No One is Right Twice: The Problem With Market Timing
u/Afraid_College8493 ·
Reddit — r/stocks
· April 01, 2026 at 17:49
· ⬆ 21 pts
· 💬 24 comments
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As we've seen with corrections and bear markets over the past few years, many posters brag about forecasting a drop - due to geopolitical issues, Fed moves, elections, weather patterns, etc.
However, they almost never forecast the beginning of the recovery or the bounce-back. By the time they buy back into the market, it's already higher than when they sold off. At first they cross their fingers and call it a "dead cat bounce." Then when the market keeps rising and they quietly buy back in at a higher cost basis.
For that reason, it's totally useless to get the market drop right if you can't similarly forecast the next rise. Almost no one can get both right, as we inevitably impose our biases/political views/arrogance/ideology/psychological state-of-mind on our market outlooks.
Solution is buy-and-hold/tune out the noise, or a disciplined rebalancing approach where you buy/sell every time the market rises or falls by predetermined %.