Dollar Cost Averaging everything you need to know

by Vested Team
February 17, 2022
3 min read
Dollar Cost Averaging everything you need to know

In this article, we discuss why you may want to consider dollar-cost averaging, and how the Vested app can help.

Why should you consider dollar cost averaging?

Automatic recurring investments can be beneficial in two ways:

  1. Reduce volatility of returns 
  2. Remove the mental burden of deploying capital

Reducing volatility of returns

Automatic recurring investments can be beneficial in two ways:

There are multiple points of view on the benefits of dollar-cost averaging. Some say it’s worse for returns, others say it’s better. As is with most things in life, the true answer is it depends.
Dollar-cost averaging is better for returns when the market is declining and is worse when the market is up
. Imagine two hypothetical investment scenarios that consist of 5 investing periods.

When the market is in a decline

Table 1: Lump sum investment vs. dollar cost averaging (DCA) when the market is in decline

In Table 1, we present a simplified investing scenario where the market is in decline. In this scenario, you can either invest $1,000 up front in a lump sum, or dollar cost average (DCA) into the market at a pace of $200 per investing period. At the end of five periods, the DCA approach comes out on top, yielding $916 (vs. $847 had you deployed the investment as a lump sum).
See Figure 1 for an illustration. The orange line (for lump sum investment) ends up being lower than the dark blue line (for DCA).

Figure 1: DCA vs. Lump sum investment in a declining market

When the market is going up

Table 2: Lump sum investment vs. dollar cost averaging (DCA) when the market is going up

You can do the same exercise for when the market is going up. In Table 2, we present a simplified investing scenario where the market is going up. Similar to before, you can either invest $1,000 up front in a lump sum, or dollar cost average (DCA) into the market at a pace of $200 per investing period. At the end of five periods, the DCA approach comes out below, yielding only $1,088 (vs. $1,167 had you deployed the investment as a lump sum).
See Figure 2 for an illustration. The orange line (for lump sum investment) ends up being above the red line (the DCA approach). Note, however, that this simplified approach does not take into account the negative impact of inflation on the cash holding, which would further reduce the real returns of the DCA approach.

Figure 2: DCA vs. Lump sum investment in a market that is going up

Do you now see why both opinions are true? The lump sum approach is better if the market is going up, but DCA is better when the market is down. The problem is, it’s hard to know how the market will behave in the future. You can try to time the market, but that, more often than not, leads to subpar returns.
To extend beyond the simplified examples above, you can run simulations to see if the above observations hold. Investing is path-dependent – the outcome varies depending on when you start, and how often you invest. In their paper, Kirby et al, ran a simulation of one million possible investing pathways, comparing the outcomes for the lump sum approach vs. the dollar cost averaging (DCA) approach. The result is shown in Figure 3 below.

Figure 3 above summarizes the trade-offs between the two approaches. Notice that the orange bars (the DCA probability outcome) is narrower/tighter than the blue bars (the lump sum probability outcome). This is because the DCA approach gives the investor the benefit of time diversification, producing a more predictable outcome, at the expense of possibly lower returns. In contrast, the lump sum approach gives a wider distribution of outcome; depending on when you start, you can either outperform or underperform the DCA approach.

Removing the mental burden of deploying capital

The old saying of buying low and selling high is easier said than done. Most people are afraid to buy low in fear of catching a falling knife (loss aversion). By enabling automatic programmatic dollar-cost averaging (DCA), we can remove the mental burden and remove emotion from the capital deployment process.

How does Recurring Investments at Vested work?

  1. Pick the investment you want to invest in on a recurring basis (either a stock, ETF, or Vest)
  2. Set up the buy order (order size, start date, and recurring frequency)

Once you’ve set up the recurring investment, you can always manage them in the Profile section. The recurring investments can be canceled at any time.

Alternative Investments made easy