The problem that's irking me right now is that based on that same research most funds are currently valued quite high, and likely to regress to the mean over the short to medium-term. Initially I had the impression that you could enter the market at any given time, make regular contributions over the long-term, and come out ahead, while now I realize that this greatly depends on the time-frame that you're investing within.
No, actually, when you're looking at long term investing, you can pretty much ignore the market. The fluctuations are normal and average out over time, such that, any particular low periods are compensated for by high periods. As that corkscrews, the overall effect is a positive return, such that, when you are ready to liquidate for retirement (or for whatever reason), by the end of ten years your market value will have gone up significantly in spite of any interim down markets.
Yes, if you sold when the market was way down, you might lose any gains you made over the years on that particular position (whatever it may be), but in general (absent calamity, which does happen), you come out ahead in the long term. That's the magic of compound interest/dividend reinvest.
It's endlessly ironic, but the whole Occupy Wall Street and Sanders fake zeitgeist about the "1%" and the idiotic "wealth inequality" nonsense taking such vehement fervor these days (is there such a thing as wealth
equality?) is that it's based almost entirely on the fact that my generation--Generation X--born in the sixties and coming of age in the eighties was the punk generation and a lot of us were saying "eat the rich" (or "fuck the rich" or "kill the rich") and basically eschewing anything that our parents' generation did, like investing, while another part dove right into investing like it was a hooker with blow on her tits (basically the poster child for "junk bonds" in the 80s and 90s).
To put that into perspective, if, starting in, say, 1980, every year we--every US citizen above the poverty line--had put $100 in the same S&P 500 index fund (I'm talking about just $8
per month) and set it for dividend reinvest, we would be talking about the 10% homeless problem, not the 10% wealth problem, because anyone who did so would be worth about a million dollars today.
All from just $8 a month. Even if you were only making $12K per year, that would be $1,000 per month. Out of that, $8/month into your retirement would have been all it took to be worth almost a million today. I literally kick myself every fucking day for not doing anything like this until I was in my
forties and even then I hesitated and didn't take full advantage of my company's 401K.
And it's not difficult. There is no secret, arcane knowledge involved. Just set it up (dividend reinvest) and add to it every year/paycheck as much as you can or are allowed and just let it ride and you're set for life. Yes, of course, absent a major collapse, but here is a great piece on the history of market fluctuation:
Here’s How Long the Stock Market has Historically Taken to Recover from Drops.
They note that in 7 out of the 11 drops charted (from 1950 - 2018) it only took a year for the market to get back up to its previous high:
The longest period so far was the 2000 recession (brought on by the dot.com bubble), but even that was only 8 years. That's why you think in terms of ten years at the very least.
And from what I can tell rates of return are expected to be quite bad in the upcoming period.
What do you mean by "upcoming period"? Do you mean the next quarter or the next two years or the next decade? Again, there are different strategies for investing shorter term than for longer term, but if you do think, say, climate change is going to be the dominant issue over the next decade,and/or there will be a coming zombie apocalypse, then you might want to invest in mutual funds that in turn invest in "green" companies while at the same time invest in a mutual fund that invests in food and water (and oxygen) or the like. It won't stop the zombies, but you'll profit off the escalating panic and mayhem, so that's fun.
But any portfolio should have a large percentage (imo) invested in an index tracking fund like
VFIAX (though that has a higher minimum buy in, but as an example, look at the "maximum" returns over time and you'll see why you look at longer term, rather than shorter term).
And yet the above is at odds with the advice of not timing the market.
Again, that's because you can't "time the market" and even if you could the way compound interest works in a mutual fund that simply tracks the top positions isn't a matter of timing the market (i.e., buying low, selling high). That's a strategy for day trading, basically, and that's almost exclusively stocks (and riskier ones at that), because they rise and fall and so you watch them during the day or week to bet on, essentially.
You can't do that with mutual funds, nor should you. You can do that with ETFs, but shouldn't.
High volume equity (stock) trading is something not even the pros excell at. Sometimes you get lucky--and that luck can last for several years--but then you lose it and make a bad call and lose your portfolio.
If you want to do something like that, then the smart strategy is to park the majority of your money in mutual funds/etfs, some in low return, but rock solid CDs and then like 10% for high risk/high volume trading.
CDs are FDIC backed and while illiquid, they are guaranteed (up to $250K per individual). They typically have very low yields (2% or so), but you can't lose your money even if the market collapses. If the government collapses, yes, but not the market. So that's a good place to park a chunk of cash for the long term as a safety net (like 10%-20% of your portfolio).
So this results in the question of: should I just enter the market now, and regardless I can't do better than that over a 30 year period, should I actually time the market, or do something else completely with my money?
Well, again, it doesn't matter when you "enter" the market when it comes to index funds.
In general, sure, it's great to buy low, but what does that actually mean to you? How will you know? If anyone could reliably "time the market" they'd be the King of Kings. At best, some people can get lucky, but almost ALL money managers have a diversification strategy at play.
Index funds (the passive ones) are precisely the opposite of all of that nonsense and that's why they do the best over time. They're not prone to money managers trying to predict the future.
I think someone noted this in the thread earlier, but why do you think somebody like Warren Buffett is strongly recommending that you just park your money in an S&P 500 index tracking fund (dividend reinvest) and let it go on its own as the best way to build wealth? It's precisely because it isn't susceptible to human failure.
Here, parenthetically, is an excellent piece from Investopedia explaining diversification and what steps you should follow:
Portfolio Diversification Done Right
My own personal preference is 60% equity mutual funds/etfs (and then I break that down into four or five funds across various industries, like a tech-based fund; a healthcare-based fund, etc., but with the majority in an S&P 500 index tracker), 20% bond funds (mutual funds as well, but with bonds as the bundled investment) 10% in long term CDs (I like five year CDs because every five years is a good time to evaluate one's portfolio); and 10% cash/speculative (i.e., higher risk stocks that might interest me, such as with the new marijuana market).
I really don't need to keep any cash (as mutual funds are now the world's money market funds, basically, and they're next day liquid), but it's a hard habit to break.
But I'm 53 and am prepping for retirement, so I probably have different concerns than you do.
Regardless, what you're talking about (timing the market) only applies to short term investment strategies that are trying to predict where the market will go in terms of weeks or months or quarters, not really longer term. I leave out years, because if you're trying to predict what the market is going to do in terms of one or two or five years--and basing your investment decisions on that type of strategy--then you'd better be very rich indeed in order to weather the many loses that will generate.
Again, that's why long-term investing results in overall positive returns; it smoothes out those year-to-year fluctuations from people thinking they can predict the future.