🧠 What To Do When Volatility Returns


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Welcome to Long-Term Mindset, the Wednesday newsletter that helps you invest better.

Today's Issue Read Time: <2 minutes

  • Lesson: A lesson from Titanic
  • Timeless Content: Why Some People Succeed Financially
  • Thread: Jeff Bezos Love For Free Cash Flow
  • Resource: Top 20 Best Performing Stocks 2005-2024
  • And more!

Join Us For A Free Investing Masterclass:

Join us next Tuesday (March 18th) at 12:00 PM EDT for an investing masterclass: Harness Volatility With Smart Position Sizing

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In this masterclass, you'll learn:

  • πŸ“Š Master the Fundamentals: The three different types of positions and their purpose
  • πŸ’‘ How To Make Smarter Decisions: Know when and why to make moves in your portfolio
  • πŸš€ Practice Your New Skill: Get real-life examples of situations where you can make moves -- and see how they turn out
  • ❓Q&A: Ask Brian anything

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If you're an individual investor, you'll love this session.

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To register for this free event instantly with 1-click, click this button:

Friends,

Roughly 113 years ago, The Titanic set sail on her maiden voyage across the Atlantic. Countless ink has been spilled retelling this story, but there's one aspect we'd like to cover here: of the 2,224 souls on board, only 32% survived.

It didn't have to be that way.

  1. A safety net: The Titanic's owners decided against providing enough lifeboats to accommodate everyone on board. The reason: they would take up so much space it would make walking the deck less enjoyable.
  2. A plan: The crew and passengers also failed to practice for (or even review) what to do in case of an evacuation.

The results were deadly.

These two simple moves -- more boats and a plan -- would have saved hundreds of lives.

This past Monday, the stock market experienced its worst returns in three years. The NASDAQ has fallen by nearly 15% in less than one month's time. Many of the high-flying stocks of January have registered enormous losses.

The parallels to the Titanic are clear.

  1. A safety net: If you need cash in the near term, keeping it in cash is the safest thing to do. And if you've already hit your "retirement number," allocating to boring (less volatile) stocks makes a lot of sense. Yes, you'll be giving up potential gains. But you'll be guaranteeing yourself as a lifeboat in return.
  2. A plan: If you wait to create a plan until you're in the moment, emotions take over. And in the investing world, emotion-driven decisions rarely work out well. That's why it's important to create a plan for exactly what you'd do in case of a market downturn.

More than anything, we hope the past month has been an opportunity to learn. It's hard to know how you'll react to volatility until you're in the middle of it. If you're reading this, the exercise (unlike the Titanic's) hasn't killed you.

Take what you've noticed. Apply it to the future. Create a safety net and a plan. We're 100% certain that when the next bout of volatility returns, you'll be much better off for having done so.

Wishing you continued investing success,

Brian Feroldi, Brian Stoffel, & Brian Withers

Long Term Mindset

P.S. Did you read any good investing content recently? Hit reply and share it with us. We'd love to read it.

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One piece of timeless content

Want to know why some struggle with their personal finances while others don't? Graham Stephan recently tackled this topic and shared his perspective in his article aptly titled Why Some People Succeed Financially.

One thread

Don't have a Twitter/X account? Click here to view the thread.

One resource

Over the past two decades, investors in the S&P 500 have done well, averaging 10.4% annually. But if you're like us, we want to know the best-performing stocks over that time. Visual Capitalist answers that question with a great visual of the top 20 S&P 500 stocks from 2005-2024.

One quote

Brian Feroldi

Brian Stoffel

Brian Withers

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Long-Term Mindset

I teach investors how to analyze businesses. Each Wednesday, I share six pieces of timeless content that can be read in less than 2 minutes. Read by 100,000+ investors from a16z, Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and more.

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