Motley Fool Money - Investing When You’re Down
Episode Date: February 5, 2022Some of your stocks getting stung? Ours too. Tim Beyers and Robert "Bro" Brokamp offer some mindset help and historical perspective on this Saturday classroom. They discuss how you can be opportunisti...c in a down market, and how to think about your cash position. If you have cash and our looking for stock ideas, our free Investing Starter Kit includes 15 stocks and 5 ETFs. For a copy just go to http://fool.com/StarterKit Stocks: SBUX, AMZN Host: Tim Beyers Guest: Robert Brokamp Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineers: Rick Engdahl, Dan Boyd Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I've tried to make this point, bro, like even if you don't dollar cost average, like every month,
if what you do is buy a little bit at a time, you're still going to get ownership in businesses
at different price points. And gathering a whole bunch of different price points is just,
it's a little bit like eating vegetables. It's just good for you.
I'm Chris Hill, and that was Motley Fool's senior analyst Tim Byers.
If your portfolio is like mine, over the past few weeks, you've probably seen some red and felt some pain.
Today, Tim talks with Robert Brokamp, certified financial planner and the Motley Fool's resident retirement expert.
They offer some tips on mindset, some questions to consider before you hit the sell button,
and they discuss ways to be opportunistic in a down market.
I welcome, fools. We're going to talk some market volatility here.
I'm Tim Byers. Here with me is Robert Brokamp.
Bro, how are you feeling? Does Mark volatility getting to you?
Every once in a while, it absolutely is. I mean, it's kind of a mixed bag, really. On the one
hand, no one likes to see their net worth drop. On the other hand, if you are in a situation
where you have some cash on the side or you're in the accumulation stage of your life,
you are buying stocks at cheaper prices. So it really depends an awful lot on where you are
along the road to retirement. Put a pin in that for a second because I think that's a really
important point, knowing where you are and what your goals are, is particularly important.
But let's just assess as we start out here where we are at this moment. The market has been
incredibly volatile. As we're taping here, this is a few days before when this podcast recording
drops. You may be hearing this over the weekend and we were recording on Monday. But we've seen
a lot of days where the market started up or started down and then just completely reversed.
And it wouldn't surprise me at all if that's happening again. This kind of roller coaster volatility,
I think that's the part that may be new for investors who've been around for a while.
And if you're a new investor and I've never seen this before, this is normal-ish.
we've seen a lot of drawdowns over the course of time, a lot of bare markets. But things seem to be
moving much faster these days, Robert. And if we put these in some perspective, stocks are moving
up and down, maybe a 10 to 20 percent moves in the matter of days and sometimes hours versus
in years past, that might be weeks or months.
You think that's fair to say?
Yeah, I would think so, and especially if you are a newer investor
and you're investing in certain companies that have gone down considerably more
than the market, right?
As we speak now, you know, S&P 500 down is maybe almost 10% for the year.
NASDAQ and S&P 600, which is small-cap stocks down,
maybe closer to 12 to 14%.
But there's something like a third of the stocks are,
down by like 30 to 40 percent.
It's really just happened for many of these stocks in the last month.
It can be very shocking if you're not used to it.
Right.
And let's address the elephant in the room.
Most of those stocks, they are stocks recommended by Motley Fool services.
Full stop.
And we know that.
We know that that is what's happening here to a lot of members and particularly new members.
So we have new members who've come in and we've seen this story a lot.
heartbreaking, bro, because we have somebody who comes in and they've taken our recommendations,
and then suddenly they have multiple stocks, maybe the majority of stocks in their portfolio
are down somewhere to 30 to 50%. If that's you, this podcast is aimed at helping you navigate
this right now because the instinct you may have in this moment is to say, this is a bad
environment. This was a mistake, and I need to get out. And we're going to talk about why and a little bit
why it may not be a good time to get out. But I do, I mean, that pain is real, bro. I mean,
somebody sees that on their brokerage statement. They see that much red. They go to CNBC or they go to
our site. They go to Yahoo Finance and they see that much red. It causes real emotional pain.
Maybe this isn't everybody. I'll just only speak to it from my perspective. But I think when you start to see that red, Robert, the first thing that happens is you start to reevaluate, I don't know if I'm going to get to do what I want to do. So, for example, am I going to have to delay retirement? Like, that's a real thought that happens, right?
