Patience Pays: Staying Invested | Analysis by Brian Moineau

When staying calm beats panic: why patience often wins in falling markets

When stock markets are rattled, even by war, it usually pays for investors to be patient. That line — echoed recently in an AP News piece — is the hardheaded, comforting truth many of us need to hear when headlines and portfolio values move in opposite directions. Panic feels actionable; patience feels passive. Yet history and market mechanics both favor the latter when you're investing for the long run.

First, some context. Over the past few months investors have been fretting about geopolitical shocks, surging oil prices, and rapid swings in technology stocks. News stories and TV anchors amplify short-term danger, and sudden drops can make any retirement account feel fragile. Still, data going back decades shows the U.S. stock market has repeatedly recovered from steep losses and eventually pushed to new highs — sometimes quickly, sometimes slowly, but eventually. That pattern is the backbone of the argument for staying invested.

When stock markets are rattled, even by war, it usually pays for investors to be patient

  • Historically, the S&P 500 has eventually recovered from prior bear markets and reached new all-time highs. This resilience doesn’t mean every dip is harmless; it means missing the rebound can be costly. (apnews.com)

  • Recovery times vary. Corrections (drops of ~10%) often resolve within months; deeper bear markets can take a year or several years to reclaim previous peaks. The median full recovery timeline in some studies sits around 2–2.5 years, while some recoveries have been far faster (like the 2020 pandemic dip) and others far slower (like parts of the 1930s and early 2000s). (cnbc.com)

  • Importantly, the market’s long-term upward bias rewards staying invested, because the compounding gains after a trough can more than make up for the pain during the decline. Missing just a handful of the market’s best rebound days can meaningfully reduce long-term returns. (thearcalabs.com)

Now, let’s move beyond headlines and talk about what investors can actually do while markets are volatile.

Why the instinct to “do something” is expensive

When portfolios fall, many people sell to stop the pain. However, selling locks in losses and risks excluding you from the inevitable rebound. Moreover, emotional selling often coincides with market bottoms — the worst possible time to exit.

Also, moving money into “safe” assets like cash or short-term bonds can help preserve capital, but it comes with tradeoffs: inflation can erode cash’s purchasing power, and locking in lower returns may derail long-term goals. Finally, early withdrawals from retirement accounts can trigger taxes and penalties, making panic moves doubly costly. (apnews.com)

Practical moves that don’t equal panic

Instead of reacting impulsively, consider measured actions that reflect your timeline and tolerance for risk.

  • Reassess time horizon. If you need the money in the next 3–5 years, reduce stock exposure. If your horizon is 10+ years, short-term dips are noise. This simple distinction should guide most decisions.

  • Rebalance thoughtfully. Use market turbulence to rebalance toward your target allocation — selling a bit of what’s up and buying a bit of what’s down. Rebalancing enforces discipline and can improve long-term returns.

  • Dollar-cost average when adding new money. Investing a steady amount over time reduces the risk of mistimed lump-sum buys and makes volatility work for you.

  • Keep an emergency fund separate from retirement savings. Having 3–6 months (or more) of living expenses in safe, liquid accounts prevents forced selling during market stress.

  • Diversify across asset classes. Stocks, bonds, cash, and real assets behave differently. Diversification won’t eliminate losses, but it blunts them and smooths the ride.

  • Check fees and taxes before moving money. Poorly timed transactions can incur commissions, tax bills, or early-withdrawal penalties that compound the financial pain of market drops. (apnews.com)

How advisors and strategists are thinking right now

Financial professionals usually say the same two things: (1) review your plan; and (2) don’t let headlines rewrite it. In practice, that means updating assumptions if your personal situation changed (job loss, big spending, change in health), but not swinging strategy every time volatility spikes.

Research firms also emphasize that corrections and bear markets are normal market behavior. For example, some analyses show that corrections happen frequently but recoveries—to the previous peak—often follow within months to a few years, depending on the severity. Therefore, many advisors favor staying diversified and disciplined rather than timing markets. (thearcalabs.com)

The psychological side: tolerate discomfort, not ruin

Investing discipline is more psychological than mathematical. It’s one thing to know an approach is optimal on paper and another to watch your balance shrink. Structure helps: automated contributions, pre-set rebalancing rules, and periodic portfolio reviews remove emotion from the process.

Also, normalize the idea that markets decline — it’s part of the return investors demand for owning equities. If that idea feels untenable, your allocation might be too aggressive for your temperament.

My take

Markets will keep testing nerves. Some shocks are local and short-lived; others are broader and linger. Either way, history favors those who prepared for the storm, kept their eyes on time horizons, and avoided reactionary moves that lock in losses.

If you’re unsettled, do the clear things: confirm your timeline, shore up an emergency fund, rebalance to targets, and avoid big, impulsive withdrawals. Patience doesn’t mean inaction — it means acting by a plan, not by panic.

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Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.