5 Ways to Manage Market Turbulence

Start by staying calm and sticking with stocks.

Here’s a solution to the made-in-Athens financial mess: Let’s pass a collection plate and take it to the Acropolis. It would be much cheaper and easier than suffering a series of stock-market crashes. That’s a joke, but the subject is serious. So please read on.

Greece owes banks in France and Germany 83 billion euros, or $105 billion. All told, the Greeks owe the world $200 billion. On May 6, the total market value of all U.S. stocks plunged by more than $1 trillion. By the close, according to the Dow Jones Total U.S. Market index, America’s shareholders had lost $462 billion. And in a replay of 2008’s meltdown, Treasury bonds and gold rose and oil prices dropped sharply. Together, those events imply flagging investor confidence about the robustness of the economic recovery. And it is investor perception about the health of the economy that will ultimately determine whether the bull market that began in March 2009 resumes, settles into a sideways pattern or ceases to exist.

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Jeffrey R. Kosnett
Senior Editor, Kiplinger's Personal Finance
Kosnett is the editor of Kiplinger's Investing for Income and writes the "Cash in Hand" column for Kiplinger's Personal Finance. He is an income-investing expert who covers bonds, real estate investment trusts, oil and gas income deals, dividend stocks and anything else that pays interest and dividends. He joined Kiplinger in 1981 after six years in newspapers, including the Baltimore Sun. He is a 1976 journalism graduate from the Medill School at Northwestern University and completed an executive program at the Carnegie-Mellon University business school in 1978.