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Friday, April 19, 2024

Chart o’ the Day: Buying stocks before, during and after the peak

 

Chart o’ the Day: Buying stocks before, during and after the peak

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What a friend we have in time 
Gives us children, makes us wine
Tells us what to take or leave behind
– John Denver

The good thing about having a long-term time horizon is that, with dollar cost averaging of the sort you do in a 401(k) or similar account, the effects of market peaks are eventually blunted. It begins not to matter that some of your allocation to the stock market occurred at high points.

But that’s over multi-year periods and decades.

J.P.Morgan Asset Management is out with its 2019 Long-Term Capital Markets Assumptions piece this week and, in the chart below, they take a look at the effects of ten-year returns for investors buying the S&P 500 a year before the market peaks, at the peak, and then a year later. In none of these cases are the results egregious, and again, the chart assumes a one-time lump sum, which is not the way people actually invest IRL. But anyway, here it is…

Speaking of market peaks, do not miss Michael’s excellent survey of charts looking at the drawdown in Amazon this fall. It’s one of only 25 stocks that have added over $100 billion in market cap since the March 2009 bottom, and since then its shareholders have had to endure five (5!) separate drawdowns of 20% or more. Despite these recurring drawdowns, the stock has appreciated at roughly 40% a year on average, which is breathtaking.

Did you know that Amazon has lost more in market cap this fall than THE ENTIRE COMPANY WAS WORTH IN 2016? True story, link below:

A Top or The Top? (Irrelevant Investor)

Source:

2019 LONG-TERM CAPITAL MARKET ASSUMPTIONS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY (JPMorgan Asset Management)

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