bear markets (defined as a market decline of 20%) in the United States since 1928. This averages out to about one every three or four years. One extremely short bear market (only 33 days) occurred between February and March of 2020 when fear around the COVID pandemic caused a market drop (as measured by the S&P 500) of around 34%. Prior to that quick downturn, the most recent bear market had been the one that took place in 2009. This means there was a period longer than a decade (April 2009 through January 2020) when we didn’t see a single occurrence of something that we could reasonably expect to happen every three or four years!

Which brings us back to our cross-town bus... KEEP READING HERE

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Matthew Miller, CFP?的更多文章

  • Unsolicited Advice for Next Gens Seeking a Better Life

    Unsolicited Advice for Next Gens Seeking a Better Life

    For the first time in American history, a significant number of 30-year-olds are not as financially well-off as their…

    2 条评论
  • Deal or No Deal: Lessons in Decision Making

    Deal or No Deal: Lessons in Decision Making

    "Deal or No Deal" was a wildly popular American TV show that aired from 2005 to 2019, capturing audiences with its…

  • The Healthiest Age to Retire

    The Healthiest Age to Retire

    I recently received a call from one of my clients who told me he had decided to retire. He is 49 years old.

  • Building Trust in an Uncertain World

    Building Trust in an Uncertain World

    “Beware of anyone who says they know. Trust me, they don't, or they wouldn't have to say they did.

  • Chutes and Ladders

    Chutes and Ladders

    In 1943, the Milton Bradley Company started selling the popular children’s board game “Chutes and Ladders.” The game is…

    2 条评论
  • What Anchor is Holding You Back?

    What Anchor is Holding You Back?

    I started playing competitive volleyball when I was about 16 years old. I had played a little bit in gym class but had…

    4 条评论
  • 3 Personal Finance Lessons from the Twitter/Musk Fiasco

    3 Personal Finance Lessons from the Twitter/Musk Fiasco

    For readers who don’t follow tech industry news, I will offer a brief history of the events surrounding Elon Musk’s…

  • Even the Rich are Broke!

    Even the Rich are Broke!

    When I wrote “The Joneses are Brokes!” in February of 2016, readers were alarmed by a Federal Reserve Report stating…

  • Three Lessons on Becoming Bulletproof

    Three Lessons on Becoming Bulletproof

    (*A quick note* Ever since Michael Douglas won 1987’s “Best Actor” Oscar for playing Gordon Gecko in Wall Street…

  • Insanity, Idiocy, and Ice

    Insanity, Idiocy, and Ice

    Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac? ~…

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了