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kareemsabri | 3 years ago
That said, if you're very long it's hard to picture entering Google or Apple at 15-18x earnings and doing very poorly. Personally I am DCA'ing because i) it's how I invest and ii) I do think there is more pain to come. There are many reasons for that, rallies amongst meme stock names after dips is one indicator imo.
His analysis of Airbnb is interesting. Airbnb's trailing 12 month P/E ratio is 40x, not 15.5x. He is projecting forward Airbnb's recent monster quarter. This is a bit risky imo, though maybe he knows the business better than me. I'd still be more comfortable DCA'ing into Airbnb or travel as a sector, but 2 quarters ago their P/E was 150x, so at 40x it does look pretty attractive.
Shameless plug, since this is right in our wheelhouse, I am the creator of a DCA focused custom indexing investing product[1] and a simulator to backtest DCA investing[2].
throw0101c|3 years ago
That's because lump sum is better most of the time… if you already have a pile of money to invest:
* https://ofdollarsanddata.com/dollar-cost-averaging-vs-lump-s...
However, most of us don't have a pile of money just lying around, but rather we get a little money every two weeks or every month, in which case it's best to put away a little money every month:
* https://ofdollarsanddata.com/just-keep-buying/
kareemsabri|3 years ago
But as your article points it, DCA is not about getting the absolute best return, it's about risk mitigation.
> The only times when DCA beats LS is when the market crashes (i.e. 1974, 2000, 2008, etc.). This is true because DCA buys into a falling market, and, thus, gets a lower average price than a lump sum investment would.
If you are fearful of a crash (like now, as we are in the midst of war, recession, energy shortages, coming out of a pandemic etc.) risk mitigation may be higher on your list of priorities. I also think it just lowers cognitive load for people who aren't investing for a living.
All that said, I 100% agree with DCA as the best approach for people investing out of income!
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33786050
Alexx|3 years ago
When people struggle to understand that I say DCA can be thought of as a sort of insurance. You pay a price to insure your home to protect against the unlikely event that your house burns down. But on average buying insurance will loose you money. But the cost is comparatively low, and for each individual likely worth it to protect from total loss, even if in aggregate it's clearly a loosing proposition.
DCA is similar, most people will end up with marginally lower returns, however a small percentage of individuals caught close to a rare negative market event will be less impacted by sudden large drops and experience overall much greater returns in the long run than if they had invested as a lump sum due to the nature of volatility decay.
kareemsabri|3 years ago
And yes, averages are great for everyone but the outliers!
pnut|3 years ago
mi_lk|3 years ago
Cwizard|3 years ago
[0] don’t have a ref but I think it has been shown that if you have a lump sum of money, historically you would have made the most gains by investing everything immediately (in the S&P500, there are only a few periods were this wasn’t true (therefore there is a risk)
kareemsabri|3 years ago
First, 25% of the time is a lot of the time. It may be possible to recognize an overheated market, by looking at historical earnings multiple averages for example. Second, they are using a "total market" index, even broader than the S&P 500. I don't know that many people who buy a total market index. Usually it's the S&P 500, or even a sector focus. The more specific you get, the more these results are likely to break down I would bet.
We focus on DCA for people who are working for a living and investing out of income, which is obviously a different cohort than Fred Wilson, the VC. So lump-sum investing doesn't really factor into it.
[1] https://www.northwesternmutual.com/life-and-money/is-dollar-...
shapefrog|3 years ago
However, whoever said the wise words about how Buy and Hold and been polluted by HODL was absolutely correct.
Stock indexes have a built in survivorship bias, as the failing or declining stocks eventually get diminished (especially if it is market cap weighted) or removed completely.