Lead paragraph
On March 23, 2026, BlackRock CEO Larry Fink reiterated a core message to investors: attempts to time the market can materially erode long-term returns. Fink told reporters that historical evidence shows missing the 10 best trading days over a long equity holding period can reduce cumulative returns by roughly half, a point he made during a media briefing covered by CNBC the same day (CNBC, Mar 23, 2026). That admonition comes as global equity markets continue to experience episodic volatility — from the 2008 financial crisis to the 2020 COVID drawdown — and as retail participation and passive flows have reshaped intraday liquidity. Investors and allocators face a choice between remaining fully invested through downturns or stepping out in an effort to avoid near-term losses; Fink’s comments place emphasis on the former as historically superior for long-horizon compounding. This article examines the data behind that claim, the implications for asset managers and allocators, and where contrarian opportunities and risks currently reside.
Context
Larry Fink’s remarks on March 23, 2026, followed a broader industry conversation about investor behavior during turbulence. The CNBC report that captured his comments cited BlackRock’s long-standing advocacy for buy-and-hold strategies and highlighted the firm’s view that short-term market-timing decisions frequently lead to poorer outcomes for retail and institutional investors alike (CNBC, Mar 23, 2026). The argument is framed against well-documented episodes of market stress: the S&P 500 fell 38.49% in 2008 (S&P Dow Jones Indices, 2009 annual review) and experienced an approximately 34% peak-to-trough drawdown between February and March 2020 (S&P Dow Jones Indices, 2020 intraday data). Those downturns illustrate the magnitude of declines that can prompt investors to sell and, in many cases, miss the recoveries that follow.
Fink’s message echoes a statistical truth that has been circulated across asset-management research for years: a small number of the best market days account for a disproportionate share of long-term index returns. The CNBC piece specifically referenced the metric of missing the 10 best days as a cautionary example; while the exact historical percentage effect depends on the sample period and index used, the empirical pattern — that concentrated positive days drive long-term equity performance — is well-established. That pattern is economically intuitive: large, rebound-driven moves often occur quickly as liquidity returns and policy responses come into play, meaning absent positions can preclude participation in most of a recovery’s gains. For allocators, the practical question is how to balance liquidity management and risk controls with the statistical disadvantage of being out of the market for those infrequent but consequential days.
Fink’s commentary also arrived against a backdrop of structural change in markets. Passive strategies have grown as a share of U.S. equity assets under management over the last decade, and intraday trading volumes and algorithmic liquidity providers have shifted market microstructure. These changes influence how rapid recoveries unfold and how visible the best days appear ex post. Institutional investors, pension funds, and sovereign wealth funds must therefore consider not only the long-term arithmetic of returning to the market after a drawdown but also implementation risks, transaction costs, and potential slippage when re-entering concentrated portfolios.
Data Deep Dive
Three key, verifiable data points anchor the valuation of Fink’s claim. First, CNBC’s report on March 23, 2026, quotes Fink’s assertion that missing the 10 best days can halve long-term returns — a statement that references long-used academic findings and internal industry analyses (CNBC, Mar 23, 2026). Second, long-run index data show that the S&P 500 has averaged roughly 10% annualized returns since 1926 (Ibbotson/S&P historical series), providing a baseline for how significant compounding can be when investors remain continuously invested. Third, concrete stress episodes demonstrate the size of drawdowns that can trigger market-timing behavior: the S&P 500’s -38.49% calendar-year return in 2008 and the roughly -34% peak-to-trough move in March 2020 (S&P Dow Jones Indices) are illustrative examples of when many investors stepped to the sidelines and when a handful of rebound days delivered outsized recovery gains.
Quantifying the penalty of missing the best days depends critically on the start and end dates, the index, and whether dividends are included. Academic and industry studies typically compute scenarios where an investor who remains fully invested across a sample period achieves a given cumulative return, while an investor who misses a handful of the highest-return days achieves a markedly lower return. The point is not that timing is impossible in every instance, but that the expected cost of incorrect timing is measurable and, in many long-run samples, substantial. For example, a theoretical investor with continuous exposure to the S&P 500 over multiple decades would capture the full benefit of compound returns; missing concentrated positive days interrupts that compounding and compresses the terminal wealth outcome materially.
It is also important to separate the statistical effect from behavioral dynamics. Fink’s comment points to a realized past — empirical outcomes for those who stayed invested — but does not negate the rational reasons investors may reduce exposure, such as liability constraints, drawdown aversion, or regulatory/policy-driven cash needs. For institutions with fixed liabilities or DAGs (drawdown avoidance goals), tactical reductions may be appropriate. The empirical evidence, however, implies that tactical absences require disciplined rules and a high bar for re-entry timing to avoid the penalty of missing large upside days.
Sector Implications
For asset managers and fund sponsors, Fink’s prescription favors strategies that minimize forced or discretionary deviations from core equity allocations. That has implications across product design, client communication, and liquidity management. Passive equity funds and broad-market ETFs tend to keep investors continuously exposed and therefore mechanically capture the upside of recovery days, whereas strategies that target volatility control via de-levering or moving to cash may systematically underperform in rebound scenarios unless they implement rapid, cost-efficient re-entry mechanisms. The choice between passive and active, or between dynamic risk overlays and static allocations, therefore translates directly into realized client outcomes when the market posts a handful of outsized positive trading days.
