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Can You Time the Market?

Making money by darting in and out of stocks is easier said than done.

By David Landis, Contributing Editor

From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, August 2009
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After watching 70% of his retirement savings evaporate in the 2000-02 bear market, Bob Parrish was determined not to leave what was left to the mercy of the investing gods. So he fired his financial adviser and decided to try something most experts say you should never do: time the market. "Most people thought 2000 was the beginning of a secular bear market," says Parrish, using a term that describes a prolonged downturn. "People said you could still make money, but instead of buy and hold, you had to take a different tack." So he vowed to buy only when he thought the market was headed upward and to bet against it at other times.

Parrish, a retired human-resources executive with an MBA, is no babe in the woods when it comes to finance. He caught most of the market's gains from 2003 to 2005, turned bearish a bit too early in 2006, and with a portfolio entirely invested in bear-market mutual funds (which gain value when the stock market tumbles), he doubled his money in 2008. Since 2002, he reckons, his portfolio has gained an annualized 23%. "While everyone else has been crying in his beer, I've been a happy camper," says Parrish, 64, who lives near Sacramento, Cal.

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Parrish's disenchantment with traditional buy-and-hold investing is understandable, given recent results. If ten years ago you had invested $10,000 in a low-cost mutual fund that tracks Standard & Poor's 500-stock index, stuck with it and reinvested dividends along the way, you would have been left with just $8,416 as of May 31. No wonder many restless investors (and more than a few advisers) are dismissing buy and hold as something that works during long bull markets, such as the one that began in 1990 and ended in 2000, but not now. "Buy low, sell high has two parts, and most of the world focuses on just the first part," says Will Hepburn, a Prescott, Ariz., money manager and president of the National Association of Active Investment Managers, whose 200 or so members practice a variety of alternatives to buy-and-hold investing.

Certainly, if you could master the second part of Hepburn's equation -- knowing when to get out -- you, like Parrish, would be sitting pretty. A chart on Hepburn's Web site shows that if you had owned the S&P 500 from 1983 through 2003, but somehow managed to miss the 30 worst days during that period, you would have earned an annualized 19%, almost double the 10% buy-and-hold return.

Easier said than done. While we agree that there's plenty of evidence that market timing has worked over short and even long periods, the devil is in the details. It's a tougher strategy to pull off than buy and hold, and few do it well. Even Parrish, who has made it work, admits, "I'm savvy enough to recognize I've been very fortunate and that it's not going to last."

Our take on timing

Mark Matson, a Cincinnati money manager, likens a market-timing strategy of switching between stocks and cash to "playing Russian roulette with two bullets in the chamber. The idea that some market timer is going to save you from the crashes while getting you all the upside from great markets is a fantasy."

We're not as dead set against market timing as Matson, but neither are we ready to throw in the towel on buy and hold. We think buy-and-hold investors could incorporate some mild forms of market timing to improve their results. But first, let's take a closer look at market timing to see why it is so alluring to frustrated buy-and-hold investors.

Successful market timing requires three key ingredients: a reliable signal to tell you when to get in and out of stocks (or bonds, gold and other types of investments), the ability to interpret the signal correctly and the discipline to act on it. The popular image of market timing is that it calls for making drastic, all-or-nothing moves into and out of a particular market.

In reality, many timers adjust their investments in stages, and their recommendations don't always reflect such a black-and-white view of things. And while some timers may trade frequently, others use signals that rarely change from buy to sell or vice versa. In any case, timers say that being out of the stock market during its most uncertain periods results in a smoother ride for your portfolio compared with a buy-and-hold approach.

Three kinds of signals

Academics and economists claim to have discovered a number of signals that have proved surprisingly predictive of market turning points in the past. The indicators fall into three broad categories:

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Reader Comments (13)

Posted by: Bob Brinker Fan Club at 07/14/2009 04:14:33 PM

Mark Hulbert says Brinker's "fixed income advisor" model portfolio #1 lost 21.7% last year.... Mark Hulbert says Brinker's "fixed income advisor" model portfolio #2 lost 11.5% last year...Mark Hulbert says Brinker's "fixed income advisor" model portfolio #3 lost 5.2% last year, 2008....Mark Hulbert says Brinker's "Fixed income onl"y portfolio in “Marketimer” lost 2.1% in 2008...All his fixed income portfolios lost money in a year Vanguard's GNMA fund was up 7.22% and Vanguard's Total Bond fund was up 5.24%. Equities were even worse: Brinker's "Marketimer" model portfolio #1 lost 39.7% last year, 2008..."Marketimer" model portfolio #2 lost 37.4 last year..."Marketimer" model portfolio #3 lost 23.9 last year,..

Posted by: Lee Smith.info at 07/15/2009 03:36:46 AM

I have my own way to test the market. It is for educational purposes...I believe in having a strategy to avoid the big losses in the stock market. I think Dan Sullivan's idea is interesting which I will have to research.

