My intuition about investing in indexes is basically invest your capital, save the dividends and invest 50% of the dividends at every 10% down. I guess you can try timing the market too.
Yeup.And that is a very important point.
To me, we're seeing something akin to the dot com burst. The higher we go, in my mind, the closer we come to flipping a simple recession into a literal depression. Everything is deeply overvalued. My filters for good value stocks to look into are turning up 10s of stocks instead of hundreds like they used to. We are quite literally in some extraordinary times.
I agree, this is the best of time and the worst of time. I am grateful my full time trading "career" coincided with the longest bull market in history.We truly are. And im grateful for that.

i moved all of my 2040 target fund into cash on my vanguard as of yesterday. on my company 401k...i move all of the money on the s&p 500 into cash as of yesterday which consist of 60% of my portfolio. the other 40% is still in my 2040 target date fund.
fear of height is very common... although people like to say the trend is your friend, when the friend is actually here they doubt his loyalty, thinking the friend will just leave suddenly..
Why not just keep it simple and buy the market twice a month on pay day until you have +$1 Million in your account and then exit? It is not rocket sceince to know that market has gone one direction for the past +30 years. UPWARDS.
I dont think selling everything and going to cash is very smart, but I am definitely starting to consider going heavyweight bonds into the election. All Trump has to do is tweet and the market collapses. The fed can't keep cutting rates, so the market will throw an absolute shit fit when they start raising rates over and over again. WSJ just released an article spinning the trillions moving to cash as a "possible bull indicator" which is pants on head retarded.
Who's to say anything you buy will ever return back to where you bought in the event a crash? If the intrinsic value is significantly below where you bought it, it will never return. The principle failing of dollar cost averaging is it only works if you maintain a contribution at or below the intrinsic value of the thing you're buying.
Now is a perfect time to review your investments and adjust as appropriate. If I was nearing retirement I'd probably be almost 100% cash and cash equivalents.
