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My Bear Market Investment Game Plan: Adjusting the Strategy

Creating an investment game plan is a crucial part of building lasting wealth. Without one, you’re likely to accumulate far less over your lifetime. Now that the S&P 500 has corrected by 20% in 2025, we’ve officially entered another bear market. Historically, bear markets have lasted about two years on average, but this one is likely to be much shorter given it is self-inflicted.
One reason I pinned my post How I’d Invest $250,000 Cash Today is because I get this question constantly. The amount doesn’t have to be $250,000 in cash, but any amount of money. It’s my real-time roadmap and a way to stay consistent with both thought and action, especially during turbulent times.
After back-to-back 20%+ gains in the S&P 500 in 2023 and 2024, I didn’t want to give back too much of my 2021 gains like I did in 2022. Let’s revisit the investment game plan and see where I could have improved and what I’m adjusting now that the stock market has plummeted.
This isn’t investment advice for you, as we’re in different financial situations. It’s a look into how I’m thinking about managing my own money during a bear market. Please make your own investment decisions appropriate to your goals.
A Review Of My Investment Game Plan In A Bear Market
For background, I’ve been investing since 1996 and have lived through the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis, the 2000 dot-com bust and the 2008 global financial crisis—the latter with over $1.5 million invested. During the 2008 collapse, I lost 35%–40% of the net worth it took me a decade to build, all within six months. I never want to go through that experience again, especially now that I have a family to support.
Our #1 goal in a bear market: Remain DUPs, which stands for Dual Unemployed Parents, as opposed to DINKs or HENRYs. My wife and I share the goal of never having to work for anyone again. We can’t go back at our age. Right now, what we value most is having the time and energy to be with our kids (ages 8 and 5) before they leave home at 18.
We don’t want to come home exhausted after a long day of work. Instead of needing an escape from work and family on the weekends, we want to spend the entire weekend together. And during school breaks, we aim to travel as a family for longer stretches of time. As older parents, we already don’t have as much energy as the average younger parent.
As moderate-risk investors, this is our investment game plan to maintain our freedom using the investments and passive income we’ve already built. Given my wife and I don’t have steady paychecks, our main goal is to survive the bear market until better times return.
We cannot afford to lose more than 40% of our net worth at this stage of our lives. At the same time, we want to take advantage of investment opportunities. This is how we are deploying cash.
1) Treasury Bonds (30% of Cash Holdings -> Down To 20%)
With Treasury yields now around 4.45% from 5%, bonds are less attractive than before at 5%. Still, earning ~4.45% risk-free beats losing 20%+ in the stock market. So if you’ve looked down on Treasury bonds before, it’s time to reconsider. The goal isn’t to generate outsized returns—it’s to protect you from downside risk in more volatile assets.
If you are in a high marginal federal income tax bracket, Treasury bonds provide an additional boost since the interest earned is state-tax free. In a bear market, I always want to have at least six months of living expenses in cash. Not only does cash provide psychological comfort, it also enables you to invest in value opportunities.
Given the recent stock market correction, I’m reducing this bond deployment allocation from 30% to 20%.
2) Stocks (25% of Cash Holdings -> Up To 35%)
I was cautious entering 2025, with the S&P 500’s forward P/E around 22X—well above the historical average of 18X. After two blockbuster years, some mean reversion seemed inevitable.
At the time, I wrote: “Given expensive valuations, I’m only buying in $1,000–$5,000 tranches after every 0.5%–1% decline. The S&P 500 could go back down to 5,000 if valuations mean revert.” I stuck to that plan and started buying after a 3% dip… but now the index is down much more, with the S&P 500 falling to as low as -4,850 from an expected floor of 5,500.
Unfortunately, I was not cautious or patient enough. I’ve been buying the dip and the market keeps dipping. That said, I’ve been buying the dip for 26+ years, and over the long run, it’s worked out. It’s in the short term when it always feels the worst. This latest correction reaffirms why I prefer the steadier returns of real estate over the gut-wrenching volatility of stocks.
