Mon, May 28, 2012, 5:43 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Preparing For Market Panic

"In the short run, the market is a voting machine, but in the long run, it is a weighing machine."

[See top-ranked ETFs by category ranked by U.S. News Best ETFs.]

This quote from Benjamin Graham means that over a long period of time, investors will analyze companies' financials, competitive strengths, and management and accurately "weigh" what a company is worth. But in the short run, markets rise and fall, and investors experience emotions like relief, panic, and joy. In the short run, buying based upon these emotions is "voting." During the dotcom bubble, investors voted stocks way up, and over time they weighed their value to bring stocks back down to earth.

As Facebook nears its IPO, the analyst and investment community will be busy weighing the value of its shares and trying to judge investor sentiment to arrive at a share price between $35 and $55. Over the long term, Facebook shares will receive a proper price, but in the short term, investor emotions will impact pricing.

[See Why Your Investment Portfolio Is Not Diversified]

What if computers could be made to read human emotion? Since most of us can fall prey to our emotions as we watch the market, what if we could measure market emotion and be ready for market swings? Look no further than the "VIX" index. VIX is a ticker symbol that you can track like a stock. Put it in your Yahoo finance ticker symbols and start watching it. VIX has a complex-sounding definition, but in layman's terms, it measures fear in the market by the price of puts and calls on the S&P 500.

Consider insurance as a great metaphor. If you are older, term life insurance is more expensive than if you are younger because the risk is greater for the insurance company. Mutual and hedge fund managers make less money when they have big swings in their portfolios. Unhappy investors pull their money out of funds that have big ups and downs, which reduces assets and lowers fund manager salaries. They want to take their investors for a ride in a quiet, smooth Lexus, not around the track in a high-performance Porsche. So they buy insurance (puts and calls) to smooth out the ride. If the stock market is worried about Greek debt, U.S. deficits, and other matters, the price of puts and calls (insurance) goes up. That's what the VIX measures.

[See If You Can't Beat It, Join It.]

When investors are incredibly relaxed without a care in the world, the VIX can get down around 10, as it was in 2007. During the height of the financial panic, it reached an unprecedented 80, and then it fell over a year following March 2009 to around 15 in May 2010 until the flash crash happened, and then it spiked back up to 45. It slowly declined to about 15 until last August when the world freaked out about the European debt crisis and our government's impasse on the debt ceiling. The VIX has since calmed down and has slowly fallen back below 20.

In times like these, when the VIX goes down, it usually goes back up based upon a random and unknowable event. For the third time since the 2008 panic, the VIX has fallen down to a point where investors are so relaxed that they've left the office, gone to the spa, and are laying on a massage table. We don't bet on markets, and our investment strategy is never to time the market. But if you want to get yourself emotionally prepared for swings, watch the VIX. If the past is any indicator for the future, we're set up for another roller coaster ride soon.

Mitch Tuchman is CEO and founder of MarketRiders, an online investment advisory and management service helping Americans invest for retirement. MarketRiders gives investors greater peace of mind knowing that they are leveraging the best thinking of Nobel Laureates and the investing methods used by the world's most elite institutions and wealthiest families. MarketRiders is on the investor's side, helping reduce investment costs and risks, and increasing retirement savings.



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8 comments

  • William  •  Las Vegas, Nevada  •  3 months ago
    I guess the answer to how to prepare for a market panic is found in the last sentence. It seems then when the vix has jumped, the panic is already here, so that is how you prepare ? To really prepare you should sell stocks and keep your cash safe. Of couse you forego the rewards of speculation otherwise known as investing.
  • achmed  •  Panama City, Florida  •  3 months ago
    finally an educational artical that isn't trying to sell me a particualar stock.
  • The_Mick  •  Baltimore, Maryland  •  3 months ago
    I bought HewliIt Packard at $23 (now $29) when the market was dropping last year and some manipulators were writing articles saying HP was one of the worst run companies in the world and was in dire straights - while neglecting to point out HP had a growing, positive cash flow of over $1 billion per MONTH, was outselling Apple in PC's 2.5 to 1, and was poised to become the world's largest server company. The VIX would have told me to sell, not buy.
    • Stymied 3 months ago
      Actually it still is and the mistakes of the past are yet to be corrected. Also, your comparison to Apple using number of units sold fails to take into consideration that Apple's products are massively profitable and that is why Apple has almost $100B in cash and is the world's most valuable company measured by Market Cap.
    • Randall 3 months ago
      gee mick i guess you'll be ok with all of o'malleys taxes upon taxes upon taxes, ah?
    • Engineer Dave 3 months ago
      Use the Vix as an overall buy and sell indicator. Then do your homework as usual and buy good stocks. Plain and simple. I am up 25% since december and selling now.
  • RogerY  •  Portland, Maine  •  3 months ago
    misleading headline as usual
  • X RIDER  •  3 months ago
    IN NO EVENT SHOULD THE CONTENT OF THIS REPORT BE CONSTRUED AS AN EXPRESS OR IMPLIED PROMISE, GUARANTEE OR IMPLICATION BY OR FROM THE SERVICES, NEWSMAX OR ANY OF ITS OFFICERS, DIRECTORS, EMPLOYEES, AFFILIATES OR OTHER AGENTS THAT YOU WILL PROFIT OR THAT LOSSES CAN OR WILL BE LIMITED IN ANY MANNER WHATSOEVER. SOME RECOMMENDED TRADES MAY INVOLVE SECURITIES HELD BY OUR OFFICERS
    • Boubou 3 months ago
      Knowing this to be true of all financial advice, and especially our own 'homework' , we still play the game. It's a strong example of denial.
  • SusanH  •  Columbus, Ohio  •  3 months ago
    My yahoo finance ticker says: No such ticker symbol: VIX Try Symbol Lookup
    • Disgusted 3 months ago
      Put in this symbol ^ vix. dont ask me why but it what yahoo uses.
    • djdancing49 3 months ago
      http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=^VIX&ql=1 dj.
  • A Yahoo! User  •  Mt Laurel, New Jersey  •  3 months ago
    democrats r m0r0ns,
  • Joe  •  3 months ago
    Discover the easiest and the best way of making big money visit “GoIdTradingAcademy.”
 
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