Posted by: Freeland at 07/15/2009 08:10:11 AM

Statistically, my remaining life span is 10 years. How many serious investors can wait 20 or 30 years for a return on their investment?

Posted by: LINDA at 07/15/2009 11:48:14 AM

For most active managers, the point to market timing is to remove emotion from the decision and impose a market dictated logic. Which makes the following comment seem very odd.... "Once you get into market timing, it changes from an investing game to an emotional game," says Garrett. Is the emotional aspect a result of the conflict of not following the crowd? Or is it the need to be confident of your system because you won't receive confirmation from the media?

Posted by: James O. Rohrbach at 07/15/2009 03:58:14 PM

I have been timing the stock market in real time for over 39 years. Of course I do not listen to people who say it can't be done. The Hulbert Financial Digest ranked my Newsletter 7th in the country out of the 200 newsletters they track.

Posted by: ScottyC at 07/16/2009 09:21:21 AM

Given the ups and down of virtually every stock price, why not buy a financial stock and hold it for a few days until it goes up 10%. Wait for a drop and do it again, and again..... This will only work in these turbulent times.

Posted by: James O. Rohrbach at 07/17/2009 10:50:17 AM

I guess you do not post comments about market timing from market timers. I have been timing the stock market in real time for over 39 years. Last year The Hulbert Financial Diggest ranked my Newsletter 7th in the country. For those who continue to tell investors that you can't time the stock market, I am hear to say that it can be done, and "Buy and Hold Is Dead" It died in the Tech Bear Market, and it was buried last year. Jim Rohrbach

Posted by: Dulla O at 07/17/2009 01:27:57 PM

I have dedicated an entire blog to following Bob Brinker and I must say he is the most successful market timer I have ever covered. I would steer clear of these amateur penny stock online newsletters...

Posted by: BMT at 07/21/2009 11:20:17 AM

Anyone have an opinion of Sy Harding of Street Smart Report?

Posted by: Bob Parrish at 07/25/2009 03:46:54 PM

As the person profiled in this article (and also the instigator for its having been written), I'd like to share two websites that have been instrumental in my investment success based on timing. But first, it's important to recognize that understanding where the economy is headed is different from knowing where the markets are heading. As Benjamin Graham said, "In the short term the market acts as a voting machine, in the long term as a weighing machine." Near-term fluctuations may have little to do with the fundamental underlying value of securities but over the long haul, prices of securities tend to reflex their economic value. My take on the shorter term has come from the free website, www.mojena.com, a market timing model developed by a retired professor from the University of Rhode Island. My view on the longer term economic picture has been shaped by free newsletters from www.johnmauldin.com. Both have an excellent track record but aren't always in sync. Currently, Mojena is saying "bu"y while Mauldin is saying "the worst is yet to come". Together they reflect the disconnect between the market's voting vs. weighing dichotomy. In becoming pessimistic too early (August, 2006), I was swayed by Mauldin's compelling forecasts of doom (or at least recession). Consequently, I ignored Mojena's "Bu"y signal which went uninterrupted from March, 2003 to January, 2008. Had I stuck with Mojena all the way, my portfolio would likely be triple what it is today. But in the end, 23% CAGR for seven years ain't too bad!

Posted by: Jim P. at 07/31/2009 07:54:36 AM

As your article points out, traditional "market timing" strategies use some sort of trend following analysis to generate timing signals which tend to be intermediate to longer term in focus. But the FUTURE of "market timing" is in shortening the focus to predict the very next day's market direction. One such timing program that does this successfully is Four Seasons Capital Growth (type 4csns into url, or Google it). Trading end of day priced Rydex SP500 index mutual funds, this program returned 120% in 2008, and is up almost 50% YTD for 2009. ...their goal is to profit from very next day stock market moves regardless of market direction. In my humble opinion, next day focused market timing is the key to long term success. Get the short term direction consistently right, and the long term takes care of itself.

Posted by: James Devincenti at 12/12/2009 01:03:38 PM

Riding the Wave - How to predict market tops and bottoms (since 1995): 1) Anytime the 100 day moving average of the S&P 500 crosses ABOVE the the 300 day moving average of the S&P 500 we are entering a multi-year Bull Market (see periods from 1995-2000, 2003-2008 and Now). 2) Anytime the 100 day moving average of the S&P 500 crosses BELOW the the 300 day moving average of the S&P 500 we are entering a multi-year Bear Market (see periods from 2000-2003, 2008-2009). Its simple, but it works..at least it has correctly picked the past 5 tops and bottoms since 1995.

Posted by: Daddy Paul at 02/15/2010 05:07:04 AM

My goal in market timing is to beat the market (buy and hold). I do not have to pick a top nor do I need to pick a bottom.



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