What the Stock Market Taught Us This Year: Don’t Fall for These Investing Traps

The uncertainty around near-term interest rates has dominated the story of the stock market in 2023. Perhaps not since the 1970s—when runaway inflation and sky-high interest rates were the crisis du jour—has monetary policy affected investment outcomes in such a pronounced way.

Yet look more closely, and it would seem that Wall Street has been more influenced by perception than reality: Company and individual balance sheets remain mostly healthy, businesses are battle tested and unemployment remains low. Similarly, the malaise surrounding the economic environment belies what we are seeing. Cruise ships are sold out, restaurants are packed, holiday shopping was off to a strong start and 82% of S&P 500 companies reported a positive earnings surprise in the third quarter.

Still, a nervous atmosphere has undercut stock performance. Scores of share prices have been lackluster as company fundamentals have been eclipsed by macroeconomic conjecture. We have lost the trees in the forest.

But as someone once declared, “It is a market of stocks, not a stock market.” This is a wise reminder that no matter the conditions, there are investment opportunities to be had. In fact, the more economic obfuscation, the more sectors are hammered, the more stocks are orphaned, the better the odds of long-term investment success.

After a year of hand-wringing through monetary policy guesswork and market fluctuations, many wonder how best to maneuver in the new year. Here’s our advice: Avoiding some of the biggest market traps can be a winning strategy.

amazon, microsoft, what the stock market taught us this year: don’t fall for these investing traps

Don’t Fed-watch

“Don’t fight the Fed” is a well-known market mantra. The idea is to buy stocks when the Fed is lowering interest rates and sell when the Fed is raising them.

This psychology has dominated the stock market all year, creating a futile guessing game. Are they still raising rates? For how much longer? Will rates fall soon? Will it be a hard landing or a soft landing? But this Fed obsession, reacting to every pronouncement, simply sucks up time. It has all been noise. Despite the fear and uncertainty, dire predictions didn’t come true.

What that means is that sectors that sold off because of heightened fears—including banks, some industrial names and anything real estate related—could be well-positioned for investors willing to take a longer-term view.

After surviving a midyear crisis, for instance, the banking sector is already beginning to show signs of recovery as market anxiety subsides. Similarly, oversold housing-related stocks should rebound once people adjust to the new rate environment, and the U.S. housing shortage, exacerbated by the pandemic, drives new construction.

It doesn’t mean every sector that got hit by investor angst is ripe for buying. Commercial real estate is an obvious example. But it does mean that if you invested by watching the Fed like a tennis match, and then reacting to every volley, you will get it wrong.

amazon, microsoft, what the stock market taught us this year: don’t fall for these investing traps

Don’t buy the hype

The selloff in many areas has inflicted pain that has been concealed by the cap-weighted dominance of a few celebrity stocks in the S&P 500 index. A handful of tech and tech-related stocks, weight-loss drugs and artificial-intelligence providers offer the sum total of stock-market outperformance this year. Beyond these headliners, there is less and less attention on individual names.

Those tech behemoths, dubbed the “Magnificent Seven,” account for more than 30% of the index and 87% of its return through October. Let us say that again: Just seven stocks represent one-third of the S&P 500 index. Some now consider Google parent Alphabet, Amazon.com, Apple, Facebook parent Meta Platforms, Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla to be defensive businesses that can grow through any economic cycle.

We’ve seen this before, and the lesson is always the same: Winner-takes-all can dominate over shorter time frames but is rarely a winning bet in the long run. At some point, this narrow market supremacy will end, to the benefit of many overlooked issues.

In other words, these hyped celebrity stocks have more downside than upside from here. There are more-compelling opportunities to be had.

amazon, microsoft, what the stock market taught us this year: don’t fall for these investing traps

For example, the small-fry stocks found in the Russell 2000 index are among the most neglected shares waiting to get their due. The index has been languishing in a bear market since 2021—partially driven by their perceived economic sensitivity and partially driven by Wall Street indifference.

