I guess that's one of the many major differences between a high-profile visionary investor like Mr Soros, and little old me:
Mr Soros is able to predict when major stock market crises will erupt; I have no such skill.
So, unlike Mr Soros who, presumably, can time his entry and exit into markets as the whim takes him, I simply have to rely on buying good-quality, well-managed businesses and ride them through whatever market ructions transpire.
PS. As the years go by, it does increasingly occur to me, however, that had I acted every time I saw Mr Soros - and many other luminaries like him - being quoted in somewhat dramatic fashion about what financial market calamity is about to befall us, my personal wealth would be somewhat diminished, because the amount of crises that I have seen foretold which never came to pass would - if you lined them up end-to-end - would almost reach the moon, I reckon.
But I shouldn't be so facetious: maybe this time Mr Soros does, in fact, finally turn out to be right.
But much precedent has taught me that I sure as heck can't invest on that basis, because more often than not the shares that I sold today, I would end up having to buy back at materially higher prices in the future.