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by yreg
1958 days ago
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Year ago when we were reading the news about what is happening in Wuhan, some of my friends bought SPY puts as an insurance against the potential crisis. The best outcome for them would be if those puts expired worthless. When you insure your house, you don't usually wish for it to burn down. I haven't acted and my portfolio took a -30% hit right after. Your suggestion (to change the portfolio allocation) would mean temporarily selling stocks and holding money. That strategy has an unlimited loss potential[0] if the stocks rise before you buy them back. With puts you are limited to whatever you pay for them. edit:
[0] unlimited loss potential provided you want to keep the same stake at the companies |
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Or bonds:
* https://awealthofcommonsense.com/2020/08/why-would-anyone-ow...
Rebalancing is a thing, though generally for risk reasons. It would/could have saved one's returns during the so-called Lost Decade of the 2000s with the S&P 500:
* https://www.forbes.com/sites/investor/2010/12/17/the-lost-de...
As your equities dropped, there's a good chance bonds would have at least stayed neutral, or even risen: so you'd sell some of those (sell high) and pick up equities at a discount (buy low).
There are even products available that do this automatically for you:
* https://investor.vanguard.com/mutual-funds/lifestrategy/