Double FOMOitis

I have an exasperating and ever-increasing case of double FOMOitis. Today’s stretched stock market valuations have given me a case of fear of missing out (FOMO) for not selling and locking in assured gains – sensible rebalancing theory suggests that we should all be selling on the way up. On the other hand, I have FOMO even considering selling because of the potential opportunity cost of not capturing further gains in a market with clear upward momentum – sensible investing theory (and Jonathan recently) suggests that we should ride the winners while they are hot.

In reality, many of HumbleDollar’s financial debates mainly matter on the margin – Social Security claiming, taxes, tariffs, interest rates, Medicare premiums, Roth conversions, annuities, diversification, dividends, specific fund selections, etc. We seniors have experienced the most amazing 15 years of stock market appreciation ever, and having a healthy asset allocation to stocks has been hugely beneficial. At this point, only a Japan-like decades of market pull-back could devastate the comfortable financial position of those (like most HD readers) with invested assets – FOMO for not selling. Yet, the economy, earnings, technology development, consumer spending, employment, GDP, and stock valuations all continue to grow nicely, and it is always best to stay invested for the long-term – FOMO to sell.

Anyone else likewise suffering a case of double FOMOitis?

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Published on July 21, 2025 15:01
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