Pension funds and insurance companies, which must reconcile regulatory capital positions and liability-matching objectives, face operational constraints that can make continuous investment difficult. Yet the data suggest that when those entities reduce equity exposure in protracted downturns and fail to redeploy in time, their funded status and long-term return objectives can suffer. For wealth managers and retail intermediaries, the practical trade-off is communication: educating clients that short-term defensive moves have long-term opportunity costs — quantified by examples such as the 2008 and 2020 recovery episodes — becomes a risk-management and retention imperative.
The trend toward larger passive footprints in U.S. equities also influences market dynamics: as more capital sits in index-tracking vehicles, the marginal buyer during recoveries can be index-hugging flows and reconstitution-related trades, which can amplify large positive days. Managers that understand this microstructure are better positioned to manage order execution and client re-entry, and those that reference [market insights](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) on liquidity and execution can calibrate tactical allocations more effectively.
Risk Assessment
The primary risk in hewing strictly to a "stay invested at all costs" message is that it can understate legitimate reasons to reduce exposure. Financial institutions with near-term cash needs, defined-benefit plans approaching maturity, or regulatory constraints may be entitled to prioritize risk reduction over capturing the full statistical upside of equities. The operational risk of forced deleveraging — for example, margin calls or collateral demands — can produce realized losses that the "missed best days" statistic does not capture. Therefore, the binary framing of "stay in or get out" needs to be qualified with an institution-specific analysis of liquidity, liabilities, and governance.
Another risk is that behavioural biases can cause investors to sell after sustained losses and fail to re-enter; while Fink highlights the cost of that behavior in hindsight, implementing rules-based reentry protocols is challenging and requires governance and trust. Market structure and concentration risk are also relevant: in periods when a small number of mega-cap names lead recoveries, investors without exposure to those names (for example because of stock-specific constraints or ESG screens) may not realize the same rebound benefits. As a result, a nuanced approach that blends core equity exposure with tactical, rule-governed overlays can mitigate the downside of both market-timing mistakes and concentrated recovery dynamics.
Finally, macro and policy regimes matter. The liquidity and policy responses that catalyzed recoveries in 2009 and 2020 may not replicate identically in future crises. Investors should therefore treat historical metrics — including the "10 best days" statistic Fink cited — as informative but not deterministic. Stress-testing portfolios across a range of recovery shapes and governance scenarios remains essential to calibrate both strategic and tactical allocations.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Fazen Capital views Fink’s warning as a necessary but not sufficient guide for institutional behavior. We agree that missing concentrated upside days can materially reduce long-term terminal wealth, but our contrarian insight is twofold: first, the value of being invested is conditional on the composition of the exposure. A broad, diversified equity allocation that includes cyclical and defensive segments will more reliably capture recovery dynamics than a narrowly concentrated book. Second, the operational value of "being in the market" can be enhanced by positioning for re-entry rather than insisting on perpetual full exposure. That means establishing pre-approved rebalancing triggers, using staged re-entry ladders, and allocating a small, cost-effective execution buffer to capture fast recoveries without incurring undue tracking error.
Practically, we advocate a hybrid approach: maintain a diversified core equity allocation designed to capture compound growth — consistent with long-run S&P 500 returns averaging roughly 10% annually since 1926 (Ibbotson/S&P) — while deploying tactical sleeves governed by explicit rules. These sleeves can be used to manage short-term liability risks or to provide liquidity during drawdowns, with re-entry tied to observable market signals or time-based rules rather than discretionary judgement. Our research also highlights that implementation matters: execution cost, tax implications, and slippage during volatile exits and re-entries can erode outcomes even when the timing decision is correct. For more on implementation and liquidity, see our [insights](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
FAQ
Q: How robust is the "missing the best days" finding across different sample periods and indices?
A: The qualitative finding is robust: across multiple timeframes and major equity indices, a small subset of high-return days accounts for a disproportionate share of cumulative returns. Quantitatively, the magnitude varies by sample length, start/end dates, and whether dividends are included. The CNBC-cited framing that "missing the 10 best days can halve returns" is illustrative of those sensitivities; practitioners should calculate the metric for their specific benchmark and horizon rather than apply a single universal number.
Q: Are there situations where market timing has demonstrably added value for institutions?
A: Yes. Entities with clear, short-term liquidity needs, or those operating under binding regulatory or balance-sheet constraints, can achieve better outcomes by reducing equity exposure temporarily. Additionally, skillful, rules-based tactical allocation — for example, volatility-targeted overlays with disciplined re-entry — has the potential to improve risk-adjusted returns. The key is embedding timing decisions within governance frameworks and back-testing their implementation costs.
Q: What lessons do 2008 and 2020 offer for policy and execution today?
A: Both episodes show the speed and magnitude of recoveries can be influenced by central bank and fiscal responses; the fastest rebounds historically followed decisive policy action and liquidity provision. Execution lessons include prepositioning cash buffers, maintaining rebalancing capacity, and ensuring trading infrastructure can handle rapid order flow. Those operational considerations determine whether an allocator who intends to stay invested can practically avoid forced deleveraging.
Bottom Line
Fink’s March 23, 2026 warning is a forceful reminder that short-term market timing carries measurable long-term costs; however, implementation and fiduciary constraints mean the right response for institutions is disciplined, rule-based allocation rather than dogmatic permanence.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
