The upcoming Memorial Day holiday is a time to remember and reflect. It gives us a moment to
step back, gain perspective, and appreciate what matters most.
That idea applies to investing more than it may seem.
Right now, there’s no shortage of concerns. Ongoing conflict in the Middle East, rising oil prices
tied to tensions with Iran, lingering inflation, and constant debate about where markets go next.
Add in the growing noise around AI and the future of jobs, and it’s easy to feel uncertain.
When information comes at us this fast, it can feel like action is required.
Remembering and Perspective
This is where remembering becomes valuable.
Markets have always faced uncertainty. Different headlines, same pattern. Periods of stress
come and go, and markets have historically moved through them.
It also helps to remember our own behavior. Most investors don’t struggle when markets are
calm. They struggle when uncertainty rises and emotions take over. That’s when decisions shift
from disciplined to reactive.
We’ve seen it before. Investors hold on during early declines, then grow impatient. Eventually,
many sell when it feels hardest to stay invested, often near market lows.
That’s not a lack of knowledge. It’s a lack of perspective.
So what’s worth remembering right now?
Markets have historically rewarded patience, not reaction. Short-term uncertainty is normal,
even when it feels unique. And your plan was built for periods like this.
It can also help to think back five or ten years. The headlines then felt just as concerning. Yet
markets moved forward.
That’s the power of remembering.
Memorial Day reminds us to pause and reflect. In investing, doing the same can help us stay
grounded, make better decisions, and remain focused on the plan, not the moment.
Reach out if you'd like to discuss,
Gail
©Behavioral Finance Network