Key takeaways

  • Buy-and-hold is a passive, long-term investment strategy that creates a stable portfolio over a long period of time to generate higher returns. Instead of trading shares based on stock market timing, investors buy stocks and hold onto them despite any market fluctuation.

  • Active investing relies on real-time market pricing; investors sell their shares when stock prices are high and buy new shares when prices are low.

  • A passive investing strategy requires patience and selectivity and can outperform active investing over time.

As long as markets have existed, investors have tried to maximize gains and minimize losses by timing the market.

Timing the market involves attempting to buy when prices are low but rising, and sell when prices are high but falling. However, when it comes to stock market timing, you must be successful twice: Once when you buy and then again when you sell.

It’s hard enough to time things correctly on one end, let alone getting the timing right on both ends. Plus, every time you trade, you incur brokerage fees and taxes, which quickly reduce your net returns on both the purchase and the sale.

Instead of timing the market, consider spending time in the market. You may find that a passive investment strategy, such as buying and holding stocks for a long time, can help you accumulate wealth.

“A broadly diversified market portfolio held through time is an easier path to wealth than trying to identify specific stocks or timing when to get in and out of the market,” says Rob Haworth, senior investment strategy director at U.S. Bank Wealth Management.

 

What is passive investing?

Passive investing, sometimes called buy-and-hold, is a popular investment approach where you invest in stocks and other securities with the intention of holding onto them for an extended period regardless of changes in the stock market. You ignore day-to-day market movements and allow the investment to perform over the long term.

Historically, a large share of the stock market’s gains and losses occur in just a few days of any given year. Since the pattern of returns isn’t predictable from month to month, a consistent investment can add to your bottom line.

The overall goal of passive investing is to build wealth gradually. Passive investors don’t profit from market timing or short-term market fluctuations. The most popular form of passive investing is to own funds that seek to replicate market indices, such as the S&P 500.

“Even passively managed index funds have changing components,” Haworth notes. “In this way, owning ‘the market’ will change over time, but continue to reflect the market as it evolves.”

 

What is active investing?

Active investing involves real-time buying and selling and is intended to seek to regularly generate short-term gains through profitable trading. An active investor, or portfolio manager, constantly monitors the stock market and trades shares when the opportunity arises. However, this does incorporate a variable of timing, and investors take risks of being in and out of investments at the wrong time.

 

Why you should consider passive investing

There are a few reasons to explore a buy-and-hold investing strategy, all of which are rooted in how stock markets work.

1. Investments can grow despite market fluctuations

U.S. stock market volatility can be intimidating, and it often causes even stalwart buy-and-hold investors to second guess their strategy. However, while past performance is not a guarantee of future returns, history shows that the market has been able to recover from declines and still provide investors with a positive return on long-term investments. In fact, over the past 35 years, the market has posted a positive annual return in nearly eight out of every 10 years.1

2. Buy-and-hold keeps you in the game

A buy-and-hold strategy can help investors avoid missing out on the market’s biggest days.

The hardest part about choosing when to be in or out of the market is that missing a few key days or weeks of a five- or 10-year cycle can have a significant influence on your returns. Historically, a large share of the stock market’s gains and losses occur in just a few days of any given year. Since the pattern of returns isn’t predictable from month to month, a consistent long-term investment can add to your bottom line.

Chart depicts returns of the S&P 500 tracking the performance of a $10,00 investment between 1/2/1990 to 12/31/2021.

3. Potential to recoup losses faster

For most investors, a buy-and-hold strategy can result in quicker loss recovery, even after a bear market, when a major index like the S&P 500 falls by more than 20% from its recent high.

As an example, let’s say you invested $1,000 in the S&P 500 on January 1, 2008. That year, the S&P 500 lost 37% of its value.2 At the end of 2008, your investment was worth $630. Consider the differing outcomes depending on whether you used a buy-and-hold strategy or chose to reinvest $630 into a savings account with a 3% interest rate, compounded monthly.

Using a buy-and-hold strategy, you would have recouped your losses by 2012, even without making additions to your original stock market investment. With your funds in the savings account, in this example, it would take 16 years to recoup your losses and cross the $1,000 threshold.

