Here’s How to Prevent Drawdowns From Devastating Your Portfolio After 50

 | Feb 20, 2023 20:01

Recently I was shocked after speaking with five different investors on the phone. These investors have been involved in the markets for many years, and they trade their accounts. Surprisingly, not a single one of them knew what drawdowns were, as there are two types. In short, it is how we gauge an overall investment strategy’s risk level, so you know if a given approach fits within your risk tolerance.

I did a survey several years ago that still blows my mind because the results were so backward and frustrating. To this day, I’m experiencing the same thing with traders and investors, so I want to talk about it here – drawdowns and what you may not know about them.

A drawdown measures how much an investment or trading account is down from its highest point. It is used to quantify the extent of loss suffered by an investor or trader during a period of market decline. A drawdown is expressed as a percentage. Also, the maximum drawdown (MaxDD) is the largest percentage drop from the account’s highest point to its lowest point over the life of the strategy, which in laymen’s terms, is the largest loss.

Drawdowns are a part of investing and trading and can significantly impact an investor’s financial health and retirement lifestyle, but it takes this type of self-discipline for success.

Large drawdowns can take years to recover, which can be devastating for investors nearing retirement or already retired. This is because there is a second type of drawdown: the time it takes to recover from the value drawdown. When an investor experiences a significant drawdown, it can take years for their account to recover to its previous level, which can delay or destroy one’s retirement plans.

h2 Max Drawdown Comparison for Buy-and-Hold vs. Tactical Investing/h2

The traditional buy-and-hold method of holding stocks and bonds has a significantly higher drawdown compared to a strategy that manages positions and risk, like the CGS method.

I work with advisors and money managers of all types, and they all say the same thing: investors start to get nervous and panic when their account falls roughly 8%. This begs the question of WHY do most firms like Fidelity and Schwab, and advisors in general, force the buy-and-hold strategy on investors when they know the risks these strategies incur? Don’t get me started. That’s a topic for another time, which Forbes did a write-up on this a while back, which I will share in a future article. But Investors have Stockholm Syndrome because of the torture which the financial industry has put them through for so long, and that what they think is normal, isn’t.