A No-Bull Bear Market Survival Guide for Investors

Inevitably it happens whenever the stock market takes a negative turn of some duration: Investors begin to wonder if the downturn is the harbinger of an imminent bear market — a prolonged period of broad equity market declines and a return, perhaps, to the dark days of the Great Recession, when people saw the value of their assets decline steeply, at least on paper.

If the Great Recession and the behavior of the equity markets since then have taught us anything, it is that knee-jerk, short-sighted and often panic-fueled investing and financial decisions made in reaction to a bear market can erase years of solid investment performance and decision-making, hamper a person’s ability to meet long-term life goals and undermine their overall financial health.

There is a better way. When it appears a bear market is imminent or already upon us, investors, rather than making asset-management decisions that ultimately run counter to their best financial interests, should instead take a deep breath, then level-headedly choose a better course of action. It is recommended not to act in haste and avoid listening to the “noise” to act and make changes immediately that will be brought up throughout media circles. The following five suggestions offered by financial professionals and outlined below are designed to help people prepare in advance, so they can resist making ill-advised, heat-of-the-moment choices about their assets when the next bear market hits, as history suggests it inevitably will.

The rationale for doing so? “People that live in places that are prone to tornadoes need a tornado shelter, in case that tornado comes,” says FPA member Eric Walters, a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ professional who heads SilverCrest Wealth Planning in Greenwood Village, Colo. “It’s the same for investors. They need tornado-preparedness for their [investment] portfolio.”

  1. Know the history and the context. Equity markets, and the stock market in particular, are prone to long and sometimes extreme highs and lows. As FPA member Robert Stoll, CFP® of Honey Lake Advisors in Barrington, Ill., notes, history suggests that when it comes to equity markets, what goes up must also come down — “that the S&P500 has had 25 years with negative returns since 1926. That's a bit more than one out of every four years. Understanding the history of the market and its volatility can help investors mentally prepare for bad years.”

History also suggests that equity markets will recover — sometimes faster than others. An analysis by T. Rowe Price found that from 1928 to 2017, stocks grew annually by an average of 10.2 percent. That includes the 25 years of negative returns.

“Mentally and emotionally, know that a bear market is a temporary time-out or pause in a market that is ever-advancing over the long-term,” advises FPA member Edward J. Snyder, CFP®, with Oak Tree Financial Advisors in Carmel, Ind.

“I often review how many months different bear markets took to hit their bottom and how many months it took to recover,” adds Walters. “By talking about declines and recoveries in months it helps emphasize that investors can get through bad markets.”

This kind of perspective helps investors to realize that any drops in the value of their assets are on paper only and not true losses. They only become true losses when those assets are actually sold. Having a broad historical perspective helps them to resist selling assets when their value has plummeted, hardly an optimal move.

  • Ensure your assets are appropriately allocated. A person’s assets should be strategically allocated across various classes — equities (stocks, etc.) and fixed investments (bonds and the like), primarily, along with real estate and so-called alternative investments — such that those assets provide both the potential for growth and downside protection, in the event of a bear market. So, take stock of your asset allocation, suggests Walters. “Does it align with your risk tolerance and emotional ability to handle volatility? If not, it is better to change it now than when we are in a bear market.”

Stoll suggests that investors assess how their assets are allocated at least annually, and adjust as necessary, because that allocation likely will shift over time as the value of assets in different asset classes fluctuates. “For example, an asset allocation of 70 percent stocks, 30 percent bonds 10 years ago, if left untouched, would have turned into an allocation of about 85 percent stocks, 15 percent bonds, today, due to the equity market's strong returns over that time period.”

In the context of asset allocation, it’s also important for people to maintain a cash reserve or emergency fund, from which they can draw in a pinch (such as due to a job loss, which could be likelier during an economic downturn) instead of having to resort to liquidating stocks or tapping retirement accounts when their value is down during a bear market. Walters recommends keeping enough cash to cover as little as three months — but preferably closer to six to nine months — of basic living expenses in that reserve. Also be sure that money is readily accessible, in a high-yield savings or money-market account, for example.

  • Have a genuine big-picture financial plan that includes goals, and revisit the plan to remind yourself of those goals. Walters recommends that people have a long-term financial plan, one that connects their resources to their goals, and specifies the asset-management strategies and steps needed to reach those goals, taking into account bear markets, bull markets and everything in between. “By focusing on dreams and the [investment] returns required to meet them, they can endure difficult markets better,” posits Walters. Instead of selling off assets whose value has depreciated, violating the fundamental “Buy low, sell high” investing credo, that goal-oriented financial plan serves as a compass to keep them on the right path.
  • Enlist the help of a financial professional to guide you through possible scenarios. People who have already walked through the what-ifs ahead of time, with hypotheticals to see how their particular asset allocation has performed in past bear markets, are less inclined to make imprudent asset-management decisions when a negative scenario becomes reality, says Walters.

To be worthwhile and accurate, those market scenarios need to account for a wide range of relevant factors. That’s where modeling tools, and a financial professional who knows how to use them, become particularly valuable. Not only can a financial professional run various scenarios on complex modeling software, they can interpret the findings from those modeling exercises and relate them to a person’s specific situation. “For example,” says Walters, “if you have $1 million and the worst return [scenario] is -30 percent, then we talk about what it would be like to have your [investment] statement arrive and see a balance of $700,000 [instead of $1 million). I do this with clients to help them understand that it could happen and to ensure they can endure it.”

To find a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ professional in your area, visit the Financial Planning Association’s searchable database at www.PlannerSearch.org

  • Invest in yourself by building your skillset. As the Great Recession demonstrated, the financial vulnerability that people face when the economy craters extends well beyond their investment portfolio. Their risk of job loss may also increase, for example. To protect against that risk and give yourself more career options, says Walters, “invest in your skills and build strong relationships within your company and [your] network.”