When stock markets shake, it can pay investors to be patient


NEW YORK (AP) – When the stock market is as crazy as it has been recently, it’s natural to want to do something to protect your retirement savings. Historically, though, staying calm is usually best.

The US stock market has a record of recovering from any severe downturn. Whether it’s a global financial crisis, a trade war or a military conflict, the S&P 500 has so far recovered its losses to set new records. Of course, it takes years, but anyone who takes their 401(k) investment out of stocks risks losing out on recovery and other gains.

Will it happen again? No one can say for sure, and this time some things are different. But many professional investors and strategists stick to the advice they usually give: As long as it’s money you don’t need quickly, which should never be in stocks in the first place, try to be patient and go through the stock market changes, as hard as it is.

They gave the same advice when President Donald Trump unveiled his global tariffs on “Independence Day” last year, after inflation skyrocketed in 2021 and after COVID ravaged the global economy in 2020. Absorbing such shocks is the price of entry to the large returns that stocks can offer over the long term.

“Although volatility may feel uncomfortable, it may pick up from here, and may lead to near-term declines in stocks, volatility itself is short-lived when it reaches extremely high levels,” according to Anthony Saglimben, U.S. market strategist. “And more often than not, extreme volatility provides investors with a long-term entry point to buy stocks rather than sell them.”

The war in Iran is slowing the world’s oil flow and causing severe volatility in markets.

The conflict has blocked much of the traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway off the coast of Iran through which a fifth of the world’s oil passes each day. It has raw material storage tanks in the area that it fills up because it has nowhere else to go. And that’s prompting oil producers to say they’re cutting output.

Oil prices briefly fell to around $120 a barrel on Monday, the highest since the summer of 2022, on concerns that production problems will continue for a long time. Some analysts say prices will soon reach $150 if the straitjacket remains closed.

A prolonged period of high oil prices could lead the global economy to a worst-case scenario called “stagflation.” This is what economists call it when growth stagnates yet inflation is high. It’s an unfortunate combination that Federal Reserves and central banks around the world are ill-equipped to address.

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