Speed read
“Later” can feel cautious in uncertain markets, but it can also create a re-entry challenge. Changing between invested and divested may influence long-term outcomes, depending on timing, market conditions and individual circumstances. One way to reduce the impact is a robust portfolio design process – to help when the world becomes noisy. Diversified portfolios are built to consider different market climates and are aligned to the investor’s objectives, risk tolerance and time horizon.
Key takeaways
Waiting until “later” can feel safe, but it can also create a second decision: when (and how) to get back in.
With big shifts, like AI, the risk isn’t only drawdowns; it can also be missing compounding and re-entering at less favourable levels.
The goal isn’t to predict the next move; it’s to hold a portfolio that can operate across a range of outcomes without relying on a single forecast.
The temptation: "let's just wait for clarity"
Look around and it’s easy to see why investors feel conflicted. Many markets have been strong, yet AI-linked shares draw both excitement and concern, and geopolitics remains noisy. When uncertainty is high and outcomes feel wide, “later” can sound prudent: raising cash, reducing exposure, and waiting for the picture to sharpen.
But investing has an awkward truth: clarity often arrives after prices have already moved. Waiting for certainty is like waiting for the fog to clear before boarding a moving train. By the time you can see clearly, the opportunity may already be gone.
“Later” isn’t a pause button. It’s a decision.
The re-entry problem: the decision you don't see coming
If you reduce risk because markets feel overheated, you are also making a quiet promise: you’ll increase risk again when things feel better. That sounds sensible, until you run this thought experiment:
What if markets rise 50% from here?
What if they rise another 50% after that?
At what point do you step back in?
That’s the catch. Stepping out is a single decision. Getting back in becomes a series of decisions under pressure, usually when it feels least comfortable to act. After a strong rise, buying feels reckless (“I’ve missed it”). Staying out starts to feel dangerous (“I can’t afford to miss more”). The longer you wait, the heavier the decision becomes, and the easier it is to make a decision that’s hard to reverse: re-enter too late, too fast, or simply pay too much to get back in.
Chart 1: Missing the market's best days is expensive
This is one way “later” can become expensive: not because you were wrong once, but because compounding continues while decisions get harder under uncertainty. Missing only a handful of the strongest days can, in some cases, materially change long-term outcomes.
For many investors, the harder part isn’t stepping out — it’s deciding when and how to step back in.
Why prices move without anything "happening"
This is also why the re-entry decision is so hard. Uncertainty doesn’t only move headlines; it moves prices. Markets reprice while visibility is poor, and by the time confidence returns, valuations and narratives have often shifted.
A simple way to think about valuations is that they rest on two pillars: what we expect the future to look like, and how confident we feel in those expectations. When uncertainty rises, confidence falls. Investors are willing to pay less when the future feels less certain. You can see this in everyday terms: a company can deliver similar results, but if investors feel less certain about next year, the price they’re willing to pay can still fall.
Periods of sharp declines and sharp recoveries can occur close together, so stepping aside may increase the risk of missing strong rebound days.
Uncertainty doesn’t just change feelings. It changes prices.
AI as the live example: where "later" thinking shows up most clearly
AI is a live example of how “later” thinking forms. We fixate on what looks expensive today and underestimate what could change across the economy tomorrow. AI may not simply boost the current system; it may reshape where growth shows up over time.
The usual framing is: “These shares are expensive. What do the winners need to earn to justify today’s prices?” It’s a fair question, but it’s incomplete. Some technologies don’t just create new products; they can change the cost and speed of doing business across many industries. The Industrial Revolution didn’t only reward machine builders; it reshaped production and commerce more broadly.
AI may have similar second-order effects. Think of it as lowering the cost of routine cognitive work — drafting and summarising, coding assistance, customer support, fraud detection, scheduling appointments and compliance checks. These are economy-wide activities, which means the effects may reach beyond the handful of tech companies most associated with the theme.
We don’t know exactly how the benefits of AI will manifest. Its potential appears significant, though outcomes remain uncertain. Investors concerned about concentration sometimes manage this by avoiding heavy single-theme exposure while maintaining broad diversification that may still participate if benefits spread more widely.
Structural shifts can create opportunities, but they can also increase volatility and dispersion of returns. Broad, diversified exposure is one way investors sometimes seek to participate without relying on a single forecast.
A more durable stance: don't bet the plan on one story
None of this is a call to go all-in on AI. That’s simply another form of overreacting. A more measured approach, for many investors, is to acknowledge uncertainty without assuming it can be neatly timed: keep exposure broad rather than highly concentrated, and aim for a risk level aligned to objectives so decisions are less likely to be made under pressure.
There’s a deeper reason diversification matters. Research on long-term equity wealth creation suggests a surprisingly small subset of companies accounts for a large share of lifetime market gains. You don’t need to pick every winner, but broad exposure can reduce the risk of systematically missing them. Uncertainty may justify different actions for different investors. A disciplined approach - involving diversification, a suitable risk level and periodic review - may help manage behavioural risks, but it does not prevent losses or guarantee outcomes.
Different investors choose different routes. The key is selecting one that fits the destination and the bumps you can tolerate.
How PortfolioMetrix responds when uncertainty is high
PortfolioMetrix applies a robust investment process intended to support long-term discipline through different market conditions. This typically includes calibrating risk, diversification, periodic rebalancing and ongoing review. These measures aim to manage portfolio risk and support decision-making, but they cannot prevent losses or guarantee outcomes. Frequent changes to investment positioning may increase uncertainty around outcomes and may not align with long-term objectives for some investors, particularly when decisions are made in periods of stress.
In practice, that means
Aligning risk to the client journey – aiming to reduce the chance and impact of clients abandoning the plan when markets feel uncomfortable.
Diversifying deliberately – so no single theme or narrative dominates outcomes.
Rebalancing with discipline – helping to avoid buying and selling becoming emotion-driven.
Building behavioural guardrails – so “later” doesn’t become a cycle of stepping off and scrambling back on.
These practices are intended to reduce emotion-driven decisions. They may help some investors stay aligned to their plan, but results will vary and costs and risks remain.
Markets will always offer reasons to say “later”; a robust, structured process is one way some investors try to stay aligned to their objectives, even when headlines are noisy.
What to do with this, this month
The world can get noisier from here, and markets can fall, sometimes quickly. But “later” is not a free option: it creates a second decision later, often under different conditions.
A useful question is: “If I’m wrong, what does that do to my plan, and how hard will it be to fix?” In uncertain markets, the edge is rarely a bold prediction. For many investors, it’s composure, diversification and process — while recognising the trade-offs, costs and risks that come with changing course.
If you’re considering changes, it can help to test them against objectives, time horizon and risk tolerance. Some investors use scheduled reviews and rebalancing policies as part of a long-term approach, while keeping in mind the risks and potential costs.