Yeah, absolutely. And ultimately, that's why we're investing, right? We're not investing
so that we can see bigger numbers on our brokerage accounts. We're investing because we want to
pay for something in the future. For most people, that's retirement, it could be college
savings, could be a second home, but we all have goals. And it just feels very difficult
when you think you're at a certain pace to reach that goal, and then after a month or two or
three, you now seem farther behind. And I would say, the pain is real.
And I think it's important to know that we're right there with you.
Many of the stocks that you own that are down 30, 40, 50%, 50%, we own as well.
Now, having the benefit of being a long-term investor, I joined the Fool in 1999, and I was a financial advisor for a few years before that.
So I've been through this.
So I can just tell you that the pain is real.
It hurts now.
But if you stick it out, you'll be happy that you did.
Yeah.
Well, let's talk about some of the historical data.
because I joined as a contractor back in 2003.
And so I've been through multiple market down cycles, including investing through the great financial crisis.
You and I both invested through the dot-com and then subsequent dot-bomb periods.
If you've been at this for a while, you know that every market drawdown is different.
And so what we're talking about just a couple of minutes ago is what seems to make this market drawdown different is,
is it's even faster than what we've seen previously.
In other words, the drawdown acceleration is going even faster than it usually goes.
And David Gardner has made this statement before, and it's a great one.
In talking about markets, he says, the market always goes down faster than it goes up,
but it goes up more than it goes down.
This is a slightly different market drawdown and that it's happening faster.
but market drawdowns are still market drawdowns.
So let's talk about some stats, some things we know about market drawdowns,
beginning with the most important one, I think.
The market goes down once every three years,
but on average, two out of every three years, the market is up, right?
Right, exactly.
And I'll draw it back all the way back to 1928,
and I'm going to use the stats.
stats from Ben Carlson of Riddle's wealth management, and that you have to expect that
roughly two-thirds of the years that the market is going to go down 10%, just in the course of the
year. And you can expect 20% declines about a quarter of the years. And then you have 10%
of the years. You can expect drawdowns of 30 to 40%. You have to expect that these types of things
happen. I think what feels different about now is these stocks,
that were sort of the darlings of 2020 and even the beginning of 2021 have seen significant drops
that probably a lot of people aren't used to.
So we have members who want to know, like, have we seen this before?
You know, 30, 40, 50 percent decline from a high, and then that stock has come back.
And the answer is, yes, we've seen that a lot.
And it's not just with Netflix and Amazon, which are the most often.
cited ones, like intuitive surgical, MongoDB drawn down over 30% several times on the way to
a multi-bagger returns. Back in 2006, David wrote a piece for Fool.com in which he literally
the headline was, Meet the World's Worst Investor, that felt a little tricky if you were to
click into. Who could this person be?
David was profiling himself. And what he was talking about is during that time, right around 2005,
2006, the NASDAQ in the space of a very short period of time was down 12%. And many of the stocks
and rule breakers were bleeding red. And I believe at that time, intuitive surgical, in fact,
was down like 50 to 60 percent, just getting absolutely murdered. And so he wrote in that article,
said, I wish my stocks were down 12%. It was that bad. And so the reason I bring this up is because
it's not just the headline stocks that we've talked about, like Netflix and Amazon. This was
so bad at one time in Motley Fool Rule Breakers that the entire scorecard was negative. And some of the
major winners that you know, if you're in that service, were down just absolutely massively. And
So David said, you could call me the world's worst investor right now.
Now, of course, we know with the benefit of hindsight that David is far from the world's
he's arguably one of the world's greatest investors, right?
So we know that he's definitely not one of the world's worst investors, but this is part of
the math that comes up.
I wonder if there's a stock that you have stuck with over the course of years that you
saw get absolutely trashed, that has since come back for you and been a real winner?
Yeah. The stock I would choose is Starbucks, right? And I own it. And I think it's a great example
because everyone knows it. And everyone looks back and probably thinks, well, of course, that was a
sure winner. And everyone loved Starbucks stock, but that actually wasn't the case. It hit almost
$20 in 2006. And then basically, it began a three-year slide to almost four-year.
And it didn't get back to $20 to around 2011.
So that was basically five years of being flat for a company that is used by everyone and beloved
by most.
And of course, nowadays, now it's almost $100 per share.
And you'll find many other great stocks that spent a long time essentially being flat to
down.
Microsoft, I think, is another great example.
It hit its dot-com peak, actually, in 1999.
So before the rest of the tech stocks, it fell, and it did not exceed its 1999 peak until
2016.
Yeah, and with extreme valuations.
And there's a legitimate question there that I do want to address because we have
some people who are saying, you were recommending stocks at all-time highs, and they're
never coming back to those levels.