In light of the pullback, I’m upgrading my stock allocation from 25% to 35%. There now seems to be a decent probability the S&P 500 could correct to 4,500, or 2 multiples below the long-term forward P/E multiple average of 18. Why pay an average valuation multiple when the government is purposefully sacrificing the stock market for potentially lower rates?
3) Venture Capital (20% of Cash Holdings → Increasing to 25%)
Investing in venture capital has been a good move so far. I wanted exposure to private AI companies because I anticipate a challenging future for our children. I also value the ability to invest in companies I believe are performing well and poised to raise their next funding round at a higher valuation. This type of almost arbitrage and transparency is why I’m a fan of open-ended venture funds.
OpenAI recently closed a new $40 billion funding round, valuing the company at $300 billion—double its valuation less than 10 months ago. This kind of momentum bodes well for other private AI companies, which may also raise at higher valuations, though nothing is guaranteed.
In hindsight, I should have allocated more than just 20% to venture capital. Still, with public markets in turmoil, we’re seeing IPO delays (e.g., Klarna) and valuation compression. As a result, venture investors must stay disciplined and avoid overpaying.
Below is my Fundrise Venture Capital investment dashboard. Returns have been steady so far. Once I sell a rental property, I plan to increase my allocation.
For now, I’m upgrading my Venture Capital allocation to 25% from 20%. There is likely much more volatility under the surface. But mentally, it’s nice not to see it. Hopefully, there will be better valuations in the private markets given the forth has come out of the public markets. Fundrise is a long-time sponsor of Financial Samurai.

4) Real Estate (24.9% of Cash Holdings)
2025 is shaping up to be real estate’s time to shine and potentially outperform stocks by a wide margin. I’ve been waiting for this moment since 2022, after the Fed hiked rates 11 times in record time. Now, amidst all the uncertainty and chaos, expectations are back for three-to-five rate cuts in 2025, from zero-to-two cuts at the beginning of the year.
Pent-up demand, lower mortgage rates, and capital rotating out of funny money stocks and into tangible assets are setting the stage for continued strength in many real estate markets. That said, markets that boomed the most and have ample room to build new supply—like Austin, Dallas, Punta Gorda, and Cape Coral—are showing signs of weakness.
The gap between the S&P 500 index and U.S. single-family home prices is large and likely unsustainable. Real estate prices should catch up while the S&P 500 corrects. If the government is going to purposefully crash the stock market, then it should do everything it can to support the real estate market, where ~66% of Americans own homes.

Strong M&A In Real Estate Bodes Well
Here’s a major tell: Rocket Companies (owner of Rocket Mortgage, formerly Quicken Loans) just agreed to acquire mortgage servicing giant Mr. Cooper for $9.4 billion. This follows their $1.75 billion acquisition of Redfin. You don’t spend that kind of money unless you’re bullish on a real estate and mortgage rebound.
I’m comfortable with this 24.9% allocation to real estate because I’m already heavily exposed—about 50% of my net worth is tied to real estate. Earlier this year, I spoke with Ben Miller, CEO of Fundrise, and we both agreed that residential commercial real estate is one of the most attractive asset classes today due to its relatively low valuations.
When faced with the decision to invest in the S&P 500 trading at 22X forward earnings or in residential commercial real estate trading at 20–30% discounts from March 2022 highs, I chose the latter.

5) Financial Education (0.1% of Cash Holdings)
Since I allocated 0% to debt paydown because most of us refinanced our mortgages and (hopefully) don’t carry revolving credit card balances, the final category to bring my allocation to 100% is financial education.
I strongly believe that financial education is key to building lasting wealth. It’s why I majored in economics at William & Mary, earned my MBA from Berkeley, started Financial Samurai, and continue to write books. A foundational understanding of asset allocation, risk and return, tax strategy, and the various ways to grow wealth is incredibly valuable.
Unfortunately, most people don’t take the time to read articles—let alone books—about personal finance anymore. I saw this lack of careful reading with my latest April Fool’s Day post and the subsequent comments! As a result, they often get blindsided during bear markets.
