Market Timing the Right Way

Any money you might need in the next three years, especially for a known goal, should not be in stocks.

I didn't lose sleep when the market slumped this summer after hitting record highs. I had lightened up on U.S. stocks a few months before -- mind you, not in all of my family's investment accounts, but only in those with near-term goals. I did so because I had grown increasingly skeptical of the market's surge during the first half of 2007, and I know that stocks are risky in the short run (say, less than five years) -- just as they are a highly reliable wealth builder over longer periods of time.

So I took a close look at the asset allocations in our accounts. The accounts with the most-distant horizons -- retirement savings in 401(k)s and IRAs -- I left heavily invested in equities.

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Knight Kiplinger
Editor Emeritus, Kiplinger

Knight came to Kiplinger in 1983, after 13 years in daily newspaper journalism, the last six as Washington bureau chief of the Ottaway Newspapers division of Dow Jones. A frequent speaker before business audiences, he has appeared on NPR, CNN, Fox and CNBC, among other networks. Knight contributes to the weekly Kiplinger Letter.