“There’s no telling what President Donald Trump will do next… And there’s no telling how the market will react to it…”
I’ve heard that sentiment a lot recently.
But we’ve never known those things. Investors are only remarking on it now because they don’t like what the market is doing.
There are no experts in the field of predicting the outcome of Trump’s trade war. Our only choice is to accept today’s investing backdrop. Accept the uncertainty… and follow your own investing convictions.
That will determine how your portfolio fares over the coming weeks and months.
When folks ask how to “play” the trade war, the only real answer is… don’t. If you try it, you’re just gambling.
Why Tariffs Shouldn’t Change Your Long-Term Strategy
U.S. stocks are still in bubble territory…
The cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings (“CAPE”) ratio is at 33.38 today. That’s within spitting distance of its third-highest peak of 37.9, reached in November 2024.
I suspect that this mega-bubble will eventually end like all the previous ones – with a huge rout in the stock market. That means I’m skeptical about the S&P 500 Index delivering decent returns over the next decade.
Maybe that’s why my colleague Mike Barrett and I have had an easier time finding short-sale recommendations for our Extreme Value subscribers recently…
Of course, the market swung so hard in both directions last week that it almost didn’t matter if you were long or short. But we only short when we believe a company is being abandoned by investors… is obviously weakening financially… and has little to no chance of a turnaround.
In other words, we don’t care about what the Trump tariffs do to stocks. The companies we’re betting against are “dead companies walking.”
So to be clear, I’m not saying short selling is a means of “playing the trade war”…
In Extreme Value, we’re sticking with our long-term strategy. We recommend buying good businesses for the long term and selling short dead companies walking. The “tariff tantrum” hasn’t changed that.
So as long as you’re using a sound investing strategy (like buying great businesses and holding for the long term), you shouldn’t do anything different. Stay on course.
Don’t Obsess Over Market Fluctuations
Imagine you owned a farm instead of a stock portfolio…
Market fluctuations would mean less to you. Thinking about what your farm is worth every minute of the day would be pointless.
Economist John Maynard Keynes underscored this point by imagining a farmer behaving like a skittish stock investor in Chapter 12 of his must-read 1936 classic The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money:
In the absence of security markets, there is no object in frequently attempting to revalue an investment to which we are committed. But the Stock Exchange revalues many investments every day and the revaluations give a frequent opportunity to the individual… to revise his commitments. It is as though a farmer, having tapped his barometer after breakfast, could decide to remove his capital from the farming business between 10 and 11 in the morning and reconsider whether he should return to it later in the week. But the daily revaluations of the Stock Exchange… inevitably exert a decisive influence on the rate of current investment.
That’s the mistake many folks make.
I suspect recent uncertainty has led many investors to reevaluate their long-term holdings based on the belief that tariffs will last indefinitely, or otherwise permanently impair the value of the businesses they own. Many investors likely cited tariffs as a reason to sell. In reality, they sold based on fear and uncertainty, not knowledge of the future of global trade.
Be honest with yourself. When you’re watching your stock portfolio lose 5% or so in a day or two, do you know where your emotions end and your rational thoughts begin?
If you’re selling stocks because you believe you understand Trump’s tariff policy, you’re probably making a mistake.
So don’t obsess about stock prices… You’ll never have the conviction to invest through tough times by studying price action.
How to Protect Yourself From Stock Market Volatility
If you want to obsess about something…
Focus on understanding the businesses you own. Understand their revenues, earnings, cash flows, margins, balance sheets, investment policies, and returns on capital.
That will help you get to know yourself as an investor.
Even if you’ve been in the market for decades, you’re still only human. Everyone with capital at risk in stocks will feel an undeniable pull on their emotions as the market rises and falls.
But as long as you’re pursuing an effective long-term strategy – like holding great businesses for long-term compounding – there’s no need to take any new actions just because the prices are moving around.
For example, one of our biggest winners in Extreme Value was beverage company Constellation Brands (STZ). The stock rose more than 600% over a period of about five and a half years. But we wouldn’t have seen that gain if we hadn’t held on to shares after they fell around 25% within the first two months of our initial June 2011 recommendation.
This holds true whether you’re trading or investing long term. The best traders get their conviction from using consistent strategies and risk controls (like stop losses and position sizes). That’s very similar to what the best long-term investors do.
So learn where you get your sense of conviction… and lean on it as this uncertainty plays out. That’ll prevent you from making the all-too-common mistakes others make in hard times.
Good investing,
Dan Ferris
Magnificent 7 Wipeout: What's Next? [sponsor]The next three months could be very challenging and critically important for anyone with money in the markets. You need a big-picture plan... and you need to take specific actions starting TODAY. Don't get stuck in the "denial" trap so many fall into. 50-year Wall Street veteran Marc Chaikin recently published his full big-picture plan, which lays out – based on more than 100 years of data – exactly what you can expect in the markets this year (and in 2026, too). Click here for Marc's critical new update.
Source: Daily Wealth