I’ve witnessed this cycle of financial destruction repeatedly since I began working in finance in 1999. People over-allocate to risk assets or go on margin before a big collapse. Others panic sell near the bottom and hold cash for an unreasonably long time. Once you fall behind during a recession, it becomes extremely difficult to catch up to your peers.
Spending just 0.1% of $250,000—$250—on books like Buy This, Not That or Millionaire Milestones is negligible in the grand scheme. But the potential return on that investment can be thousands of percent.
Sadly, it often takes significant financial loss for people to finally take action. That was the case for me during the 2008–2009 Global Financial Crisis, which ultimately motivated me to launch Financial Samurai.

Please Develop Your Own Investment Game Plan
If you don’t develop an investment game plan, you’re likely to accumulate far less wealth than your peers who do. Worse, you might lose a significant amount of net worth due to improper risk exposure and allocation.
Establish your financial goals, then create a plan to get there. If you’re not sure where to start, consider working with a fee-only financial advisor or financial professional of some sort. Or, if you have the means and want more hands-on attention, a wealth manager could be an option. Just be prepared to pay up given they charge based on a percentage of assets.
To many people wing it when it comes to their personal finances. And in 10 years, those who do often wonder where all their money went.
Readers, how are you deploying your cash in this bear market? Are you adjusting your investment strategy? How much lower do you think the market will go, and why? Are you financially prepared for a 1-2 year downturn?
To expedite your journey to financial freedom, join over 60,000 others and subscribe to the free Financial Samurai newsletter. Financial Samurai is among the largest independently-owned personal finance websites, established in 2009. Everything is written based on firsthand experience.
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Save More Than 80% on This Adobe Acrobat + Microsoft Office Pro 2021 Bundle

Disclosure: Our goal is to feature products and services that we think you’ll find interesting and useful. If you purchase them, Entrepreneur may get a small share of the revenue from the sale from our commerce partners.
Running a business means working with documents, presentations, spreadsheets, and contracts daily. Having the right tools in place can make or break efficiency, and that’s exactly what this offer delivers.
For a limited time, you can get a three-year subscription to Adobe Acrobat Classic plus a lifetime license to Microsoft Office Professional 2021 for Windows—all for just $89.99 (MSRP: $543.99).
Why business leaders should pay attention
This isn’t just another software discount. For small business owners, entrepreneurs, or managers overseeing lean teams, the cost of subscriptions adds up quickly. This bundle eliminates that problem by combining the best offline PDF software with a permanent copy of Microsoft Office Pro.
- Adobe Acrobat Classic (three years): Work securely offline with tools to create, edit, and protect PDFs. Convert PDFs into Office files, redact sensitive sections, or generate forms—all with enhanced security features. With no reliance on the cloud, you maintain control of your documents while meeting compliance and client needs.
- Microsoft Office Pro 2021 (lifetime): Get the full suite—Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Teams, Publisher, Access, and OneNote—installed directly on your Windows PC. Handle everything from financial modeling to pitch decks to client emails without ever worrying about renewal fees.
This bundle costs less than many companies spend in a single month on recurring subscriptions. Whether you’re in real estate creating contracts, in consulting preparing presentations, or in finance handling data-heavy spreadsheets, the Acrobat + Office bundle gives you the core tools to run daily operations smoothly.
Pick up this Adobe Acrobat + Microsoft Office Pro 2021 Bundle while it’s just $89.99 (MSRP: $543.99) during this pre-Labor Day sale.
Adobe Acrobat Classic + Microsoft Office Professional License Bundle
StackSocial prices subject to change.
Running a business means working with documents, presentations, spreadsheets, and contracts daily. Having the right tools in place can make or break efficiency, and that’s exactly what this offer delivers.
For a limited time, you can get a three-year subscription to Adobe Acrobat Classic plus a lifetime license to Microsoft Office Professional 2021 for Windows—all for just $89.99 (MSRP: $543.99).