And they look back to that time, bro, like 1999 and the dot-com euphoria.
And they say, that's the period we've been in.
Now the reckoning is coming.
And you just recommended all of these growth stocks at generational high valuations.
And they're never coming back.
And the answer to that is, that may be true in some cases.
That is absolutely possible.
I'll also say, just to validate what some folks have said here, that if a stock is down like 80% or 90%, there is a chance that it is not coming back.
That is absolutely possible.
So I'm not going to dismiss the legitimate concerns that people have.
So what, I mean, what can you do in those sorts of situations?
And we've said for a long time, and if you haven't heard us say this, that's on us.
So I'm going to say it now so that you can maybe put some framing around this.
And I'd love for you to add to this, Robert.
We want you to be a net buyer of stocks in all markets, including when they're at generational highs.
Now, that does not mean we want you to go all in and say.
say like, okay, I've picked my spot. The Motley Fool said this is a great buy. I'm going all in
on this 52-week high. We never want you doing that, ever. What we really do like is if you're
a net buyer of stocks on a regular basis. So I'll pick up one thing you said, and that I think
it is important to remember that there are some stocks that won't come back. Often people will say when
we talk about Amazon or Netflix, we're always just pick. Yeah, we're cherry-picking. Right, there's a
survival bias, the survival basis, right?
Exactly.
But some won't.
My favorite example is GE, right?
You and I growing up thought of GE as the bluest chip of all the blue chips.
Sure.
It peaked in 2000.
It's still almost 80% below its all-time high.
If you would have told someone in the 90s that GE would provide that type of return,
they wouldn't have believed you.
So there are some times that will happen, which is why it's fundamental.
you own at least 25 stocks. And me personally, I think you should own even more, at least
until you become so experienced and successful as an investor that you can handle a more concentrated
portfolio. To get to your point about the mathematics of dollar cost averaging, I'm not going
to get the math itself, but basically it is this. You want to be a net buyer of companies. You want
to be an accumulator of companies as you are working through your career and getting to that point
where you'll have to turn some of those companies into cash.
I'm 15 years from retirement.
So I'm thinking of all the 401 contributions I'm going to be making over the next several years,
and that if the market goes down and stays down for a while,
that just means I'm going to be buying more companies at cheaper prices.
And there are many examples of people who have done the same thing at past peaks,
whether it was dot-com crash or even farther back to when you go.
back to 1987 when the Dow dropped 20% in one day. If someone just started investing on that day,
the very peak, but then continually made additional investments along the way, that person would
be a multimillionaire. Because even though you get to that peak, once it comes down, you're just
buying companies at cheaper prices along the way. And by the way, if you're reinvesting your dividends,
the same thing, which is why Jeremy Siegel,
the professor at Wharton is called dividend reinvestment, the recovery accelerator,
because it's automatically doing some dollar cost averaging for you,
where the cash is just buying more shares of the companies,
which then produce more dividends, which buy more shares of the companies, and so on and so on.
I mean, it's great advice.
I've tried to make this point, bro, like, even if you don't dollar cost average, like every month,
If what you do is buy a little bit at a time, you're still going to get ownership and businesses
at different price points, and gathering a whole bunch of different price points is just,
it's a little bit like eating vegetables. It's just good for you. And it allows you to buy at a
high. I'll give a good example here. There's a portfolio that I run where the stock has just
gotten absolutely crushed. And as part of that overall position, the stock I'm talking about here
is Fastly, we bought some back when it was down at lows it hasn't even reached yet. We've got
an initial position in there. And then we added more. And then at one point, we added some more money.
and it was at a high that just felt like, it felt like a stretch.
It was close to, I think, $130 a share.
And we had some members that bought there.
And my message at the time was like, be slow, be careful, do not go all in.
We're adding a little bit because we believe in the company, but we're not like doing a doubling down or anything like that.
The net position is still up, but that's only because we have several different price points.
We added to it across several different price points.
So you can add to your stocks.
It doesn't have to be every single month, but do add to them a little bit at a time.
It's okay to kind of dip your toe in the water and then a little bit more,
then a little bit more, and then a little bit more.
So before we wrap here, bro, a couple things.
