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This article is one in a series discussing the results of Bankrate’s Market Mavens second-quarter survey: Best moves to protect your money from a recession
Investors have been grappling with what the Fed’s actions and higher interest rates mean for stocks. While some think that the Fed will raise rates too quickly and topple the economy into a recession, others think the Fed may engineer a “soft landing” and let the economy slow before ultimately continuing on to grow. Here’s what the pros say you can do to protect your money. Stay focused on your retirement accounts
If you have a long time until you need to tap your retirement accounts, don’t sweat a downturn in the market. Instead, it can be more valuable to think of it as an opportunity to buy. Stay focused on your retirement accounts, and you’ll barely notice the blip in the market in a few years’ time. “Remain calm and continue contributing to savings, and ,” advises Michael Farr, CEO, Farr, Miller & Washington, a wealth management firm in Washington, D.C. If you continue to invest during a downturn, you’re likely to buy investments at attractive prices, and perhaps as importantly, you’ll keep yourself from selling at an inopportune moment. If you become frightened during a downturn or try to time the market, , costing you much more in future returns than you’d avoid in losses today. Think and invest for the long term
The experts continually focused on the importance of thinking and investing for the long term. “Stocks are falling sharply on the fear of recession. That creates attractive long-term investment opportunities in quality companies,” says Patrick J. O’Hare, chief market analyst, Briefing.com. “This current moment isn’t an ‘all-in’ phase after the sharp declines, because we have yet to see earnings estimates adjust properly for the challenging economic period that lays ahead,” he says. “That said, with stocks of quality companies down 30, 40, and 50 percent or more off their highs, this is a moment where one can start accumulating stocks in those companies.” Other experts broadly agreed with that long-term sentiment. “Stay fully invested consistent with long-term targets while looking for opportunities to add equities on additional weakness,” says Jeffrey Buchbinder, equity strategist, LPL Financial. Meanwhile, Kim Forrest, chief investment officer and founder, Bokeh Capital Partners, says it even more tersely: “Invest for the longer term.” Use dollar-cost averaging to your advantage
If you’re regularly earning money and investing that into the market, you’re well-placed to ride out the current bear market and any downturn that occurs if the economy does hit a recession. “Invest small and dollar-cost average,” says Jim Osman, founder, The Edge Spinoff Research. “We are not going anywhere fast anytime soon.” is an investing technique where you spread out your purchases over time using a fixed amount of money. For example, you might invest $100 in an index fund every week. When the market falls, you’ll buy more shares and when it rises, you’ll buy fewer. But over time you’ll buy at an average price, but neither the best price nor the worst price. You’ll reduce the risk that you buy at too high a price and you’ll likely be buying when the market hits a low point. You’ll avoid dumping your money in all at once when the market is high, and if you keep investing, you’re more likely to stay invested over time, helping your long-term returns. O’Hare says it’s a great time for this technique: “It is a moment where continued dollar-cost averaging should be embraced to maximize return potential in better years ahead.” Maintain your investing discipline
When the market falls, it can be easy to sell or deviate from your long-term investing strategy. But if you have a strong long-term plan, then it’s more important than ever to stick with it. “Maintain your investment plans – rebalance, tax-loss harvest where you can and continue dollar-cost averaging into your retirement plan vehicles,” says Kenneth Chavis IV, CFP, senior wealth manager, LourdMurray. involves selling some of the investments that have outperformed and moving that money into investments that have underperformed in order to bring your portfolio back to its target allocations. is a practice where you sell losing investments to recoup a tax write-off, helping to reduce your taxes today or offset other gains. And it’s important to keep your aligned with your long-term goals, says Dec Mullarkey, managing director, SLC Management. Asset allocation is how you divide your investments among various asset classes (stocks, bonds and even cash) to reduce risk and potentially increase returns. For example, if you’ll need money in 20 years, you want to stay invested in assets such as stocks or stock funds that perform well over long periods of time. “While recessions are inevitable, their timing and severity are hard to handicap,” says Mullarkey. “Given how strong U.S. household and corporate balance sheets are, we are in a good position to tolerate potential growth setbacks and hopefully bounce back quickly.” Methodology
Bankrate’s second-quarter 2022 survey of stock market professionals was conducted from June 9-16 via an online poll. Survey requests were emailed to potential respondents nationwide, and responses were submitted voluntarily via a website. Responding were: Dec Mullarkey, managing director, SLC Management; Brad McMillan, chief investment officer, Commonwealth Financial Network; Jim Osman, founder, The Edge Spinoff Research; Patrick J. O’Hare, chief market analyst, Briefing.com; Jeffrey Buchbinder, equity strategist, LPL Financial; Robert A. Brusca, chief economist, FAO Economics; Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist, CFRA Research; Chuck Carlson, CFA, CEO, Horizon Investment Services; Kenneth Chavis IV, CFP, senior wealth manager, LourdMurray; Kim Forrest, chief investment officer/founder, Bokeh Capital Partners; Marilyn Cohen, CEO, Envision Capital management; and Michael Farr, CEO, Farr, Miller & Washington. Editorial Disclaimer: All investors are advised to conduct their own independent research into investment strategies before making an investment decision. In addition, investors are advised that past investment product performance is no guarantee of future price appreciation. SHARE: Bankrate senior reporter James F. Royal, Ph.D., covers investing and wealth management. His work has been cited by CNBC, the Washington Post, The New York Times and more. Brian Beers is the managing editor for the Wealth team at Bankrate. He oversees editorial coverage of banking, investing, the economy and all things money. Related Articles