Why business leaders should pay attention
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The Most Common Tax Planning Mistakes For High Earners

If my posts on the mistake of chasing value stocks or the need to invest big money to make life-changing money don’t resonate, consider hiring a financial professional to manage your portfolio. You may not be obsessed enough to consistently invest the amount needed to retire comfortably. Offloading the burden of investing frees up your time and energy to focus on work, family, and hobbies.
At this moment, I’m preparing to do my taxes again. Every year I file an extension (Oct 15 deadline) because of delayed K-1s from private fund investments. So when Empower reached out about highlighting tax planning mistakes for high earners, I agreed. It’s a topic I know all too well.
What I didn’t realize is that Empower offers tax planning as part of its standard client service. No extra invoices, no $300/hour CPA bills. Just integrated advice, included in the management fee. Considering that taxes are often the single largest expense for high-income earners, having proactive strategy baked in is a big deal.
The Importance Of Tax Planning For High Income Earners
When you’re a high earner—think $250,000+ income or the potential to get there—you’ve probably got a lot on your plate: investments, real estate, maybe a business or two. What you might not be paying enough attention to? Tax planning.
It’s not sexy like a moonshot AI stock, but the compounding effect of smart, consistent tax moves can rival investment returns over time. As Empower Personal Wealth specialist Scott Hipp, CPA, CFP® explains, for high-income, high-net-worth clients, tax planning isn’t about chasing one-off loopholes, it’s about proactive, coordinated, year-round strategy.
Let’s dive into four key questions Scott answered that reveal just how much value smart tax planning can deliver. If you’re searching for a financial professional to manage your wealth, choosing one that integrates tax planning into their service is essential, not an add-on.
Empower has been a long-time affiliate partner of Financial Samurai, and I personally consulted for Personal Capital (later acquired by Empower) from 2013 to 2015. I’ve seen firsthand how incorporating tax strategy into wealth management can meaningfully boost long-term returns.
1. Why is tax planning critical for high earners?
When you’re in the top federal tax brackets—32%, 35%, or 37%—every strategic move counts more. Saving 1% on taxes for someone making $100K is nice. Saving 1% for someone making $800,000? That’s four first-class tickets to Hawaii with a couple thousand left over.
Scott says most people think of tax planning as a once-a-year scramble or a hunt for magical loopholes (“I heard Uncle Bob pays zero taxes because he made his dogs employees…”). The truth: the biggest gains come from small, consistent, legal moves year after year.
It’s like The Shawshank Redemption: pressure and time. Maxing out a health savings account, backdoor Roth contributions, charitable “bunching,” and tax-loss harvesting may seem minor in isolation, but over 20 years, they can carve a serious tunnel toward financial freedom.
Here’s the danger: by the time you file in April, most opportunities are gone. If you’re filing 2025’s taxes in April 2026, your deadline for most strategies was December 31, 2025. That’s why Empower’s team works year-round—advisors and tax specialists meet regularly to tweak and optimize before the clock runs out.
2. What’s the deal with the SALT deduction changes?
The State and Local Tax (SALT) deduction cap got a temporary boost after the passage of The One Big Beautiful Bill Act on July 4, 2025. It’s $40,000 in 2025 (up from $10,000), rising slightly each year until 2029, before reverting in 2030.
Who benefits? Mostly taxpayers with AGI under $500K in high-tax states. Hit $600K AGI, and the expanded cap phases out completely.
But even high earners over $600K aren’t out of luck—if you own a pass-through business (S-corp, partnership, LLC taxed as such), you might use the Pass-Through Entity Tax (PTET) workaround. Here, the business pays state taxes, making them fully deductible federally, and you get a state tax credit. As of 2025, 35+ states have a PTET option.
For the right clients, SALT changes + PTET can unlock deductions worth tens of thousands—money that stays in your portfolio instead of the IRS’s coffers.
3. How does Empower approach complex high-earner situations?
Let’s say you’re a business owner with significant investment income, passive rental income, and real estate holdings.
