LUKE23 wrote:I don't think trying to the time the market, or having a complete shift in investing philosophy is wise. You need to pick something that matches your risk tolerance long-term, and stick with that allocation. For me, I'm at 80% index funds, 10% individual stocks, 10% HYSA (may move to bonds there, haven't decided yet) and I try to re-balance to those percentages quarterly. Even if we do have a major downturn in equities, I just see that as a major buying opportunity assuming you have a 10+ year horizon until you need the funds.
Just keep DCA'ing.
I've done presentations on investor behavior in a past life and, while the numbers change depending on the time frame you look at, the story is the same... The average investor underperforms the S&P 500 and if you take a 20 year time frame and miss just the top 10 days in the market, your return is likely around half of what the S&P did over that same timeframe. Of course it works the opposite way too and individual results may vary, etc., etc., but you absolutely crank up the risk factor trying to time things.