The Stock market turnaround prediction off its worst sell-off in decades is a reminder that you don’t have to be Nostradamus when it comes to knowing when a bull market ends. But the reversal also highlights how difficult it is to keep your portfolio invested when markets drop – especially when fears and pessimism are high. The key is to have a strategy in place that can help you weather both market tops and bottoms, preserving and even boosting your hard-earned gains.
This week’s market slump was sparked by concerns that the economy may slow, which would weigh on corporate earnings and lift interest rates. But, according to strategists at JPMorgan, those worries are overstated and should be reversed as the Fed pauses its rate-hiking campaign, economic data improves, and uncertainties around tariff impacts dissipate.
Higher valuations for stocks will likely remain a hurdle for some investors, but “will not be the primary driver of further market weakness,” JPMorgan analysts Dubravko Lakos-Bujas and Bhupinder Singh wrote in a recent research note. That’s because valuations by themselves aren’t a big reason why stocks decline, but rather, they set prices up to fall faster and further when things go wrong.
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While turnaround and value stocks can add diversification to a portfolio, they shouldn’t form its core. Instead, they should be used to support other investment styles, such as growth and defensive strategies. To avoid over-allocating to turnaround bets, invest gradually as they recover and only buy them when they are significantly undervalued.
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