With Empower, you basically have a “tax specialist on demand” baked into your fee – no surprise bills. The process starts with:
- Reviewing the past three years of returns for missed opportunities. (You’ve got three years to amend and claim a refund.) Empower can spot thousands in overlooked deductions.
- Holistic planning based on your goals. Tax strategy isn’t in a vacuum—it’s tied to your investment plan, estate goals, and cash flow needs.
Common missed opportunities for self-employed clients:
- Not deducting health insurance premiums.
- Missing the Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction.
- Ignoring home office deductions.
More common errors Empower can help catch:
- Capital loss carryforwards lost when switching preparers/software
- Incorrect Backdoor Roth processing
- Missed Foreign Tax Credit
- Wrong cost basis for stock sales (ESPP, options)
- HSA distributions taxed in error
From there, Empower looks forward—maybe setting up a solo 401(k), timing income, or planning capital gains. The idea is to create an ongoing tax playbook, not just fix past mistakes.
4. What real-world tax savings have clients seen?
Missed health insurance deductions are surprisingly common—and costly.
- S-Corp owner: CPA added health insurance premiums to W-2 wages (correctly) but never told the client they could deduct those premiums above the line. Amending three years’ returns saved ~$6,000 in federal taxes.
- Sole proprietor: Deducted health insurance as a Schedule A itemized deduction, but couldn’t benefit due to medical expense thresholds and not itemizing at all. Amending saved ~$7,500.
- Medicare premiums: Many don’t know they qualify as self-employed health insurance deductions. Catching this can save $1,000+ per year.
These aren’t flashy hedge-fund-like wins—but they’re guaranteed returns via tax savings, often compounding over years.
Key Strategies Empower Uses for High Earners
Scott shared a few proactive moves that come up again and again:
Bunching Charitable Contributions
Standard deduction in 2025: $15,750 (single) / $31,500 (married). By combining two or more years of donations into one tax year, you can exceed the standard deduction, itemize that year, and take the standard deduction the next—resulting in a bigger total deduction over time.
Bonus: Donate appreciated assets or use a Donor-Advised Fund for even more efficiency.
Tax Loss Harvesting
Selling investments at a loss to offset gains elsewhere—then reinvesting in similar (but not “substantially identical”) assets—can lower your current-year tax bill while keeping your portfolio allocated. All Empower Personal Strategy clients ($100K+) minimize your tax burden with proactive application of tax-loss harvesting and tax location.
Roth Conversions
Moving funds from a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA lets you lock in today’s tax rate if you expect to be in a higher bracket later. Future withdrawals? Tax-free. This is especially powerful in lower-income years before RMDs kick in.
Saving Money On A Good CPA
A good CPA might charge $150–$400/hour just for tax consultations. Meanwhile, many don’t offer proactive planning at all, focusing instead on compliance and filing.
Empower builds tax planning into its overall wealth management service for clients with $100K+ in investable assets. That means:
- One fee, one integrated plan.
- Advisors and tax specialists in the same room (or Zoom) all year.
- Proactive calls before the deadlines—not “we’ll see you next April.”
The Bottom Line
Big investment wins get the headlines, but year after year, quiet, boring, proactive tax moves can be worth just as much, sometimes more. For high earners, ignoring tax planning is like leaving compounding on the table.
If you’ve got $100K+ in investable assets, Empower is offering Financial Samurai readers a free consultation. Even if you’re confident in your current plan, a second opinion could uncover thousands in missed opportunities.
For a limited time only, book your free, no obligation session here. An Empower professional will review your investments and net worth, and offer some suggestions on where you can optimize, all for free.
Empower’s Tax Optimization Services
Tax optimized investing (tax loss harvesting, tax location, tax efficiency): available to clients investing $100K+.
Tax planning guidance (analysis and recommendations – identify gaps and opportunities in your tax strategy before you file with your advisor and tax specialist): available to $250K+.
At $1M+, clients receive the above, in addition to access to a CPA, at no additional cost.
