Lessons From a Crazy Year In Financial Markets
https://www.wsj.com/articles/lessons-from-a-crazy-year-in-financial-markets-11609410602
Markets don’t perfectly reflect the economy
It pays not to try to time the markets
Forecasts are just forecasts
The tech trade is only getting bigger
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I remember first seeing a bar chart about "missing the best days of the stock market" in 1994, when the company I was working for transferred the 401K plan management to Vanguard Funds. Even as a 30-something, I could see the fallacy in the chart, because it is distorted. It was much like a timeshare presentation where only positives are presented. So I raised my hand and asked, "What would the returns have been if the worst 5 and worst 10 days had been avoided? He did not have an answer, because that side of the same coin would have supported the idea of timing the market to avoid the worst days.
If someone is interested in exploring this idea some more, Google "missing best 10 stock market days fallacy."
Nevertheless, I thought it would be interesting to see how my 4 round trip market timing trades this year compared to the 5 best and worst days of 2020. I was double-short for the fourth worst day (March 9) and closed out the QID position on the 2nd worst day (March 12) for a 39% gain. I opened a double-short position on the 3rd worst day (Sep. 3) and still held it for the 5th worst day (Sep. 8) and the 5th best day (Nov. 4) closing out the position on Dec. 1 for a -15% return (market timing does not guarantee a winning trade every time).
I was in cash for the worst day of the year (March 16th), the best day of the year (March 13th), the second best day (March 24), the fourth best day (March 17th) and the third best day of the year (April 6th) .
So I was in cash and completely missed 4 out of the 5 best days of the year and was on the wrong side of the market for the fifth, yet my 4 trades yielded returns of:
+6.6% QQQ
+39% QID
+43% QQQ
-15% QID
and the current QQQ position has a 4% return
for a compound annual return in 2020 of 91.1%
This year was by far the best year since I started timing the market in 2008. Many years there are no trades. I have never calculated each year to determine how much more I have due to market timing, but it must easily be 3-4 times versus if I had stuck with "buy and hold for the long term." Nothing wrong with that strategy, but I knew too many "buy and holders" who sold out at the worst times in 2008 and swore off the stock market for good. Much like people who get burned by a timeshare purchase and think they are scams.