There's a couple of stories I want to tell here, and then we want to give some very specific
takeaways, kind of remind folks of what we've been saying here and distill them into a couple
of very practical things they can do. Two stories, quickly. The first is the biggest investing
mistake I ever made, that if you hear us, and we sometimes hear this, Robert, I don't know
if you've ever had a similar mistake like this. But as the Motley Fool, we're motley, but one of the
things that's fairly common across the investors on the team is we're reluctant to sell. And this
story I'm going to tell you is one of the reasons why. It's because it's more costly, in my experience,
to sell badly than it is to buy badly. It's more costly to sell badly than it is to sell badly than it is to
badly. And here is my story along this lines, bro. I've told this too many times before, and it still
hurts. I still hate it. But it was 1999. I bought my initial shares of Amazon. It was about $1,000
worth of Amazon.com stock because Jeff Bezos was on the cover of Time magazine, Times Person of the
year. By 2002, the stock had fallen to $7 a share, and I dumped it. You don't have to,
do very much math to know that selling at $7 a share was a catastrophic mistake. And there's a
practical impact here. I mean, our oldest son had a first choice of college that we could
have used those funds if I had stuck with it and not sold it to probably pay at least a couple
years of tuition at this really good school. But I was not patient, and I sold out of that.
So I'll pause there for a second. You don't have to top my story, bro, but if you got one,
I'll take it. Well, I will say this, I hardly ever sell. And there are stocks that I wish I did
sell because there are stocks that are not going to do well. There are, I'm sure, Tim, in your history,
there are times when you have sold a stock and you were right to sell that stock.
But the thing is, holding on to a great company, what we believe, and we have demonstrated in our history at the Motley Fool,
is that holding on to a great company will do so well that it overwhelms the bad picks.
Motley Fool history is full of bad picks, but our record is so good is because we hold on to these ones that do so well, they make up for all.
all the losses. I will tell you how I manage things. And I don't sell. Like I said, there's some
I probably should have. But I basically follow a general rule of having 10% of cash on the side.
And it's a pretty standard guideline from Motleyful services, assuming you have a pretty high risk
tolerance and you're more than a decade from whatever goal you have. And like I said, I'm 15 years
from retirement. When that drops to about 5% because my
stocks have done so well, I will do things like maybe not reinvest my dividends, let them accumulate
in cash. Maybe put a portion of my 401k contributions in cash so that I build up that cash hoard
so that then when I feel like there are good opportunities, I will buy more. If I ever get to a point
where my cash is 15%, because the stock market has come down, that's when I really go all.
in. And I would say anyone who is more than 10 to 15 years from retirement or when they
need the money, history says you're going to be fine in the stock market. Stocks have made
money in about 94 percent of 10-year-holding periods and almost all 15-year holding periods.
Now, we know many people listening are not in that situation. They're closer to or in retirement.
And it definitely makes sense once you are 10 to 15 years and maybe you're a little bit more
conservative or moderateist hathoms to do a little bit less of that. But history shows that if
you've got that timeframe, you're probably going to be okay. So let's boil down some last
bits of advice here. And I'm going to tailor this a little bit because you made a good point here,
Robert, that we have a lot of members. The ones who are hurting the most right now are older. 60s,
70s, maybe some in their 80s. And so we saw some people just in the last couple of weeks who were
just really upset. That pain resonates. I really hate it because I've heard from some people
who say, I think I might have to delay my retirement or scale back what I thought I needed to do.
So that's real. And I want to give one piece of advice here to start with, bro, and then I'd love for you to
react to this. This is something that I'm doing that I think is reasonable. If you are in an older
age bracket and you're in retirement, you're like, what do I do now? I think the number one thing
that I would do in your shoes is make sure I had five years of cash set aside for my retirement
needs. If there's other capital after living expenses and savings, then maybe I can think about
doing some other investing. But I really want to have those five years settled because what we know
from our research is that crazy markets tend to at least settle a little bit if you give it a
five-year period. What's your thought on that and anything you want to add there?
Yeah, I'm totally with you. I say it's important when it comes to a
investing to be a short-term pessimist and a long-term optimist.
So, historically, when you look back at the 20s, bare markets on average take three
years to go down and then come back up again. But many have taken longer.
In fact, the first two bear markets of this century took almost five years to recover.
So that's why we have that principle of any money you need in the next three to five years.
And if you're retired five years, you should have that out of the stock market.
These days, really, cash is probably your best bet.
Even the bond market is down so far this year.
because of interest rates going up.
So just keep it in cash.
You're not going to get much of return, but it's an investment.
But then the long-term optimist part is appreciating, even if you are retired,
most financial planners recommend that you plan on living to age 95,
and some are bumping that up to 100 because people are living longer.
So that means you may need, if you're retired, just to use the old 4% rule,
you'll need 4% of your portfolio this year.