The result is that the total market cap of the Magnificent Seven is now three times the size of every single stock in the Russell 2000 index combined—making just seven stocks the equivalent of 6,000 small-cap names. On average, 47 analysts follow the typical Magnificent Seven stock versus just five for a small-cap name. Nine percent of smaller companies have no followers at all.

Here’s the silver lining: Less coverage means more market inefficiency means more opportunities. Stock prices trade on fundamentals. And when those solid fundamentals shine through, share prices rise. Additionally, when tepid U.S. growth inevitably picks up, small-caps are poised to strongly outperform as they have done every other time in the past.

The upshot is that you can go ahead and buy the hype if you want to, blinded by the celebrity names. But that’s not where the upside opportunities are likely to be.

Don’t anchor to the here and now

This time is different. Except it hardly ever is.

That’s a lesson investors rarely learn. Case in point: the extremely low interest rates that have persisted for much of the past two decades. Over the past 50 years, U.S. interest rates have averaged 5.98%. Today’s 5.5% rate seems high compared with the 0.25% paid during the recession of 2008, but no comparison to 1980 when rates topped out at 20%.

Similarly, at the start of the new millennium, a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage was 8.08%—basically in line with 2023 levels, but significantly higher than the bargain 2.96% rate that could be had just two years ago.

Higher interest rates now feel like a shock to our systems because we got anchored to some extreme lows. When considered in the full context of a longer history, though, they are in line.

Now people are anchored to the S&P 500 beating everything else. But just as we have seen with interest rates in 2023, the trend will revert to the mean, even if it takes a while.

Don’t fear volatility

Although it may feel uncomfortable, it is often easier to invest at the extremes—when valuations are crushed, buy signals are blaring and the bad news is priced in. Such conditions have the greatest profit potential, but the inherent volatility makes investors nervous.

This angst is playing out in the price action surrounding earnings announcements. FactSet reports that stocks are getting hit harder for negative earnings surprises. In turn, this drives up their volatility. In the third quarter, an earnings miss cost the typical company 5.2% in market value—more than twice the 2.3% average over the past five years.

Instead of running for the exits, we view volatility as our friend and actively seek to take advantage of the price movements. Everyone says they want to buy low, but when the opportunity arises, many wait for the dust to settle and miss the moneymaking moment.

amazon, microsoft, what the stock market taught us this year: don’t fall for these investing traps

Don’t bet against America

The market has turned more optimistic as the year winds down and we see plenty of value-beneath-the-surface stocks.

But even if investors have found some trees, they still have some concerns about the forest. Two terrible wars, congressional dysfunction, a border emergency and mounting unrest lurk over our economy as well as those around the globe.

In these unnerving moments, we are comforted by the faith in the resiliency of our capitalist democracy from capitalism’s own Yoda, Warren Buffett. He wrote in the 2012 Berkshire Hathaway shareholder letter, “Of course, the immediate future is unknown; America has faced the unknown since 1776…. Periodic setbacks will occur, yes, but investors and managers are in a game that is heavily stacked in their favor.”

Indeed, our markets have overcome a Great Depression, multiple recessions, global and regional conflicts, a modern-day pandemic and all other kinds of unforeseeable blows. Through it all, America has endured, and we have every reason to believe she will continue to do so.

Mellody Hobson is co-CEO and president, and John W. Rogers Jr. is founder, co-CEO and chief investment officer, of Ariel Investments. They can be reached at [email protected].

OTHER NEWS

16 minutes ago

Boeing says NASA's 'stranded' astronaut crisis averted, reveals why homecoming is delayed

16 minutes ago

Friday 5: Heather Gibbs grows into leadership role at Joe Gibbs Racing after husband's passing

16 minutes ago

2023 Toyota Prius Prime Road Test

16 minutes ago

A millennial making $350,000 a year through overemployment says he only worked 50 hours a week

16 minutes ago

PROFILE: Rob Walter leads Proteas to promised land of T20 World Cup final

16 minutes ago

Princess Anne Hospital Update

16 minutes ago

How High Can Nvidia Stock Go?

