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Key Words: Suze Orman says investors should ‘rejoice’ at the Dow’s more-than-1,000-point tumble — here’s why

Suze Orman says investors should stay the course and explains why she thinks investors worried about their retirement savings after a historic downturn for the Dow Jones Industrial Average should welcome such selloffs. Read More...

Author and personal-finance expert Suze Orman had a simple two-word answer to the question of how to react to a market that just shed more than 1,000 points on the back of growing uncertainties, including the spread of the coronavirus outbreak.

‘I rejoice.’

Orman said Monday on CNBC that investors should stay the course and explained why she thought investors worried about their retirement savings after a historic downturn for the Dow Jones Industrial Average should welcome such selloffs.

Responding to a question about Monday’s selloff, Orman explained it this way:

I rejoice. I have to tell you. Because, think about it, the majority of people out there, the way that they do it best is where?–through their retirement accounts: monthly contributions. Most of them are 30, 40, 50 years of age that have at least 10 to 30 or 40 years until they need this money for retirement. So given that that’s how they are investing, why would they want the markets to go up? ‘Cause the higher the market goes, the shares cost more, the less shares their money buys, the less money they make, in the long run. So with this dip, and if it continues to go down,they should just stay the course and actually be quite happy because the market is still incredibly high.

She went on to say: “So it could be a year or two. If [you’re investing for] the long run, don’t sell and continue to dollar-cost average. It’s really just that simple.”

Read: The Dow tumbled more than 1,000 points and marked its third-worst point drop in history — here’s how the stock market tends to perform after big drops

Her comments came after the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -3.56% shed 1,031.60 points, or 3.6%, to settle at 27,960.80, after plunging more than 1,079.97 points to a session low of 27,912.44. Blue chips registered their third-worst daily point decline in the index’s 124-year history, with the slide at least partially attributed to spread of COVID-19, the infectious disease that reportedly originated in Wuhan, China and has infected nearly 77,000 people and claimed more than 2,000 lives since the start of 2020.

Need to Know: Warren Buffett says ‘don’t buy or sell’ on the headlines as coronavirus sends stocks plunging

Monday’s decline also turned the blue-chip gauge negative for 2020, leaving it with a 2% year-to-date decline.

The S&P 500 SPX, -3.35% slumped 111.86 points, or 3.4%, to close at 3,225.89, and the Nasdaq Composite COMP, -3.71% fell 355.31 points, or 3.7%, to finish at 9,221.28. The S&P 500 is now down 0.2% year-to-date, while the Nasdaq is still up 2.8% in 2020.

Check out the full video here:

Worth a read: Apple’s stock falls below its 50-day moving average for first time in nearly 6 months

Read: Economists say Fed rate cut could come as early as March

Check out: Can stocks keep soaring as the U.S. dollar surges? What investors need to know

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