Disclosure: This statement is provided by Kansei Incorporated (“Promoter”), which has a referral agreement with Empower Advisory Group, LLC (“EAG”). Learn more here.
To expedite your journey to financial freedom, join over 60,000 others and subscribe to the free Financial Samurai newsletter. Financial Samurai is the leading independently-owned personal finance site today, established in 2009.
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How To Eliminate That Intense Financial FOMO You’re Feeling

Back in 2012, I thought I had finally conquered financial FOMO after walking away from a well-paying finance job. But after having children, I’ve noticed more and more relapses. If you’ve found yourself battling the desire for more money than you truly need, this post is for you.
Ever since returning to San Francisco from our 36-day trip to Honolulu, I’ve been feeling a greater sense of FOMO. The first week back hit especially hard when Figma IPOed and surged 333% on its first day. Suddenly, we were right back to frenzied markets, with retail investors piling in at sky-high prices.
In Honolulu, my focus was on mainly three things: 1) family, 2) exercise, and 3) remodeling my parents’ in-law unit. Those three priorities consumed all my bandwidth. Between supercommuting and construction, I was spent most days, with little time left to think about chasing investments.
Pickleball and then the beach were my escape. While waiting for the next game, conversations revolved around recapping rallies, kids, or which store sold the best Pirie mangoes. Careers and investments never came up, except when I asked a couple players about Honolulu’s cost of living. The vibe was refreshingly present, grounded, and calm.
The Return Back Was Somewhat Jolting
I had never taken my family on such a long trip before, so the contrast with life back home was especially clear.
With just the four of us at home, family logistics became simpler, familiar camps smoothed out childcare every other week, and the remodeling burden was finally lifted. With all that mental headspace freed up, my mind inevitably drifted back to the markets and to the unsettling realization that the AI boom was racing ahead without me.
On the pickleball courts here, the chatter couldn’t have been more different. Nearly everyone was talking about tech stocks, the bull market, and the next big AI play. Why? Because nearly everyone either works in tech or invests heavily in it. There was no escaping the mania. I found myself longing for the calmer rhythm of Honolulu again.
The Moment That Reduced My FOMO Tremendously
Then something unexpected happened that broke my financial FOMO fever. The first weekend back home, I went to a neighborhood gathering at a local park. Familiar faces were everywhere, including one dad I occasionally hang out with. He works in venture, so I asked whether he ever felt the same financial FOMO I’d been struggling with since returning.
He shrugged. “Kinda, but not really.” Why would he? He spends his days looking for the next big winner, so opportunities are always flowing across his desk. Though he did mention once passing on a company that went on to be a huge success.
That surprised me. If anyone should feel FOMO, it’s investors who had the chance and said no, far worse than never getting a look at all, which is the reality for most of us. If I never had the opportunity, then there was no missing out in the first place. But it also made sense he didn’t feel much financial FOMO since he was already immersed in the hunt for more.
We kept chatting. He asked how my summer had been, so I shared some stories from our time away. Naturally, I asked about his summer too, expecting to hear about some big trip since his family had traveled a lot before. But instead, he told me they hadn’t gone anywhere. He’d been too busy working. Two months into summer, and he was still grinding away.
That was my “ah hah” moment. Suddenly, my financial FOMO evaporated. Here was someone, at least twice as wealthy as me, stuck at home because of work. It reminded me of my banking days, when I had to ask for permission to take vacation—like a kid asking his parents for pocket money. What a crock!
I’m sure his hard work this summer will make him millions more. But he’s already rich. At our age, I don’t want to sacrifice too much time with my kids for incremental wealth that won’t materially change our lifestyle. 18 summers isn’t a lot. I’ve got enough passive income to cover our family’s basic needs. That freedom, I was reminded, is worth more than chasing the next big score.
The Six Steps To Reducing Your Intense FOMO
Financial FOMO comes from comparison, insecurity about our own progress, and the fear of missing a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. It tends to peak during bull markets, when it feels like everyone else is getting rich except you.
