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Ukraine investment considerations: time in the market beats market-timing

Sabrina Denis

Sabrina Denis

Senior Portfolio Strategist


Lara Castleton, CFA

Lara Castleton, CFA

U.S. Head of Portfolio Construction and Strategy


2 Mar 2022
3 minute read

While the Russia-Ukraine conflict will likely remain uncertain for some time, we believe situations like this require cool heads from an investment perspective. Lara Reinhard and Sabrina Geppert from the Janus Henderson Portfolio Construction and Strategy Team explain what history can teach us about the potentially costly effects of making drastic portfolio changes during times like these.

Investors woke up to the news last Thursday that Russia had launched military activities in Ukraine, resulting in fear sweeping across global markets. When this fear is added to the existing challenges of rising rates and high inflation, it quite logically leads to questions about the implications for investment portfolios.

When emotions are high and portfolio returns are in the red, it is very easy for that fear and panic to lead investors to make drastic decisions about their investments.

While of course it’s important to consider the current risks and, if necessary, make portfolio adjustments, we believe it’s important to first stop, take a step back and pause before making potential changes out of emotion or fear of loss.

The reality is, timing the market rarely works, and more often it comes at a high cost to investors. For example, a hypothetical $10,000 portfolio invested in the S&P 500® Index on 1 January 1999 would have grown to $59,799 on 31 December 2021, a return of close to 600% (not including any applicable fees, taxes or costs). If you were to remove the S&P 500’s best 10 days of performance during that period, you would have missed out on $32,401 of compounded return, which for many is an amount that can make a real-life impact.

The reason it has been so notoriously difficult to time the market is that some of the worst short-term market fluctuations and losses are immediately followed by days or periods of the best recoveries. That’s not to say that a significant decline will always be followed by a quick and sharp recovery. However, it is a reminder that markets can be fickle and quickly reverse previous days’ moves.

While the Russia-Ukraine conflict will likely remain uncertain in the days and weeks ahead, we believe situations like this require cool heads from an investment perspective. And while it is far too early to predict the long-term impacts of Russian military action in Ukraine, what we can do right now is learn from history while continuing to monitor the situation.

In an already volatile year, we on the Portfolio Construction and Strategy team have been touting the importance of having a balanced, flexible and diversified portfolio to help smooth the ride through the volatility. Recent events only further emphasize this disciplined approach, which can help investors, as emotional individuals, have more willpower to stay invested through the upcoming uncertainty while remembering the main goal: time in the market, not market-timing.

Diversification neither assures a profit nor eliminates the risk of experiencing investment losses.

 

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