How to invest when stocks are volatile

March has been a dizzying month for US markets. The S&P 500 just posted two days of back-to-back gains, but the benchmark index is still down almost 5% this month.

President Donald Trump’s tariff announcements have roiled markets and sent US stocks bouncing all over the place. While the uncertainty on Wall Street can be unsettling, selling your stocks in panic would likely only make it worse.

Although recent market swings can be daunting, market volatility is more normal than you’d think, according to Jeff Buchbinder, chief technical strategist at LPL Financial.

“Volatility is like a toll investors pay on the road to attractive long-term returns,” Buchbinder said in a recent note.

The last thing you want to do is “panic sell.” Volatility is a short-term feature of markets. So, too, are so-called corrections, when stocks fall 10% from their most recent high.

Historically, the US stock market has climbed higher in the long term, smoothing out kinks and rewarding investors who stayed in the market.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Sunday told NBC News that he was “not at all” worried about recent drops in the stock market.

“I’ve been in the investment business for 35 years, and I can tell you that corrections are healthy,” Bessent said. “They’re normal. What’s not healthy is straight up.”

Still, seeing your retirement account take a hit can be unnerving, especially given the whiplash of recent market swings. But if you’re investing for retirement or long-term financial goals, the best thing to do during moments of uncertainty is to keep calm and tune out the noise.

“Reacting emotionally to the markets can wreck your returns,” said Jon Ulin, a certified financial planner and chief executive at Ulin & Co. Wealth Management.

“Panic selling often means locking in losses and missing the best rebound days,” Ulin said.

A core tenet of investing is that no one can really “time” the market. Swings can be so unpredictable that staying invested is a better strategy than selling and trying to pick the best opportunity to get back into a fund or stock you sold. People who sell when times are tough tend to lose out in the long run.

“Protecting your portfolio isn’t about timing the market — it’s about time in the market with a strategy that can withstand the storm,” Ulin said.

What’s going on with markets?

If you’ve checked your retirement account and felt unsettled — you’re likely not alone.

The S&P 500’s performance from Trump’s inauguration to March 7, or 46 days into his second term, was the index’s worst start to a presidency since President Barack Obama’s first term, according to Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA Research.

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