Gordon Gekko
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It would be some awakening alright if something that has never happened happens; that a bit of sabre rattling by Donald Trump will somehow morph into something that makes the money that I put into global equities today worth less in 2038.
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Sunny,
You got out of equities completely and then went back in. You’re doing this off your own bat. You are attempting to time the market, whether you deny it or not.
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Again Gordon, I notice that you were unable to answer my latest question and had to resort to sarcasm.
I got out of equities at the end of last year. Simply couldn’t understand the valuations considering the political noise.
Got back in after the correction. Didn’t get out at the top or back in at the bottom but I did well out of it.
I probably shouldn’t have gone back in after the correction so maybe you are right. I am just trying to time the market
Badly phrased but read the entire thread. How many times did I clarify my position??? As someone said above, you are not even reading posts.
Feel free to throw out smart remarks about “past performance being a perfect indicator of future performance”; I’ll just draw comfort from the fact that the person who invested the day before Franz Ferdinand was shot, the day before the 1929 crash, the day before Poland was invaded, the day before Pearl Harbour, the day before the Oil Crisis, the day before the Dot.Com bubble burst, or the day before the Financial Crisis has always been up in after-inflation terms 20 years later, provided he/she stayed the course.
prove that nobody has ever lost on the S&P over any 20 year period. Did you even read the posts? Or do you and your mates just prefer to have a row
So now we know that nobody has ever lost money over a 20 year period in respect of the MSCI World Index or the S&P 500.
do you think that being invested in global equities for any 20 year period has ever led to a loss?
nobody has ever lost money over a 20 year period either.
You are attempting to time the market, whether you deny it or not.
The person with a long time horizon who invests his or her spare cash as and when it becomes available.
I’ve answered all of your question.
I give up. Let’s just leave it there. Enjoy your weekend.
Now let’s take your approach, Sunny, which is to chop in and out due to (say) the political concerns that you cited earlier. It’s a flawed approach and one that condemns you to poor returns unless you are the Messiah.
Which is more risky? Leaving €100,000 on deposit for the next 20 years or investing €100,000 in Global Equities for the next 20 years? In my view, it’s the former.
He is just doing a TA, it is not that dramatic, it's fairly common among fund manager, although I have my doubts that it makes much difference to the long term returns of a portfolio.
So you now admit that investing in global equities for 20 years is not risk free like you claimed earlier? It is simply ‘less risky’ than other alternatives.
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