by Schwab Center for Financial Research
Stocks fell sharply Thursday, clawing back some of the extraordinary gains that major indexes had made over the summer, as investors shifted out of the large tech-oriented companies that had pushed the market higher in recent weeks. Separately, official data showed that the COVID-19 pandemic continues to sap the economyâs strength, with jobless claims remaining high as August wound down, despite a modest improvement from earlier in the month. The broad S&P 500Âź Index ended the day 3.5% lower, while the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 2.8% and the tech-focused NASDAQ fell almost 5%.
âThe five companies investors generally refer to as âBig TechââAmazon, Apple, Google/Alphabet, Facebook, and Microsoftâreceived much of the attention in what has turned out to be the fastest stock market recovery in history,â says Liz Ann Sonders, Schwabâs chief investment strategist. âThese companies represent just 1% of the stocks on the S&P 500, but now account for nearly a quarter of the indexâs market capitalization. This kind of concentration poses a risk, especially when many of the other stocks on the index arenât performing nearly as well.â
âAt the same time, investor sentiment had become frothy, and todayâs decline may not be enough to ease all of that speculative froth,â she adds.
For further evidence of how relying on just a few of stocks to drive a recovery can create vulnerabilities, just look abroadâinternational stocks outperformed U.S. stocks during the selloff.
âIn general, valuations for international stocks have been lower than for U.S. stocks, and international stock performance hasnât been driven by a handful of stocks, unlike in U.S. markets,â says Jeffrey Kleintop, Schwabâs chief global investment strategist. âAdditionally, international stock indexes tend to contain relatively fewer Information Technology stocks, which underperformed, and relatively more Financial Services stocks, which outperformed.â
âInternational stocks tend to skew more toward cyclical companies than U.S. stocks do,â Jeff says. âThis could be a boon if the economic rebound broadens beyond companies that benefit from stay-at-home orders to include other companies.â
What long-term investors can do
- Resist the urge to react to daily market movements. Selling stocks when markets drop can make temporary losses permanent. Staying the course, while difficult emotionally, may be healthier for your portfolio. This doesnât mean you should hold on blindly, but we suggest taking into account an investmentâs future prospects and the role it plays in your portfolio, rather than being guided by short-term market movements.
In practical terms, that means taking a beat and really thinking through why you want to sell an investment. Does the investment no longer fit your strategyâor is fear driving your decision?
At the same time, investors should avoid trying to time the market. This rarely worksâbut itâs especially difficult to try to time the market around unexpected geopolitical events, like COVID-19. Focus on the time horizon for each goal.
- Make sure your portfolio is consistent with your goals, risk tolerance, and preferences. âWhen the market is going up and up, itâs easy for investors to think theyâre more comfortable with risk than they actually are,â says Mark Riepe, head of the Schwab Center for Financial Research. âPullbacks have a way of stripping away any illusions on that front.â
âThatâs why itâs so importantâparticularly for the new investors out thereâto have a plan for the money youâve invested,â Mark adds. âIf youâre saving and investing for a goal that is still many years away, then the best response to sudden drops in the market may be not to do anything.â
However, if youâre uncomfortable with market volatility and your goals are short term, you may want to decrease your exposure to riskier assets and move that money to Treasuries or bank certificates of deposit (CDs) to reduce volatility.
- Rebalance your portfolio as needed. Market changes can skew your allocation from its original target. Over time, assets that have gained in value will account for more of your portfolio, while those that have declined will account for less. Rebalancing means selling positions that have become overweight in relation to the rest of your portfolio, and moving the proceeds to positions that have become underweight. Itâs a good idea to review your portfolio for rebalancing opportunities at regular intervals, and is worth considering when markets have been very volatile.
âIf you are a disciplined longer-term investor that has a diversified strategic asset allocation plan, you could consider more frequent rebalancing tied to how far asset classes have moved relative to [your] longer-term targets,â says Liz Ann.
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