Curious if anybody has any advice for a young guy here trying to understand patience as an investor in a bear market...
My wife and I try to keep things as simple as possible with our investing, focusing on the free money aspects. Aside from maxing out 401k matching, we also max out an ESPP for a publicly traded tech company, getting a 15% discount on the market price at the start or the end of the ESPP vesting cycle, whichever is lowest.
With our current ESPP vesting cycle ending in February, I'm curious if it's best to be patient and wait for the bear market to work itself out, or to just take the the guaranteed money/profits and sell the moment it hits our account. I've read a lot of financial message boards that say you should always take the immediate profit and go.
The main reason I'm thinking about not doing the prudent thing and selling right away is that, if the price is lower at the end of the cycle than the beginning, I'll be buying a decent amount of additional shares than originally projected. That, paired with a potential rebound, seems like simple patience could end up paying off for me even better than projected. But now, I also sound like I'm trying to time the market. I don't want to speculate.
We were fortunate to be riding this market wave for the past year and half and really didn't have to do much thinking to make a very nice ROI, but now with the downturn, I'm trying to understand and assess what the most prudent approach is to maximize returns while mitigating unnecessary risk.
Thanks to anybody willing to offer up some wisdom and guidance.
(NOTE: Forgive me if this isn't the proper thread for this kind of ask, but didn't think this warranted it's own thread)