---
title: "Rethinking Loss in the Stock Market"
description: ""
canonical_url: https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/rethinking-loss
markdown_url: https://trendshare.org/ai/rethinking-loss.md
published: 2011-10-21
last_updated: 2025-11-11
content_license: https://trendshare.org/about/disclaimer
---
# Rethinking Loss in the Stock Market

Source: https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/rethinking-loss
Updated: 2025-11-11
Stocks go up and stocks go down. It's fun to watch your investments increase
in value, but it feels awful when they decrease.

Don't fret! If you have good investments, you can weather the daily ups and
downs of the market without getting caught up in [the frantic daily reporting of the stock market horse race](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/why-does-the-media-cover-the-stock-market-so-poorly).

If the [Dow, S&P 500, or NASDAQ](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/dow-sandp-nasdaq) index
drops a percent or two and you feel uneasy, you're in good company. On paper,
you may have lost hundreds or thousands of dollars. (Put yourselves in the
shoes of a [Mark Zuckerberg losing $7.2 billion dollars in a single day](https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-06-27/mark-zuckerberg-loses-7-billion-as-companies-drop-facebook-ads). Daily, monthly, and
yearly fluctuations are mere bumps on a long road. If you take a longer
view—if you think of losses differently—you will invest with more
confidence.

## When Do You Really Lose Money on a Stock?

It stings to look online and see that stock you were really excited to buy
drop a couple of dollars per share, but remember this: you only make a profit
or suffer a loss when you sell.

You have not *lost* anything until then. [The value of a stock is as much its future worth—the share in its earnings in the present and future—as its current price](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-present-value). Regardless of the current price of a stock, you still own a
part of that business and share its value. Unless and until the nature of the
business changes, you've retained that value.

## What Does it Mean When a Stock "Goes Down"?

Every day in the stock market is a new day. Unless no one buys or sells
anything, prices will move. They may end up at the same place, but there's
always *something* happening.

Does that something mean anything?

When a big stock or a specific index drops, people rush to ask "[what happened in the market](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-happened-in-the-stock-market-today)"
This is a normal question. Usually there's no single explanation which accounts
for all of the actions of all of actors in the market. Even as simple an
explanation as "There's a rumor the Fed will raise interest rates" can't
account for every sell and every buy.

Even if you *could* explain what happened after the fact, what could
you do with that information? Perhaps a rise in interest rates changes the
business strategy behind the stocks you own—but if it makes those
businesses no longer worth owning, were they ever worth owning in the first
place? (This may be a blessing in disguise for great companies, by encouraging
poor companies to leave the market altogether.)

Even if you've [fully invested in index funds](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/buy-the-s&p-index-fund), you might be better off not doing anything. For example, when the
Dow drops a hundred points, that could mean that only one stock, such as [Boeing](/stocks/BA/view) lost a few dollars. Everything else could
have gone up. ([The Dow's price-weighted model has problems](https://www.fool.com/how-to-invest/2013/09/26/the-real-reason-the-dows-price-weighted-model-brok.aspx) like this.)

In fact, throughout late 2019 and early 2020, Boeing's response to the 737
crisis caused a great amount of volatility in its stock price, and that
turbulence caused a great amount of volatility in the price of the Dow, making
broad market volatility look more severe than it might otherwise have been.

It's more important to see *trends* beyond the daily or weekly or
quarterly fluctuations.

If you've invested in good businesses which will continue to be good, each
share is an investment in a bright future. Daily ups and downs are just steps
in a longer journey. To try to draw conclusions based on these fluctuations is
to attempt to divine meaning from a thousand random points.

If you're a [value investor looking for bargains](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/should-value-investors-time-the-market), dips and drops in stock prices are
expected—even, occasionally, valuable. Warren Buffett is on record as
advising that [there are bargains to be found when other people are fearful](https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/29255-be-fearful-when-others-are-greedy-and-greedy-when-others); be bold when the
rest of the market runs scared and be cautious when the rest of the market is
confident.

The point of value investing is to find overlooked opportunities. That means
bargains. Find stocks worth more than their current prices and plan for great
returns *over time*. No one can control the market's fluctuations, but
you can do your research and find strong companies with good histories.

## Price Drops are Opportunities

[Sometimes a stock's price drop is an opportunity](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/when-stocks-go-on-sale). If the stock were a bargain at $10 per share, how much more so
at $8! You don't have to take advantage of this opportunity; you may want to
diversify into other stocks or you may not have the budget to buy right now,
but it's still an opportunity.

This can happen for you without direct involvement, if you practice [dollar-cost averaging](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-dollar-cost-averaging) or [dividend reinvesting](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-dividend-reinvesting). Whether this is
deliberate purchasing on a timescale, or an automatic investment through a
401(k) or SEP, a minor adjustment in a stock price gets you more for your money
and multiplies your eventual gains. Through the gradual magic of compound
interest, [an extra percent return here and there can add up to thousands of dollars](http://observationsandnotes.blogspot.com/2012/02/expenses-impact-on-stock-bond-returns.html).

## Losses Can Save Money

Sometimes a loss can be a benefit to you.

If you've realized a lot of profit—actually sold at a profit—in
this tax year, you can get out of a losing investment and reduce your taxable
liability.

If you sell at a loss and realize that loss, your capital losses may offset
the same dollar amount as your capital gains. (This is why [many investors sell toward the end of December.) There are rules around this, such as not buying and selling the same security within 30 days to avoid something the SEC calls wash sales](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/should-you-sell-stocks-in-december). Consult your tax
professional for more details.

Even if you can't currently take advantage of tax benefits, sometimes
selling an underperforming stock at a loss can free up capital to invest in a
much better opportunity. Why wait for something to turn around, when you've
found a better bargain right now?

Losses on paper aren't always losses in fact. It's not easy to see the great
company you bought at a good price turn into a bigger opportunity at an even
better price, but you don't have to squeeze every possible penny out of every
possible purchase to be a good investor and meet your goals.

If [the company is still strong](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/earnings-matter-most), [the intrinsic value of the stock remains](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-intrinsic-value) as
it is. Seek strong companies with great businesses you understand. Sleep
soundly even despite the daily random machinations of numbers. Seek
*value*.

If [the company is still strong](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/earnings-matter-most), [the intrinsic value of the stock remains](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-intrinsic-value) as
it is. Seek strong companies with great businesses you understand. Sleep
soundly even despite the daily random machinations of numbers. Seek
*value*.
