So, does your personal opinion reflect the need to move assets into money market/cash options (ie Tarheel's statement of being 90% cash)? I still have investments in high risk/long term mutual funds/stocks but I'm getting very antsy despite the steadfast advice I constantly hear to wait it out. Is it time to redistribute said funds into lower or reasonably priced mutual fund options or into money market options? The more that time goes by, and the more action I see our gub'ment take, the more scared I become. My portfolio is diversified amongst American and European investments, and is about 70 percent high/medium risk long term mutual fund investments/stocks with 30% being invested in more stable money market accounts. Anyone's input and personal experiences will be appreciated. I've already lost a shitload of money, but it's about balanced out with the amount of money it made before the bottom fell out. The account is about 7 years old, and I'm about to be 30.
My opinion is that the market is bouncing on the bottom (further indication today as we hit 7600 and bounced back) we will continue to do that. I think that for the next 16 months or so you will see the market rally and then drop rally then drop etc...until finally it will start to pick up some steam.
A couple of schools of thought...in your situation I would not pull out of the market and go into MM. We are past that point. You are young the market will rebound, if you can afford too the best thing for you (IMO) is to put more money into the market. Now I say that not knowing your current money situation, so obviously only dump money in if you can afford too.
The theory is called dollar cost averaging, the principle is simple, if you buy a stock at $50 a share, and said stock drops to $30 dollars a share and you now buy one additional share you now own 2 shares of stock for $80 ($50+$30=$80). However what is important about this is that you have just dropped your cost basis, so when you owned 1 share of stock at $50 and it dropped to $30 a share you were down $20 or roughly 66% however after buying the second share you have now lowered your cost basis to $40 (2 shares divided by $80) so now you are down $10 or 25% and when the stock rises up to $90 dollars you make more of a profit as well.
If you were to pull out of the market and go into cash, your next thought would be? When to get back in? Most people deal with investments with emotion. In other words buy high and sell low....not what you want to be doing. So when the market creeps back up your thoughts would typically be should I get back in...no I'll wait. Now say the market goes to 10,000 well guess what you just missed out on 2000 points of that market upswing.
If you are concerned about your investments an alternative is looking at the investments themselves see how they have performed, how have they performed in previous historcal downturns? How long has the manager been there? Rather than selling and going into the Money Market maybe make a switch in funds, not something less risky like fixed income, but switching equity for equity.
Then again ...what do I know