Dave Ramsey: The Biggest 401(k) Mistake People Make

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When interviewed by Rebecca Mezistrano, producer of TheStreet, personal finance expert Dave Ramsey weighed in on the biggest 401(k) plan mistake Americans make that could be costing them millions.
His answer? Jumping in and out of the market.
āThey freak out when the market goes down,ā stated Ramsey. āThey stop, they start, they try to time the market.ā
Ramsey then noted that people trained to time the market canāt even do it well ā so the lay person shouldnāt try.
Ramsey stated that those with money invested in the market do best when they ignore their emotions (be it panic or excitement), avoid reacting to short-term fluctuations and simply allow their 401(k) plans to grow untouched.
He goes on to say that individuals trying to time the market never keep up with steady investor. The steady investor wins every time, but do other financial professionals agree?
Do Other Financial Professionals Agree or Disagree with Ramseyās Take?
āI often disagree with Dave Ramsey, but on this point he is 100% spot on,ā stated Robert Johnson, chairman and CEO at Economic Index Associates, who claimed attempting to time the market is āfoolās gold.ā Ā
Johnson cited the J.P. Morgan Asset Managementās 2025 Retirement Guide to demonstrate that over a 20-year period from Jan. 3, 2005, to Dec. 31, 2024, āif you missed the top 10 days in the stock market, your overall return was cut by over 40%,ā and, ā[seven] of the best 10 days occurred within two weeks of the worst ten days.ā
Translation? The biggest market gains happen too infrequently, too unpredictably and too densely to risk pulling your money out of the market and missing them.
Lisa A. Cummings, Esq., attorney at Cummings & Cummings Law, also agreed with Ramsey, adding that timing the market results in counterproductively buying expensive securities during market highs and selling low amid fear ā āwhich results in the opposite long-term goal to preserve your contributions and grow your earnings over a longer time horizon.ā
Listen to Ramsey on this one: Set it and forget it.
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