Barbara Drury
In this guide
- Market mayhem
- What to do?
- Reviewing my retirement plan
- What I will be covering in the coming months
Here’s my quandary.
Over the summer break, I decided this was the year I would finally retire, with a tentative date of Christmas 2025. And then Donald Trump assumed the US Presidency.
Markets were bracing for his promised tariffs, but the extent of the universal tariffs announced on April 2 was worse than anyone predicted. Share markets quickly priced in the growing possibility of a global trade war and recession in the US and beyond, sending global share markets reeling.
Markets hate uncertainty, which is another way of saying people hate uncertainty, because markets are ultimately a place where people meet to trade, albeit at a digital distance these days. And despite our technological sophistication, the human brain still has a primitive fight or flight response to fear and uncertainty.
Market mayhem
As I write this, it’s three trading days after Trump’s tariff bombshell and Australian shares plunge 4.2%, taking 3-day losses to more than 7%. The US market is down 10% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq index is down 20%. A friend texts to ask if it’s too late to switch to cash. The headlines are screaming bloodbath.
At this stage, it’s impossible to know if the current market turmoil will be short-lived or if this is the beginning of a longer, deeper descent. What we do know is that despite the occasional bloodletting – the 1987 crash, the GFC, Covid – share markets rise over the long term supported by growing economies and rising incomes.
As Warren Buffett’s mentor, Benjamin Graham said, “In the short run the market is a voting machine but in the long run, it is a weighing machine.” Today the market is voting ‘no’ to Trump’s tariffs out of fear and uncertainty about their economic impacts, but share market returns over the next 5-10 years will reflect economic fundamentals.

Log scale, end December 1994 =100
Source: Bloomberg, RBA
Unfortunately, I don’t have 5 – 10 years to recoup what could amount to a Trump-sized hole in my retirement savings.
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About the author

Barbara Drury
Barbara is a financial journalist and author with over 30 years’ experience in Australia and the UK. She is a contributor to The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age Money section, and has worked for the Australian Financial Review and The Australian.
Barbara is the author of Alan Kohler’s Eureka Report Guide to Personal Investing, Sorting Out Your Finances for Dummies and Personal Finance for Dummies and co-author of Investing for Dummies with James Kirby.
Learn more about retirement planning for beginners in the following guides:
How much super do I need to retire?
How to plan for your retirement
How long you can expect to live and what it means for your super
Your home: The foundation of retirement planning
Why financial literacy is vital for a good retirement
What age should I retire?
Learn more about retirement planning through case studies in the following guides:
Case study: Self-employed single seeking a comfortable and secure retirement income for life
Case study: Should a wealth retiree start a super pension or draw on non-super investments first?
Case study: Recontribution of death benefits?
Case study: Later-life divorcee using a transition to retirement strategy to rebuild super savings
Case study: Mid-life average income couple dreaming of a travel-filled retirement
Case study: Combining new retirement products to maximise retirement income
Case study: When can I afford to retire?
Case study: Combining downsizer and non-concessional contributions
Casestudies:Super death benefit nominations
Learn more about when to retire in the following guides:
Retiree reflections: “If I had my time over again, when would I retire?”
Planning to retire at 65? What you need to consider
Planning to retire at 60? What you need to consider
Planning to retire before turning 60? What you need to consider
What age should I retire?
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