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Don’t wait for accidental success

Buffett explained that finding a good, investment-worthy business can be tricky enough. But to find such a business at precisely the right time, while you have plenty of cash and the market is down, is “too much to count on.”

“You never get the benefit of those extremes anyway unless you come into some accidental sum of money at some time,” he said.

And Buffett’s sentiments were previously echoed by another renowned investor, Peter Lynch, in his 1996 book “Learn to Earn.” In his work, Lynch digs into historical returns from 1965 onward and shows that someone who invested during the market's peak every year had only underperformed someone who invested at the bottom of the market every year by 1.1%. In other words, perfect timing was overrated.

“Far more money has been lost by investors trying to anticipate corrections than has been lost in all the corrections combined,” he says in the book. “It’s also a mistake to sit on your cash and wait for the upcoming correction before you invest in stocks. In trying to time the market to sidestep the bears people often miss out on the chance to run with the bulls.”

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Time in the market

Investors are often better off implementing a consistent strategy over extended periods instead of waiting for home runs, since predicting the market is notoriously difficult.

Digital fund management company WisdomTree compiled a list of annual market predictions from major investment banks and asset managers at the end of 2022. These estimates for the S&P 500 ranged from -4.3% to 17.2%. By the end of 2023, the S&P 500 had delivered a 24.2% gain — beating all 16 forecasts.

Meanwhile, a 2023 Wealthfront analysis revealed that the probability of losing money was 25.2% if an investor stayed invested in the stock market for one year. It dropped to just 0.3% if they stayed invested for 15 years and 0% if the time horizon was stretched to 20 years.

Put simply, time in the market is better than timing the market.

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Vishesh Raisinghani Freelance Writer

Vishesh Raisinghani is a freelance contributor at MoneyWise. He has been writing about financial markets and economics since 2014 - having covered family offices, private equity, real estate, cryptocurrencies, and tech stocks over that period. His work has appeared in Seeking Alpha, Motley Fool Canada, Motley Fool UK, Mergers & Acquisitions, National Post, Financial Post, and Yahoo Canada.

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