I’m not sure anybody is truly immune to financial FOMO. You can be wealthy, financially independent, retired, or even work in venture capital, and still feel it. But FOMO left unchecked can push you into bad investment decisions, such as buying at peaks, overextending on margin, or constantly second-guessing yourself.
Here are six tactical yet practical steps that may help you manage FOMO better:
1) Build a Core Portfolio You Rarely Touch
One of the best ways to combat FOMO is to remind yourself that you already own a piece of the future. If you’re invested in equities, real estate, Bitcoin, or venture, you’re covered. Even holding something as simple as the S&P 500 means you’re participating in the ongoing growth of our economy. The exact mix of your asset allocation is up to you. What matters most is having a stake in assets that can carry you forward, so you don’t feel pressured to chase every hot new opportunity.
I keep the bulk of my public equity investments in broad index funds. Meanwhile, about 40% of my net worth in real estate, and 15% in private companies.With a solid core, it becomes much easier to tune out the noise and ignore the hype cycles.
For example, if AI truly sparks a wave of IPOs, new startups, and thousands of newly minted millionaires, at least my San Francisco real estate should benefit. I recently experienced a rental bidding war for one of my properties and that’s before the AI IPO wave has even arrived. Investing in the picks and shovels helps ensure you will financially benefit, no matter what.
2) Allocate a “FOMO Fund”
Instead of trying to suppress the urge to participate, give yourself permission, but with guardrails. Roughly 40% of my public equities are in individual growth names, mostly tech. This way, when I see headlines about breakthroughs, like quantum computing, I feel like I’m part of the story rather than left on the sidelines. Of course, during the next correction, I will also lose more than the average index fund investor too.
I’ve also carved out a dedicated “FOMO Fund”—about 5% of my overall portfolio—for speculative money. That’s where I can dabble in individual private companies, new venture funds, or even short-term trends. If it pays off, great. If not, it won’t derail my financial plan. By containing the risk, you scratch the itch while protecting your long-term wealth.
3) Systematize Your Investing With Automation
One reason FOMO hits so hard is because investing often feels optional and emotional. A simple antidote: automation. Dollar-cost averaging into index funds, ETFs, individual stocks, or funds removes the decision-making stress. When money flows into the market on a schedule, you don’t sit around debating whether to chase the next hot stock. Instead, you’re already steadily invested, no matter what the headlines say.
For example, after opening a new personal Innovation Fund account earmarked for my kids with $26,000 ($500 bonus if you invest over $25,000), I enrolled in auto-invest at $2,500 a month. It’s enough out of my cash flow to feel involved without feeling strain. One year later, that’s $30,000 invested; after 10 years, $300,000.
Without automation, it’s easy to fall off track because life gets busy. I have over 30 investment accounts to manage between the four of us. Inevitably, I’m going to miss something, which is why automation is so important to free up mental bandwidth.
I’m concerned my kids may have little chance of becoming financially independent on their own in an AI-driven, hyper-competitive world. Therefore, every dollar I automate for them helps reduce that concern, while ensuring their money is working even if I get distracted.

4) Use Opportunity Cost as a Filter
Before jumping on the next hot idea, I try to ask: What am I giving up if I do this? Am I sacrificing cash flow, peace of mind, or time with family? Am I risking capital I’ll need in five years for housing, education, or flexibility? During bear markets, I certainly get a little more moody. By forcing yourself to weigh trade-offs, you realize some FOMO-driven decisions don’t actually pass the test. I
As someone who enjoys investing more than spending, this opportunity cost exercise often flips for me. I tend to think instead: What is the opportunity cost of spending money on something I don’t really need versus the potential returns if I invested it? Buying this unnecessary $120,000 Range Rover could turn into $300,000 in five years if invested well!
Still, the reality is that not all investments work out, especially the most speculative ones. Corrections and bear markets are a natural part of investing. Which is why it’s worth asking a different version of the question too: What are the joys I’m giving up today in exchange for an investment that may never pan out? That balance helps keep you grounded, whether you lean toward spending or investing.
