The Nasdaq closed at a new all-time high on Monday. So did the S&P 500 Index.

Most investors see new highs and get caught up in strong emotions… And those emotions are dead wrong.

At first, it’s a good feeling. But it’s quickly followed by dread and concern. What goes up must come down, after all.

People are geared to think like this. It’s our nature to fear the unknown… to be cautious about anything that seems too good to be true. And new all-time highs seem too good to be true.

That kind of intuition is great in day-to-day life. It protects us. But when it comes to finance and the markets, reality tends to be less intuitive. The truth of the matter is simple…

New highs are a good thing. They tend to lead to higher highs.

Let me explain…

Longtime readers won’t be surprised to hear this. Sticking to what’s working – to what’s in an uptrend – is an idea we write about over and over again in DailyWealth. And we don’t do it for kicks. We do it because history proves it’s the right move.

To see what I mean, let’s take a look at the Nasdaq. Remember, it hit a new all-time high on Monday. What does that mean going forward?

I looked at the full history of the Nasdaq to find out, going all the way back to 1971. Since then, the Nasdaq has closed at new all-time highs 23% of the time… more often than most would probably expect.

History is pretty clear on what happens after these highs, too. The table below shows it…

As you can see, stocks should perform darn well over the next month. The month after a new all-time high is more than twice as strong as a typical one-month return… And the next six months beat the typical return too, by nearly 30%.

A year later, the new-high bump is usually over with. So we can expect things to return to a baseline of typical returns over the next year.

There’s nothing revolutionary in these numbers. They don’t tell us that stocks will soar 30% by year’s end. But they do prove that new highs are a good thing. They happen when prices are moving higher… And that uptrend usually continues.

On the other hand, it might feel smart to buy when stocks are falling. The thrill of potentially catching the bottom is hard to ignore. But the data says it’s not a smart bet.

Here’s what happens in the Nasdaq after the index hits a 12-month low…

Stocks lose money in the month after a new 12-month low. Losses tend to follow losses.

Sure, things even out after six to 12 months. But trying to call the bottom is usually a money-losing bet. When it goes wrong, you can risk a lot more than slight underperformance… That’s why you should always wait to buy until you see the uptrend.

Plus, if your plan is to sit on the sidelines until new highs turn to new lows… you’ll risk missing out on months of above-average returns.

The simple truth is that new highs are nothing to fear. They tend to mean more gains are on the way.

The Nasdaq just hit a new all-time high. So this isn’t the time to make a contrarian bet against U.S. stocks. It’s a time to stay long.

Good investing,

— Brett Eversole

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Source: Daily Wealth