I'm no professional, but I do invest in Zurich's dynamic fund and I'm making a hefty lump sum top up tomorrow. The fund is down 20% ytd. That's literally on sale. Why would you want to miss the cheaper units?. If you save it in the bank and dump it in when the funds preforming better then your literally paying more per unit and getting less for your money?. Keep paying monthly and ride this out. You'll be far better off.Earlier in the year we opened a Zurich Life investment product with a lump sum of €25K for college fund thru IPF.
We setup a regular saver 800/month to it but now i am wondering if its better pause that, with the state of things and just deposit that 800 in the CU and put it in later as further lump sum? we do have rainy day funds in CU already
Thanks in advance
Ah, timing the market... The mug's game?That's literally on sale. Why would you want to miss the cheaper units?.
Well I never ...The mug's game?
I'm no professional, but I do invest in Zurich's dynamic fund and I'm making a hefty lump sum top up tomorrow. The fund is down 20% ytd. That's literally on sale. Why would you want to miss the cheaper units?. If you save it in the bank and dump it in when the funds preforming better then your literally paying more per unit and getting less for your money?. Keep paying monthly and ride this out. You'll be far better off.
Bill90 is not timing the markets. He is betting on mean reversion. You are buying units on the assumption that a recent extreme change has reduced the price of units and this will be corrected. A fund that tracks a broad based index (eg S&P 500, i.e. companies that produce goods and services everybody wants) should mean revert (although JM Keynes pointed out that “Markets can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent.” But if you have invested in a fund that tracks an asset class that has fallen out of favour (i.e. you are catching a falling knife), you could be in for a long wait.Ah, timing the market... The mug's game?
Time IN the market, not timing the market, is key.
Thanks. You've just explained how they are timing the market better than I could have.Bill90 is not timing the markets. He is betting on mean reversion. You are buying units on the assumption that a recent extreme change has reduced the price of units and this will be corrected. A fund that tracks a broad based index (eg S&P 500, i.e. companies that produce goods and services everybody wants) should mean revert (although JM Keynes pointed out that “Markets can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent.” But if you have invested in a fund that tracks an asset class that has fallen out of favour (i.e. you are catching a falling knife), you could be in for a long wait.
Hi Clubman, i wouldn't mind if you shared an opinion on the original question please if you dont mind? ThanksThanks. You've just explained how they are timing the market better than I could have.
That mug is now up 20% on his substantial lump sum .Ah, timing the market... The mug's game?
Time IN the market, not timing the market, is key.
Very good because it all recovered and is up some since.How did the person/mug do who invested their lump sum much earlier while you were waiting for the sale?
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