16 minutes ago

Man Utd primed to sell Marcus Rashford to PSG, as transfer fee, exit reasons and Ten Hag stance all emerge

16 minutes ago

Homeowner seeks advice after allowing plant to take over lawn: 'It is really hard to control'

16 minutes ago

Second panda ever born in Taiwan celebrates her fourth birthday with fruit cake

16 minutes ago

Ariane 6: How to build a space rocket step-by-step

16 minutes ago

Lloyd Harris to face American teenager in Wimbledon Round 1

16 minutes ago

Marilyn Monroe's former home declared historic landmark and safe from demolition

16 minutes ago

Premier League 'pens letter to clubs to explain its rules regarding fair valuation' amid fears they are using swap deals to exploit loopholes in financial rules before June 30 deadline

16 minutes ago

Street-Spotted: Mercedes-Benz 380SL

16 minutes ago

This is how the Taliban's drug prohibition is killing us

16 minutes ago

'I ditched Diet Coke for one month - it completely changed my body and mind'

16 minutes ago

Keyshia Cole to bring soulful magic to South Africa

19 minutes ago

Mauritania's President Ould Ghazouani seeks reelection amid regional tensions

19 minutes ago

German court convicts a 15-year-old of planning an extremist attack on a Christmas market

19 minutes ago

High-stakes French legislative election hits torrid final stretch before first-round voting begins

20 minutes ago

Man fatally shoots 80-year-old grandfather and self in New York state

21 minutes ago

Iranians vote in snap election to replace president killed in crash

21 minutes ago

C.J. Stroud asserting himself is a good sign for Texans

21 minutes ago

Lamine Yamal discovers his school exam results while on national team duty at Euro 2024... after Spain wonderkid, 16, was seen doing his homework while at the tournament

21 minutes ago

Apple Watch X — 5 rumored upgrades I'm most excited for

21 minutes ago

Is it William winning the hearts of Americans, like Harry wishes he was? After Travis Kelce calls Prince 'coolest' royal, how future king has surged in popularity over the pond, while the Sussexes get a lukewarm response

24 minutes ago

Massive Samsung Unpacked leak just revealed Galaxy Watch Ultra, Galaxy Watch 7 and Galaxy Buds 3

25 minutes ago

Futures rise in countdown to key inflation data, Trump Media spikes

25 minutes ago

How to halve EV charging times with no extra cost

25 minutes ago

As BP backtracks on green targets, is the share price set for a boost?

25 minutes ago

This Is the Best State for a Summer Road Trip in 2024 — With More Than 9,500 Miles of Scenic Byways

25 minutes ago

"We're probably the only company that has all the pieces" — AMD on why it is ahead of rivals Nvidia and Intel when it comes to AI PCs

25 minutes ago

Kevin O'Leary explains what changed the cost of housing in America — do you agree?

25 minutes ago

John Franklin-Myers 'couldn't pass up' opportunity to join Broncos

25 minutes ago

Nvidia Is Far From Perfect: 3 Ominous Signs That Suggest Wall Street's Artificial Intelligence (AI) Leader Is in a Bubble

26 minutes ago

Video: England's Anthony Gordon is pictured with cuts on his chin and wrist after he fell off his BIKE on a ride around their camp - but there will be no ban on cycling at Euros

26 minutes ago

Tripadvisor names the best travel experiences and attractions for 2024: A walking tour in Porto, a historic London pub crawl and the Empire State Building are among the winners

26 minutes ago

Video: Jude Bellingham on the bench and Joe Gomez at left-back? Jermaine Jenas and Danny Murphy pick their England XIs for last-16 showdown with Slovakia

26 minutes ago

Video: We're backing England! Gary Lineker calling the Three Lions 's***' and fans throwing cups isn't helping... with the Euros still wide open, join Mail Sport's campaign to get behind the boys