Buy the Dip… or Buy the Future?

Date: 2026-02-27

Author: Wealth & Means Staff

Source: https://wealthandmeans.com/essay/buy-the-dip-or-buy-the-future

The 'buy the dip' strategy sounds disciplined. Historical crashes really do recover. But research shows most investors who try it end up worse off. A data-driven look at why waiting for dips destroys more wealth than it builds — and what to do instead.

TL;DR

Since 1990, markets have crashed repeatedly — 1997, 1998, 2010, 2011, 2015, 2016, 2020 — and recovered every time. 'Buy the dip' sounds like a strategy. In practice, most investors who try it underperform simple buy-and-hold because: markets rise more than they fall (structural cost of waiting), the best recovery days happen when fear is highest (behavioral paralysis), and round-number targets ('I'll buy at -20%') don't cooperate with market reality. For most long-term investors, especially in their 20s: consistent dollar-cost averaging, automation, and rebalancing capture the downside opportunity without requiring perfect timing.

Key Takeaways

If you've spent any time on finance social media, you've heard the mantra: "Just wait. The dip is coming."

It sounds disciplined. Patient. Strategic. And history backs it up — sort of. Since 1990, U.S. markets have experienced multiple flash crashes and rapid selloffs: 1997, 1998, 2001, 2010, 2011, 2015, 2016, and most dramatically, 2020. In many of these episodes, stocks plunged 10% to 35% — then recovered in months, sometimes weeks.

On paper, it looks like a dream setup: wait, buy cheap, ride the rebound, repeat.

So why do most investors who try this end up worse off?

The Pattern Is Real — the Seduction Is the Problem

First: the pattern is real. Markets do panic. Prices do overshoot to the downside. Patient buyers in March 2020, March 2009, and October 2011 did extraordinarily well.

The 2020 crash is the most famous example. The S&P 500 fell 34% in just 33 days. It felt like the financial system might collapse. Five months later, stocks were at new highs.

This is why "buy the dip" became gospel. It worked — spectacularly — if you timed that moment.

But in real time, that moment felt nothing like an opportunity. Hospitals were overwhelmed. Businesses were closing. Unemployment was exploding. No vaccine existed. Nobody knew how bad it would get. Buying stocks then didn't feel smart. It felt reckless.

And most people didn't do it. They waited for confirmation. For clarity. For lower prices. By the time confidence returned, prices were already up 30–50%.

Why Waiting Underperforms

Large-scale research testing hundreds of dip-buying strategies over decades produces a remarkably consistent result: most "buy the dip" strategies underperform simple buy-and-hold investing.

The reason is structural: markets rise more than they fall. Over time, stocks spend far more days near all-time highs than in deep declines. Crashes are rare. Bull markets are normal. So if you sit in cash waiting for "the next big dip," you are:

That "structural cost of waiting" quietly destroys returns. And the damage is compounded by the fact that the market's best days cluster right after crashes — when scared investors are still on the sidelines, the sharpest recoveries occur. Missing those days because you're waiting for more confirmation can reduce lifetime wealth by 30–50%.

The Three Behavioral Traps

Opportunity Cost. Every year uninvested, compounding works against you. A dollar invested at 22 is radically more powerful than a dollar invested at 32. That gap — the decade of compounding — is typically larger than any discount captured by dip-timing.

Behavioral Paralysis. When the dip finally arrives, fear spikes. "What if it keeps falling?" "What if this is 2008?" "What if I lose my job?" Investors who correctly anticipated a decline often still fail to act at the bottom — because buying feels worst precisely when it's most valuable.

False Precision. Investors set round-number targets: "I'll buy at -10%," "I'll buy at -20%," "I'll buy if it crashes." Markets fall 9%, then rally 18%. Then you're watching from the sidelines.

When It Actually Works

To be fair: sometimes it does work. If you already have cash, you act quickly, you're emotionally disciplined, and the recovery is fast (like 2020), buying during panic can boost returns.

But notice something important: you don't get to choose these conditions. They choose you. Building a strategy around rare, unpredictable moments with specific emotional and financial requirements is not a reliable foundation for wealth.

The Better Approach

You can still benefit from market downturns — without gambling on perfect timing.

Dollar-cost averaging is your best tool: invest the same amount every month. When prices fall, you buy more shares automatically. When prices rise, you buy fewer. No guesswork, no timing calls, no drama.

Automatic investing through 401(k)s, Roth IRAs, and brokerage auto-invest features removes the emotional decision entirely. Automation beats emotion.

Rebalancing does the rest. If stocks fall and bonds hold steady, rebalancing naturally buys more equities at lower prices — without requiring you to call a bottom.

The Real Advantage You Have: Time

At 25, you have something institutional investors can't buy: decades of compounding.

$500/month invested from 25 to 65 at 8% annual returns produces approximately $1.7 million. Starting at 35 with the same contributions produces approximately $740,000. Same money. Half the result.

That gap is larger than any dip you'll ever time perfectly.

"Buy the dip" is a catchy slogan. But as a core strategy, it's unreliable — it assumes you'll predict crashes, act under pressure, and outsmart millions of other investors. Most people won't, most of the time.

What does work: staying invested, adding consistently, letting time compound, and using downturns as opportunities rather than waiting for them as a signal to start.

The best dip to buy is your first one. The best time is now.