Chorus

"On a good day, we can part the seas. On a bad day, glory is beyond our reach."

Saturday, December 31, 2016

2017 Preview: Fear Today, Gone Tomorrow

Remember when we were younger and we had an idea of what the future held? Whether our personal lives or as a society as a whole, those ideas rarely came to fruition exactly as expected. The possibilities of the future are limitless. And for good reason, because the possibilities of the mind are limitless as well.

The past only has one course to the present though -- and that is through reality. All possibilities eventually give way to actual events. Out of every possibility of tomorrow, there is only ever one path that becomes our reality. Most of tomorrow's concerns will never come to pass, and a few of yesterday's concerns are tomorrow's laughs (the vast majority are forgotten forever after reality invalidates them).

There are two words that can turn any financial decision into a mistake: "What if."

In terms of returns, those two words have generated the most stellar performance and most disastrous afflictions imaginable. Because we can always imagine a better return than what we have experienced. If we can imagine things getting worse, then we can imagine things being worse than what has happened so far.

Looking back at the unexpectedly positive returns of 2016, it is easy to spot investments that could have netted far greater returns than those we gained. Lucky for me, I was invested in the highest returning stock of the year, aptly named Nvidia, but that does not mean that I reaped the highest rewards imaginable. FOMO is the fear of missing out, and in my case, I missed out on higher gains by not buying more shares when I purchased Nvidia.

With a new administration starting next month (for many, "President Trump" is still an unimaginable reality), there are a slew of unknowns, and at least half are navigated by fear. While the markets responded favorably to the election of Donald Trump last month, the continuation of this bull market is by no means a guarantee. Amid all the uncertainty, the most probable reality is that the more things change, the more they stay the same.

Personally, I still feel as though the 2008-09 crash is still too fresh for the major populous to have forgotten the lessons learned from it. As equities have climbed to new heights repeatedly in the past eight years, there is still a "once bitten, twice shy" mentality masking or negating rational exuberance. In part, the pains of that near-disaster are still memorable, but also, the pains of FOMO are still haunting many others.

At the time it happened, people did not have the free cash available (or the confidence) to benefit from the DJIA tumbling from 11,000 down to 6,500-level, but now many people have learned the benefit of keeping a large amount of cash on hand to benefit from depressed markets. Anytime the markets retreat, that cash on the sideline comes into play now. At this point, I cannot imagine that trend stopping in the coming year either.

While I find it hard to expect the continuation of market growth, I am left with my prediction for the new year as either a gain or less of less than 10%. For this coming year, I feel optimistic enough to predict a small gain. That said, I do not plan to make any changes to how I have been managing my portfolio.

After paying off my mortgage this week, I have afforded myself the possibility to max out both my Roth IRA and my Health Savings Account, which I resolve to do in 2017. Since the markets have been hitting new highs, I have been directing a larger portion of my incoming assets to cash. I expect the bond market will offer strong buying opportunities after a sharp decline as interest rates rise (not that the buying opportunities will be rewarded in 2017), but I do not expect many other great buying opportunities.

Thankfully, I am diversified enough that I should be able to benefit from any unexpected rise. And more importantly, I am disciplined enough that I am not unnerved by leaving money on the table or by missing out on better gains that others will enjoy. I have been on both sides of trades enough times that it does not matter. Plus the majority of my assets are indexed, and it is hard to complain about replicating the general market performance when gains have been this strong.