Analysis
Fink’s statement aligns with the **efficient market hypothesis (EMH)** and decades of academic studies (e.g., Dalbar’s *Quantitative Analysis of Investor Behavior*), which show that most individual investors and even professional fund managers underperform passive index funds over time due to failed market-timing attempts. However, the claim is **not universally absolute**: some institutional investors (e.g., hedge funds using quantitative models) and contrarian investors (e.g., Warren Buffett’s value-based timing) have demonstrated limited success in timing specific cycles. His 45-year experience lends credibility, but the statement oversimplifies the rare exceptions where timing *can* add value under highly disciplined conditions.
Background
Market timing refers to the strategy of buying or selling assets based on predictive methods (e.g., technical/economic indicators) to outperform buy-and-hold strategies. While theoretical models like EMH (Fama, 1970) argue that prices reflect all available information—making timing futile—behavioral finance (e.g., Shiller, Thaler) acknowledges that irrational exuberance or panic *can* create temporary mispricings. Fink, as CEO of BlackRock (the world’s largest asset manager), has long advocated for **long-term, passive investing**, a stance that aligns with his statement but also serves his firm’s business model.
Verdict summary
Laurence Fink’s claim that 'you can’t time the market' is broadly supported by financial research, but exceptions and nuanced strategies exist for skilled investors.