Fear is creeping in.
After a blazing-hot start to the year, in which the Nasdaq notched its best first half in 40 years...
And the S&P 500 rallied 20%...
Stocks just slammed into a brick wall.
The Nasdaq and S&P 500 are each down more than 3% this month. And investors are on edge.
In fact, CNN’s popular Fear & Greed Index is “showing signs of fear for the first time since March.” Just last month, the index was showing “extreme greed.”
Why has everyone suddenly “flipped the switch” after a few bad weeks in the market?
I’ll let you in on a dirty little secret of investing: we’re hardwired to be pessimistic.
The skeptic who talks about what could go wrong sounds intelligent. He sounds smarter than the oblivious optimist. That’s why you see so many gloomy Wall Street analysts on CNBC.
Overcoming our negative bias is one of the biggest challenges we face as investors. If you can conquer this bias, you’ll unlock huge opportunities in the stock market.
Let me show you how this simple mindset shift could help you make millions of dollars in extra profits over your lifetime.
I owe that guy a lot.
Maybe I wouldn’t have started investing without him. I used to think investing was an activity reserved for rich London stockbrokers.
Problem was… my mentor was a total pessimist. You know the type… always convinced the next stock market crash was right around the corner.
He owned a few stocks. But the majority of his money was in gold and silver. One day, he even brought in a 100 oz silver bar in a plastic bag to show me. His arguments for buying hard assets sounded convincing.
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Governments printed trillions of dollars after the financial crisis. This “funny money” pumped up stocks, which could collapse any day. To protect yourself, you had to own assets that couldn’t be created out of thin air.
I fell hook, line, and sinker for this argument and threw all my money into “smart” investments like gold and silver. It felt like I was in on some secret only intelligent investors knew about. Buy stocks? That was for suckers who were going to lose all their money.
But the joke was on me. US stocks went on to have one of their best decades ever... while precious metals were one of the worst-performing assets over the same timeframe.
Luckily, I figured this out early: betting on the end of the world is a surefire way to go broke. I started investing the vast majority of my net worth in the stock market.
I learned to stop obsessing about what might go wrong and, instead, look at the facts. And the facts show markets reward optimistic investors.
Take a look at this chart of the S&P 500’s all-time performance.
US stocks have risen roughly three out of every four years since 1945. Folks who invested $30,000 in the S&P 500 in 2010 have over $100,000 today. And despite many crashes, the odds of making money in US stocks is 100% over any 20-year period in history.
Let me repeat: the odds of making money in US stocks are 100% over any 20-year period in history.
Unfortunately, many folks are still trapped in a pessimistic mindset today. It’s why most US investors expect stocks to crash, even when markets are surging to new highs.
It dates back to hunter-gatherer times. In those days, focusing on what might go wrong was a matter of life and death. For example, if you didn’t store enough food, you starved to death. If you didn’t guard your camp, a bear might eat you.
You must train yourself to tame this instinct in order to achieve investing success.
As legendary Fidelity money manager Peter Lynch once said, “More money has been lost by investors preparing for corrections, or trying to anticipate corrections, than has been lost in corrections themselves.”
In short, buying the best stocks in history required you to have a bullish mindset.
Imagine telling someone Netflix (NFLX) would disrupt the powerful cable industry 15 years ago. They would have called you crazy.
Yet today, Netflix has more subscribers than all the cable networks combined. And the stock has rocketed over 900% over the past 10 years.
Same for Amazon (AMZN). In 1999, former 60 Minutes host Bob Simon laughed out loud at the thought of “a couple of geeks who sketched out some software” destroying Sears Roebuck.
We know how that story played out. Amazon handed early investors 100,000%+ profits.
Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying optimists always make money. Or that they always get in early on the next big thing. But being willing to take chances on potentially world-changing businesses is a virtue. You can make life-changing money by getting in early on just one incredible disruptor stock.
Pessimists have no chance of catching the best-performing stocks. They’ll come up with 10 reasons why it won’t work. They’ll talk themselves out of buying it.
But remember: the story of the US stock market over the past century isn’t one about pessimists. It’s about optimists and new record high after new record high.
Stephen McBride
Chief Analyst, RiskHedge