What to Do With Your Money When the Market Is Scaring Everyone Else (SB1822)
whatshot 10 snips
Mar 30, 2026
They explain why normal intra-year drops make small dips unimportant. They show how a written investment policy and automated rebalancing rules stop emotional trades. They demonstrate how checking less often changes your perspective on volatility. They introduce a four-factor, risk-based method for sizing emergency funds instead of the generic three-to-six month rule.
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question_answer ANECDOTE
Historical Story About Stock Price Access
OG recounts how stock prices used to be mailed as certificates, making daily prices noise for long-term holders.
The shift to public intra-day pricing turned useful info into a trigger for unnecessary action.
insights INSIGHT
News Is Designed To Make You Act
Financial news drives action because its business model sells attention, not advice.
OG explains channels amplify short-term noise to keep viewers watching, which encourages impulsive trades.
insights INSIGHT
Average Intra Year Declines Are Normal
The average intra-year S&P 500 decline is 14%, so typical statements can show large temporary drops without implying long-term loss.
OG notes that a 5% year-to-date drop is only about one-third of a typical intra-year decline, so it’s not unusual.
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Markets are down. Social media is loud. And somewhere in the back of your mind, a voice is asking if you should do something. That voice has cost investors more money than any bear market in history. Joe and OG dig into what actually separates disciplined investors from everyone panic-refreshing their brokerage account -- and how to build the guardrails that keep you from making the one mistake that derails everything you've built.
What You'll Walk Away With
Why the average intra-year market decline is 14% -- and what that means for how seriously you should be taking a 5% dip right now
The real reason financial news channels make you feel like you need to act -- and how understanding their business model changes everything
How to build a simple investment policy statement that removes emotion from the equation before the next market drop hits
Why setting arbitrary calendar dates to review your portfolio might be the single most underrated investing strategy available to anyone
The case for checking your portfolio less often -- including a real example of how last April's market chaos looked completely different depending on how often you were watching
How to set automatic triggers that tell you when it's actually time to rebalance -- so you're never guessing in the middle of a storm
A powerful perspective shift: look at your tax returns from 2003 or 2010 and then look at your balance today -- what that exercise does to your decision-making in volatile markets
Why your only real job as a long-term investor is to not interrupt the compounding -- and how systems make that easier than willpower ever could
A four-factor framework for calculating exactly how much emergency fund you actually need -- built around your income, job stability, reemployment risk, and expense flexibility
Why the standard three-to-six month emergency fund rule is the wrong starting point -- and what a personalized risk-based approach looks like instead
Why This Matters Now
If you're in your 40s and you've been building toward something -- a retirement account that finally has real weight to it, a financial plan that took years to assemble -- a volatile market feels personal. Because it is. The stakes are higher than they were in your 30s and the noise is louder than ever. The investors who come out ahead aren't the ones who reacted fastest. They're the ones who had a plan written down before things got uncomfortable.
From the Basement
Joe and OG work through what a real investment policy statement looks like in plain language -- rules, triggers, and all. OG and Anna return with the second installment of the financial planning basics series, this time tackling exactly how much emergency fund you need using a four-factor framework that replaces the three-to-six month rule of thumb with something actually built around your life. Doug arrives with insurance trivia that is technically about premiums and practically about Joe's unregistered vehicle situation in Texarkana. Whether the basement scoreboard survived the week is a separate matter entirely.
Resources Mentioned
JP Morgan Guide to the Markets -- monthly research report tracking S&P 500 returns and intra-year declines (Google "JP Morgan Guide to the Markets" for the latest edition)
Stock Market Maestros by Claire Flynn Levy and Lee Freeman-Shor -- referenced throughout; available wherever books are sold
SSA.gov -- Social Security earnings history lookup, referenced as a tool for tracking long-term financial progress
Stacking Benjamins Scorecard -- rate your overall financial strategy at stackingbenjamins.com/scorecard
Stacking Benjamins Vault -- budgeting and net worth tracking tool at stackingbenjamins.com/vault
Stacking Benjamins Voicemail -- share your investment policy statement questions at stackingbenjamins.com/voicemail
Stacking Benjamins Meetups -- find a group near you at stackingbenjamins.com/bad
FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-protect-your-money-for-when-times-turn-bad-1822/