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Reasons to Remain Calm
“You know you make me want to shout”
-Otis Day and the
Knights
I feel like Kevin Bacon's character in the movie Animal House. In
the last scene of the movie, Bacon keeps yelling, “remain calm.”
Instead, the crowd tramples him into the ground.
I was opposed to the Wall Street bailout plan, but it
happened anyway.
I've also been
telling people to spend less than they make, diversify their investments, and
to avoid risk.
If Wall Street had followed those rules, the crisis would
not have happened
Many bailout supporters were expecting an immediate
cure. Even if the bailout works, it will take a long period
of time.
Someone should have explained that to the American people.
No one did. When the worldwide crisis continued, people were spooked.
It is time to remain calm.
Go back to my rules.
If you are spending less than you make, diversified your investments and
avoided risk, you are going to be ok.
Don’t get caught up in the panic.
I know you want to do something. We all do. We have this feeling of total
helplessness, like watching a loved one die of cancer. The game is being played on a larger stage.
Remaining calm is the only true solution.
I’ve watched the President and Secretary of the Treasury panic
last week. That didn’t make me feel good
but I stayed calm anyway.
This is a time when we need to rise above our
leadership. The quicker we all settle down, the quicker we
can start working towards solutions.
The worst decisions are those made hastily and under
stress. Financial decisions have to be
separated from emotional reactions.
If you have money in a 401(k) plan, it's probably gone
down in the last month. It may go down
in the next month. It may go up. If I
knew the exact answer, I would be a multi billionaire.
Some segments of
the market do extremely well in times of panic. Others do worse. The key is to have your assets balance each
other.
Some segments of
the economy have been hammered, some not at all.
If you work in healthcare, government, or a business not dependent
on the financial markets, you may in good shape. The odds of the losing your job is possible,
but remote.
No matter how bad
the economy gets, we are still going to be hiring nurses, firefighters and
dentists.
If you're retired and get a defined-benefit pension check, your
money is probably safe.
If your own your house outright, and not planning on
selling it, you don’t have a problem..
If you have a fixed mortgage, and you're making the payments on time,
you shouldn't have a problem either.
There is another economic extreme. People who are maxed
out on their credit cards, and behind on their sub prime mortgages. The
economic crisis may not hurt them as badly as maintaining the status quo.
Those people were
already in trouble.
There is now going to be huge
political pressure to make banks and mortgage company’s work out compromises and stop foreclosures.
It is politically difficult to throw someone out of those
houses when they gave Wall Street $700 billion.
There are a number
of sectors really hurting. I am affiliated with two industries, financial
services and media, that are having a difficult time.
When it's all over, those fields will have a
few big players and a lot of tiny ones. The mid level companies won’t
survive.
The crisis is a good time to gauge if you're company is going to be one of the survivors. If not, its time to look at alternatives.
Changing careers is a life changing event. It’s not a decision that you should make during times of panic.
This is the fourth
time in my professional life where I’ve seen an economic boom and bust.
I saw it in the
stock market crash of 1987. Also when technology stocks crashed in
1999. Worst was when “the world stopping
turning” on September 11, 2001. Along
with the human loss, the event damaged
the economy. Some industries, like airlines,
have never come back.
Each time, I watched people buy high and sell low. They would make irrational economic decisions
and sell in the middle of a panic.
I would see people
make bad, life altering, decisions because
they didn’t think them through carefully.
Kevin Bacon may have gotten trampled, but he had the right idea. Right now is when people should stay calm.
Don McNay is the
Chairman of the Board for McNay Settlement Group in Richmond, Kentucky.
You can write to him at
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or read his award winning column at www.donmcnay.com
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