But there's the majority of your portfolio that you won't need
for five years, 10 years, 20 years, maybe even 30 years, depending on your age.
And over that long of a time frame, you almost have to have that invested in stocks
or a good part of it invested in stocks because you need your portfolio to last as long as you do.
And you need the purchasing power of your portfolio to keep up.
And if you instead invest in cash or bonds, it's just not going to do it.
I've looked at many, many, many studies of Safe Withdrawalry.
rates in retirement. And the recommended allocation is somewhere between 40% stocks and as high as 75%
stocks, because you need that growth to make sure that your portfolio lasts for decades and is able
to buy things of the future at higher future prices.
So then, last thing we can say then, this is a little bit of a fuzzy and it's going to feel
a little frou-frew here, but it is important. This is the time to be working on.
on your mindset. And what I mean by that is, if you come at this with a lot of anxiety and what am I
going to do, I take it from somebody who really struggles with this. I have a long history with
catastrophizing anxiety. I have my own clinical mental health issues. I know this very, very well.
So I know in this kind of environment, it's very easy to get to, oh, no, what do I do now?
And that is a natural response.
And I think the easiest way to find your way out of that is getting that five years set up.
Once you get that five years set up, then you can go from fear, oh, no, what do I do now, to, oh, what can I do now?
which is different, right? That's a very different approach. And what we hope is that as you ride
this out a little bit and you take stock of your portfolio and try first not to sell if you can help
it, if you do need to, then be strategic and get that five years. But then see what other
capital you can add, be a net buyer on a regular basis.
if you can do it, but plowing into your interests, if you can't be regular, just be a net opportunistic
buyer of stocks a little bit at a time and think about it just like you would any other habit
you are trying to build. You just try to do something every day and kind of get a little bit
better and a little bit better and a little bit better. And ultimately, it adds up to a lot.
All right, enough of me yammering.
Any last words of wisdom here before we have to go?
I'll return to something we talked about toward the beginning, and that is you're investing
for a reason.
And the reason might be retirement, but it could be something else.
And I think it is really important to line up whatever the value of your portfolio is with
what your goal is and to see if it's enough.
So that involves either using a few really good online calculators or
or maybe even seeing a fee-only financial planner who you could pay by the hour of the project,
just say, am I on track or not?
Because it might be, even though your stocks are down, you still have enough money and you're fine.
Or it might be, you know what, because of this, you're going to be behind.
So either you have to adjust your expectations or find more ways to get money into your 401ks and your IRAs
and your college savings accounts.
Because it's important to check that there's sort of those signposts along the way.
You want to know, am I on track or not? That's ultimately what everyone wants to know. Am I on track?
Figure that out now and then figure out what you have to do if you're not, because then you'll be
much happier three, five, ten years down the road knowing that you took action today to get
yourself back on the right direction.
Do you tell me if I have this right? There are generally two types of financial planners.
There are financial planners who get paid by selling you products. We don't recommend
And those folks, we do recommend financial planners who make their money by charging you a fee,
and they have no interest whatsoever in what financial products you use.
They just get paid by the hour or by the project to work entirely for you and no one else.
Do I get that right?
Yes, you got that right.
And now you can find fee-only planners.
There are a few networks to try, the Garrett Planning Network.
There's NAFSA, National Association of Personal Financial Advisors,
and the XY planning network.
Some of them will require that they manage your money,
charge you 1% to manage your assets,
but many of them will charge just by the hour.
If that's what you want, if you want to say,
listen, all I want is a professional opinion to make sure I'm on track.
You should be able to find someone who could help you with that.
Yeah.
The final product will that be they'll take a look at all of your assets.
They will literally write out a plan and say,
here it is.
this is what you've shown me. Here's what I see. And that can be helpful, too, in these kind of
situations. Okay, we are buying stocks alongside you. It's hard, but we will walk with you. If I could
leave you with that, there's a lot of us who are buying. I'm buying more. There's a lot of other
members of the team that I know are buying more right now. Services are buying more right now.
So if I could leave you with that encouragement, the way that we're reacting to this is trying to find ways to buy more.
And we hope that you too will be a net buyer of stocks.
So that's it.
Thanks for joining me, bro.
And we'll see you soon, fools, fool on.
That's all for today.
But coming up tomorrow, Jason Moser and Matt Frankel with a deep dive on 5G and the ripple effects for banking, gaming, and more.
As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about, and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against.
So don't buy ourselves stocks based solely on what you hear.
I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening. We'll see you tomorrow.