Losing Money Quickly
Just look at the Figma IPO. I suspect FOMO drove many investors to pile in on day one, paying $100–$133 a share. Fast forward just a few weeks, and the stock is already down about 40% from its peak. I would much rather have spent $25,000 on a memorable family vacation than invested it in Figma and watched $10,000 vanish in two weeks. YOLO!
Chasing hot IPOs at extraordinary valuations is dangerous, so please be careful. Instead, consider investing in these companies before they go IPO so you can sell to investors who experience maximum FOMO.
Always remind yourself that you can and will lose money when it comes to investing in risk assets. Sometimes, this fact is easy to forget during a bull market.

5) Define “Enough” Clearly
FOMO often creeps in when you don’t have a clear baseline for what success actually means to you. If your target is always a vague “more,” then no matter how much progress you make, someone else will always appear to be ahead – whether it’s their bigger house, higher net worth, or latest hot investment. That mindset makes contentment impossible.
What helps is defining enough. For me, that’s when passive income reliably covers our family’s basic living expenses. Once that box is checked, every dollar beyond is truly optional. I can put it toward growth investments, donate it, or try to spend it guilt-free on experiences.
After I hit a passive income target, I try and shift my mindset back toward an early retirement lifestyle. This means less striving, more enjoying. Anchoring to “enough” quiets the noise, and reminds me that I’ve already got enough.
Once you know your number and can sustain your lifestyle, you realize chasing endlessly isn’t freedom, it’s another form of bondage.
6) Change Your Environment
Finally, FOMO isn’t just about the markets, it’s about the people around you. Living in go-getter cities like San Francisco or New York means you’re constantly surrounded by the most ambitious and competitive people. Many of whom are making big money in tech, finance, or startups. The conversations, the headlines, even the birthday gatherings, it all feeds into a sense that you’re in this constant battle where you’re often falling behind.
One way to dial that back is to physically change your environment. Moving to, or even spending extended time in, a slower-paced city or town gives you space to breathe. Suddenly, not everyone is talking about the latest IPO or AI fundraise. Conversations shift to family, community, or quality of life.
It doesn’t mean giving up ambition or opportunity, you can still build wealth anywhere. But by lowering the ambient noise of competition, you reduce the constant comparison game that fuels financial FOMO.
Final Thoughts On Getting Rid Of FOMO
Markets will always swing from euphoria to despair, and there will always be someone making more money than you. But with a sound core portfolio, a small space to take punts, and a clear definition of enough, you can stay disciplined while still scratching the investing itch.
FOMO doesn’t disappear, but with the right systems, it can be managed so it doesn’t manage you.
Readers, do you experience financial FOMO? If not, how do you manage it so you don’t feel like you’re constantly missing out on financial gains? Interestingly, the vast majority of people I speak with in real life say they don’t really struggle with financial FOMO. That makes me curious — what strategies do you use to tame this beast?
Invest in AI So You Don’t Get Left Behind
AI is set to disrupt the labor market in a massive way, for you and for your kids. One way to hedge against that disruption is to invest in AI itself.
With Fundrise’s venture capital product, you can gain exposure to leading private AI companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, Databricks, Anduril, and more. The minimum investment is just $10, and new accounts currently get a $100–$200 bonus.
I recently opened a new account for my children with $26,000 and will auto-invest $2,500 a month for the foreseeable future. My hope is that by riding the AI wave, they’ll benefit from the very disruption that might otherwise work against them.
Fundrise is a long-time sponsor of Financial Samurai, and Financial Samurai is an investor in Fundrise products. Our investment philosophies are aligned. Overall, I’ve invested more than $350,000 in Fundrise Venture.

Subscribe To Financial Samurai
Pick up a copy of my USA TODAY national bestseller, Millionaire Milestones: Simple Steps to Seven Figures. I’ve distilled over 30 years of financial experience to help you build more wealth than 94% of the population and break free sooner. When you’re ahead, that FOMO starts to disappear.
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