Over the years, markets have rewarded those who bought every dip.
Fast rebounds happening after every sharp correction reinforced the belief that declines are temporary, boosting investors’ confidence in buying the dip.
However, market behaviour changes across cycles, and what worked previously might not work now.
In 2026, the biggest risk in investing may be assuming that stock prices will always keep rising or rebound immediately after corrections.
Let’s break down why and what you can do to avoid this mistake.
Investors now expect fast recoveries after dips, having seen this pattern often enough in recent years.
For example, Singapore Technologies Engineering (SGX: S63, STE) share prices dropped approximately 15% from S$8.96 on 13 August 2025 to S$7.61 on 1 September 2025.
However, it bounced back and reached S$9.01 per share by 7 October 2025.
For investors who bought during the dip, they would have made about 18% just by holding the share for a little more than a month.
Such instances are why temporary pullbacks are being taken as “cues” for opportunities to buy in.
However, this mindset encourages complacency and excessive risk-taking.
Investors might skip the required analysis, assume that the business fundamentals are no longer important, or take on positions that are larger than what they can comfortably hold.
Share price rebounds are typically governed by specific conditions, such as the easing of policies and reports of strong earnings.
There is no guarantee that the same conditions will repeat for the share that had dipped.
It is important to remember that while markets do recover over time, it is not always a quick rebound.
The stock market in 2026 looks very different from the previous years.
Interest rates are no longer rising aggressively.
After several strong years, earnings expectations are higher, and valuations in many sectors leave less room for disappointment.
In a late-cycle market, corrections are choppier and more selective.
Growth remains positive but is slower, giving subdued returns.
Some stocks might recover quickly, but others could continue to decline as fundamentals catch up with prices.
Take for example, Genting Singapore Limited (SGX: G13), which was trading at a high of S$1.06 on 19 February 2024.
Despite strong market rallies in 2025, the stock price dipped and the company is currently trading at S$0.73 per share, down approximately 31%.
Investors who expect fast recoveries like in previous years may grow impatient, leading them to sell even when prices are low.