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Expect a Manic Monday
“Just another manic Monday”
-Prince (The Bangles)
In A Piece of the Action, Joe Nocera’s classic history of personal finance,
Joe cited a mutual fund manager who noted an interesting fact.
If you added up all the
Monday’s between 1955 and 1985, the
stock market dropped 1500 points. It did fine the other four days of the week.
That makes sense.
People have the weekend to read the papers, talk to their neighbors and
get negative and fearful. They walk in
on Monday morning and sell.
It is the classic example of
how emotion trumps reason.
I was in the financial
business on “Black Monday” in 1987. The
Dow Jones average lost 22% of its value in one day. It
took people the weekend to digest the news from the week before.
Bad news kept coming in but
people were slow to process it.
Like they have been in
2008.
As the first days of the
economic crisis broke, I was stunned at how the average person was
disconnected. The local news devoted its
airtime to bank robberies and car crashes.
People on the street wanted to talk about football or the weather. The problems of Wall Street had not made
their way to Main Street.
Then came President Bush and
Secretary Paulson’s first effort to sail a $700 billion Wall Street bailout
through Congress. As the bill was
debated, defeated, revised, laden with goodies and finally adopted, anger and
pessimism spilled into the streets.
Suddenly Wall Street was the only topic that people wanted to talk
about.
The markets have dropped
further and each day, and Americans have gotten more anxious.
Now they have an entire
weekend to process the news. Negative
thinking will turn to panicked selling.
Expect a very “manic
Monday”. It would not surprise me if
Monday broke records for market declines.
It also would not surprise me
if Monday was the day of a great turnaround.
The market needs to hit a
bottom so it can rebound.
I’m hoping that a “manic Monday” will get
stocks to prices where people start buying again.
I have been deluged by calls
and emails, many from people I don’t know.
Most want reassurance or
guidance. But many are sitting on the
sidelines, itching to buy.
They look at companies like
Ford, GM or Apple (none of which I have ever owned) and wonder if there will
some be bargains.
I don’t know. But it is a good time to do some research and
find out.
If you have done your homework
and know your investment, you know when it is at a good price or a bad price.
I’m in the structured
settlement business, so my knowledge is focused on annuities and insurance
companies. Although I did it earlier in
my life, I have not sold stock or mutual funds in a decade. I only track stocks that I own.
People can do well when they
take their time to do research. In the
era of the Internet, there is a ton of information about anything you might be
interested in owning.
After careful research, you may
see opportunities that the panicked and pessimistic are missing. You might go in slowly (as I recommend) or go
“all in”, like professional poker players do.
Investing is like playing
poker. Winners and losers are decided by
understanding the psychology of the
people involved.
The current psychology ranges
from negative to mindless panic. If you
are positive and calm, you might be a big winner.
I always start my columns
with a song and I was torn between Manic
Monday and Rainy Days Always Get Me
Down by the Carpenters.
A way to keep this Monday
from getting you down is to rationally plot out your financial future Then do the research to understand your
investments.
Don’t count on Wall Street to
do your research for you. Its track
record is pretty weak.
If you have a plan, keep your
wits and don’t buy into panic, the expected downturn on “Manic Monday” might be
a good day for you.
Don
McNay is the
author of Son of a Son of A Gambler: Winners, Losers and What to Do When You
Win the Lottery. You can write to him at
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
or read other things he has written at www.donmcnay.com McNay is the founder of McNay Settlement
Group in Richmond, Ky.
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