Stock market investors have reasons to be pleased, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average recently hitting the significant milestone of 40,000. Despite a recent dip, job growth and corporate profits remain strong, and inflation appears to be gradually coming under control.
However, a rising stock market brings its own challenges. Some investors might feel they’ve missed out on Nvidia, whose stock price has doubled this year, or on the broader AI sector. Others might be skeptical about China’s market rebound, even though the iShares MSCI China ETF has risen over 9% this year despite doubts about the country’s economic recovery.
The concept of “pain trades,” mentioned in a recent note by Nicholas Colas, co-founder of DataTrek Research, refers to situations where the market defies conventional wisdom, frustrating investors both on Wall Street and Main Street.
Colas explains, “It essentially says that when everyone agrees on a given idea, everyone is wrong.”
Unfortunately, pain trades are a natural part of investing. When too many investors place the same bet, it often stops being profitable, leading to volatility. This causes prices to deviate from their fundamentals, sometimes rising on bad news or falling on good news.
This mismatch between clear investment logic and actual market behavior forces investors to make tough decisions. Early investors must decide whether to take profits, while those on the sidelines wonder how long they can go against the market trend.
Such situations are often uncomfortable.
Even renowned investors can suffer from pain trades. Colas cites George Soros, who bet against tech stocks during the dot-com bubble but ended up going long just before the bubble burst, causing his fund to lose more than half its value.
To handle pain trades, Colas offers two pieces of advice.
First, don’t be discouraged by short-term losses. It’s better to endure a 20% to 30% drop typical of bear markets than to miss out on future gains.
Second, trust in the long-term prospects of large-cap U.S. stocks, which consistently provide good returns. As Colas notes, “In the end, the worst Pain Trade is being underinvested.”