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If you spend enough time sitting in local diners or answering the phones at a wealth management firm, you start to notice a rhythm to human anxiety.
The headlines change, the names of the politicians rotate, and the specific economic “boogeyman” of the month evolves, but the underlying sentiment remains remarkably consistent.
Right now, the air is thick with a familiar brand of apprehension. You hear it in the booth next to you over breakfast, and you see it in every notification on your phone:
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- “The market is overdue for a collapse“
- “Interest rates are a permanent weight on the economy”
- “The world is simply too volatile right now”
I have been a witness to these conversations for nearly 30 years. I’ve seen the seasons of worry shift from the “Japan Inc.” fears of the early ’90s to the dot-com euphoria, the existential dread of the Great Recession and the sheer confusion of the post-pandemic inflationary spike.
Sometimes the catalyst is technology; sometimes it’s Washington; sometimes it’s a virus. The details change, but the feeling that we are standing on the edge of a cliff does not.
And yet, looking back across those decades, a clear pattern emerges. Through every recession, bubble and crash, the people who achieved their long-term financial goals weren’t the ones who found a “trick” to beat the system.
They were the ones who anchored themselves to a few fundamental realities that don’t make the evening news because they aren’t flashy or frightening. Especially when the noise gets as loud as it is today, it’s worth stepping back to look at what lasts.
The high cost of emotional decisions
In my career, I have reviewed thousands of portfolios and sat through hundreds of market cycles. I can say with certainty that almost every significant investing mistake I’ve seen was a failure of temperament, not a failure of intelligence.
These weren’t math errors or a lack of analytical data. They were emotional reactions to a world that felt like it was spinning out of control.
Fear, greed, and panic are the most expensive emotions an investor can have. They act as a “reverse compass,” almost always pointing you toward the exit exactly when you should be standing still or pushing you toward a “hot” investment just as it’s about to peak.
I often think back to a call I received in March 2020. We were in the early, terrifying days of the COVID-19 lockdowns. A client who had been steady and rational for over a decade — called me with a tremor in his voice.
“Dennis,” he said, “I’ve stayed the course through plenty of dips. But this feels different. The world is literally shutting down.”
He wasn’t wrong. It did feel different. The streets were empty, and the markets were in freefall.
We spent nearly an hour on the phone, not talking about P/E ratios or technical indicators, but talking about history and his specific life goals. We talked about why we built his plan the way we did and how it was designed to navigate periods of uncertainty.
Ultimately, he chose to stay aligned with that strategy.
Discipline is the most unglamorous part of investing. It’s boring, and in the heat of a crisis, it feels passive. But in reality, maintaining discipline in the face of a falling market is one of the most active and difficult things a human being can do. It is the bedrock of wealth.
Real ownership in a ‘ticker symbol’ world
Somewhere along the way, the financial media turned investing into a high-stakes video game. We talk about “the market” as if it’s a sentient, fickle beast or a series of random numbers on a screen. We focus on day trading, “hot tips” and the quest for the next unicorn. But this perspective misses the entire point of what we are doing.
At its core, investing is about ownership. When you buy a share of a company, you aren’t just buying a ticker symbol — you are buying a stake in a real business. You are becoming a partial owner of an organization with employees, customers, infrastructure, and intellectual property. You are betting on the collective ingenuity of people who wake up every morning trying to solve problems and create value.
History has a very clear bias toward patient owners. After World War II, as the American middle class expanded, investors in American business benefited. In the 1980s and ’90s, as computing and the internet reshaped the global landscape, the owners of those technologies benefited.
Even after 2008, when the popular narrative was that the global financial system was permanently broken, the following decade proved to be one of the most productive periods for long-term investors in history.
Of course, individual companies fail. This is why we diversify — so that the failure of one “engine” doesn’t bring down the whole plane.
But the broader story remains the same: Productive businesses are the most reliable engines of wealth ever created.
If you view yourself as a long-term owner rather than a short-term gambler, the daily fluctuations of the stock market become much easier to ignore.
The futility of the crystal ball
Every January, Wall Street releases an avalanche of forecasts. They tell us exactly where the S&P 500 will end the year, what the Federal Reserve will do with interest rates in June and who will win the next election. By April, most of those predictions are either forgotten or proven wrong by some “unforeseen” event.
The truth—the one people in my industry rarely like to admit — is that nobody can consistently predict the future. Not the economists with the PhDs, not the high-frequency algorithms and certainly not the political pundits. The world is far too complex for that.
The alternative to prediction is planning. The clients I’ve seen weather the worst storms — weren’t the ones who guessed what was coming. They were the ones who were prepared for anything to happen.
A good plan doesn’t try to guess the weather — it builds a house that can help withstand a hurricane. This means:
- Keeping appropriate cash reserves so you aren’t forced to sell stocks when they are down
- Managing taxes thoughtfully so you keep more of what you earn
- Structuring your income so that your lifestyle isn’t dictated by the S&P 500’s performance in a single month
Planning creates a sense of agency and confidence. Prediction, on the other hand, creates nothing but stress and the inevitable disappointment of being wrong.
Why this matters for the road ahead
Today’s environment is undeniably complicated. We are dealing with record-high markets, elevated interest rates and a geopolitical landscape that feels increasingly fractured. It is tempting to believe that we are living in uniquely dangerous times that require a complete abandonment of traditional wisdom.
But every generation believes their challenges are the ones that will finally break the rules.
- In the ’70s, it was the end of the gold standard and double-digit inflation
- In the ’80s, it was the threat of nuclear escalation
- In 2000, it was the collapse of the “New Economy”
- In 2020, it was a once-in-a-century pandemic
Each of these moments felt overwhelming while we were in them. And each eventually became a chapter in a history book.
What endured through every one of those chapters were the disciplined investors, the patient owners and the thoughtful planners. Most successful investors aren’t brilliant strategists; they are simply people who are consistent:
- They show up
- They review their goals
- They rebalance their portfolios when things get out of alignment
- They stay calm when everyone else is rushing for the exits
In a world of loud headlines and constant “breaking news,” perspective is your most valuable asset. Volatility is not the same thing as failure, and a market correction is not a catastrophe — it’s the price of admission for long-term growth.
If you can focus on discipline over emotion, ownership over speculation and planning over prediction, you aren’t just “investing.” You are building a foundation for your family’s security that can help survive whatever the future holds.
When the noise gets louder, stop looking at the scoreboard and start looking at the plan. That is how real wealth is created, and more importantly, that is how financial confidence is maintained.