Chart depicts outcomes for a buy-and-hold strategy vs. a savings account.

4. Your investment will grow with compound interest

A buy-and-hold strategy can also help you take advantage of compound interest. While past performance is not a guarantee of future returns, the S&P 500’s inflation-adjusted annual average return on investment is about 7%.3 This means, on average, the index’s value is 7% higher at the end of the year than it was at the beginning. These gains accumulate over time and can provide an advantage to those who invest early and let their money continue to accumulate.

5. You won’t miss out on dividends

Investors often try to wait for the “right” time to start putting money into the stock market. But in doing so, they sacrifice an important opportunity: collecting dividends.

Don’t underestimate dividends. These individual payouts might seem small, especially when you’ve been investing for only a few years, but dividends are responsible for more than 40% of S&P 500 gains.2

As a stock market investor, you can choose to cash in your dividends as soon as they’re available, or you can opt to reinvest your dividends back into the market, manually or automatically.

Automatic dividend reinvestment expands your portfolio with minimal effort on your part. As you reinvest your dividend payouts, you’ll purchase additional shares that earn additional dividends. In other words, dividend reinvestment can help you leverage the magic of compound returns.

Still, it’s important to understand two potential downsides to automatic dividend reinvestment.

  • The dividends you receive from Company A are automatically reinvested to purchase more shares of Company A. This takes away your option to reinvest dividend payouts from Company A into Company B, even if Company B is more attractive and would accelerate your portfolio’s growth.
  • If you automatically reinvest dividends, you still need to account for taxes. When you receive a dividend payment, that amount of the dividend is taxable income, even if the dividends were reinvested into the same stock automatically. Be sure to check with your tax advisor.

If saving for retirement is your primary investment objective, you might want to turn off dividend reinvestment once you’ve stopped working. Instead, you can collect the dividends paid as cash distributions that you can put toward living expenses. Before retirement, however, reinvesting dividends can help maximize your gains and set you up for the potential to receive higher payouts in the future.

 

Passive investing: How to buy a stock and hold it

There are generally two buy-and-hold investing options. You can choose to buy your investments all at once (lump sum investing) or begin an investment schedule (dollar cost averaging).

  • Lump sum investing is precisely that: You invest a large chunk of money all at once. You might have a lump sum of cash from the sale of a family business, the sale of company stock, an inheritance or proceeds from an insurance policy claim, for example. The sooner you invest, the sooner you begin earning returns and start the process of accumulating compound returns.
  • Dollar cost averaging is a strategy where you contribute a fixed dollar amount to an investment on a regular schedule. It allows you to actively invest in the market even if you have only a small amount of money to put to work each month.
    As an example, let’s say you invest $300 per month for one year in an index fund that covers a broad range of stocks. When values — the prices you pay for your shares — are higher, your $300 contribution will buy fewer shares. When values are lower, your contribution will purchase more shares. Over the course of a year, you’ll pay an average price for the shares your purchased. Therefore, you’ve reduced the risk of repeatedly buying at peak values.
    With this approach, you can start investing early and take advantage of compound returns. It’s important to note that dollar cost averaging does not guarantee you’ll pay less for your investments compared with a one-time buy. But investing on a regular schedule helps develop a habit of saving money regularly.

 

Focus on the long term with passive investing

Oftentimes, emotions can sabotage a buy-and-hold passive investment strategy. Overconfidence might lead you to trade too frequently, while fear of loss might cause you to hang on to investments that no longer support your goals or earn a sustainable return.

However, when you invest more regularly and focus on the long-term, you can feel confident that you’re steadily working toward your goals.

Learn how we approach your long-term investing success.

Equity securities are subject to stock market fluctuations that occur in response to economic and business developments. The S&P 500 Index consists of 500 widely traded stocks that are considered to represent the performance of the U.S. stock market in general. Dollar Cost Averaging does not assure a profit and does not protect against loss in declining markets. Such a plan involves continuous investment in securities regardless of fluctuating price levels and investors should consider their ability to continue purchases through periods of fluctuating price levels.

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