Had I switched to cash and bought back in after the falls, then I would be far better off today.
I know of no way to reliably predict market movements
18 years is still a long investment term though, there will be at least 2 more crashes before the OP hits retirement.
I'm 50 years old and in that band of citizens who have been told they would be receiving their state pension at 68. I have an AVC fund which currently stands at €131,000 with and additional €7500 per year going in. This will obviously greatly inflate my occupational pension, although there's no certain way to know by how much. 100% of this AVC is in the Irish Life Exempt Consensus Fund Series S. Right now, I'm aware, shares are high because basically, there is nowhere else for money to go, deposit rates being rubbish. However, I'm wondering if I should be spreading some of this money around the other Irish Life funds and, if so, which ones? Any advice?
Warren Buffett in his shareholder letter last month
Pick a strategy and find out the potential ups and downs of it. If you know there is a potential 40% loss and that won't keep you awake at night, then equities are fine. If the thoughts of losing 40% of your money gives you the shivers, you will have to sacrifice growth for security. 18 years is still a long investment term though, there will be at least 2 more crashes before the OP hits retirement.
Even sticking with the current strategy may be alright. The Consensus fund isn't the greatest fund around but it does make you money in the long run.
Steven
http://www.bluewaterfp.ie (www.bluewaterfp.ie)
Like the OP I'm reaching that age where similar decisions need to be made. So can I ask, if funds are switched now to lower risk assets, bonds etc, are these then locked into low returns long term? or if bond yields improve, will such funds benefit also. My concern is around the impact of inflation, which I fear we will experience before too long.
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