In fact, investors were net withdrawers of funds in 2018 and lagged the S&P “in good times and bad,” according to Dalbar.

In October 2018, a bad month, the S&P return was negative 6.84 percent, while the average equity investor return was negative 7.97 percent, Dalbar reported.

In August, a good month, the S&P return was 3.26 percent, while the average equity investor return was 1.8 percent.

“Judging by the cash flows we saw, investors sensed danger in the markets and decreased their exposure, but not nearly enough to prevent serious losses,” Clark said.

“Unfortunately, the problem was compounded by being out of the market during the recovery months,” he said. “As a result, equity investors gained no alpha and, in fact, trailed the S&P by 504 basis points.”

Since 1994, Dalbar has been analyzing investor returns based on aggregate cash-flow data from U.S. mutual funds.

According to its research, the average investor consistently earns “much less” than market indices suggest.

In fact, year after year, the firm has found that investors are often their own worst enemy, failing to exercise the necessary discipline to capture the benefits markets can provide over longer time horizons, while succumbing to short-term strategies such as market timing or performance chasing as they did in 2018.

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