Personal finance

Why investors ‘always misunderstand’ the difficulty of regaining a loss, says advisor

Products You May Like

Toondelamour | E+ | Getty Images

Have a losing investment? You may need to wait longer than you think to regain that loss.

The answer lies in simple arithmetic.

Yet,investors always misunderstand this,” said Ted Jenkin, a certified financial planner based in Atlanta and a member of CNBC’s Financial Advisor Council.

Here’s an example: Let’s say you invest $10 in a stock. Its value declines to $8 — a 20% loss. The stock’s value then rebounds by 20%.

You might guess you’ve broken even — but you haven’t. That 20% gain returns the stock’s value to $9.60, not the original $10.

It would take a 25% increase to fully regain the initial $2 loss.

More from Ask an Advisor

This math is “why recovering what you lost is so hard, because you always have to achieve a better return than the actual return you lost,” said Jenkin, CEO and founder of oXYGen Financial.

Here’s a recent real-world example.

The S&P 500 stock index plummeted in the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic. The index declined from its 3,386.15 closing value on Feb. 19 to 2,237.40 on March 23, 2020 — a 34% loss.

The index had recouped its value by Aug. 18 that year, when it closed at 3,389.78 — a 52% gain from the low point in March.

This is perhaps a sobering math lesson for investors, who tend to feel the pain of a financial loss more strongly than a gain.

But it carries important implications for certain investors, too.

For example, retirees may opt to withdraw a certain share — say, 3% or 4% — of their retirement accounts every month for income. If those accounts decline in value — meaning income would decline, too — it may take “much longer than you think to get back to your regular income level,” Jenkin said.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: Adobe, RH, Oracle and more
Despite the Fed’s first interest rate cut in years, it may be too soon to refinance your mortgage. Here’s why
House may force vote on bill to eliminate rules that reduce pensioners’ Social Security benefits
Britain’s ultra-wealthy are threatening to exit en masse ahead of proposed tax changes
DirecTV, Disney reach deal to end blackout in time for college football

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *