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Looking at single stocks? The drop in the indexes may be bigger than anything that's happened in a long time, but every year countless individual stocks perform the exact same maneuver as they run into their own problems.
It may seem wrong that it could take 11 years to get back to the same level as last year, but the long-term average 6.5% real return of stocks happened through times worse than these. When I was learning about investing last year I kept thinking "if only you could avoid all those bad days in the market you could do a lot better".
I finally got the point that if you see things that way the market will hurt you again and again, but if you accept it as part of the process you can make money. Above all, the stock market is not a smooth progression no matter where you look.
There's two important things to remember that no one wants to talk about:
- A "recovery" to last year's prices means absolutely nothing if those prices weren't based on meaningful long-term economic advantages
- The last few months may be the best thing that's happened to future returns in the last 20 years
I dunno. It seems that labeling 10% as a "good year" without acknowledging that it is derived from the long-term annual average rather than a median or mode is misleading.
It's the biggest weakness of 401(k)s, in my opinion - limited choices and an emphasis on buying on schedule rather than when ideal.
A 65% loss is pretty brutal, but if it had to happen to you, it's better to happen now when you have many years of stock buying ahead of you, right?
Either way, I wouldn't be worried. Let's just keep plowing more and more into it.
I'm not TOO worried - I'm young, I have time to recover. I hope...
In 11 years I will be almost 75 years old.
I had planned to retire in a year or two. Now -- assuming the rumors of layoffs at my employer's shop don't come to fruition -- I likely will not retire. Ever. This situation has already left me totally screwed, and it's far from over.
6 is more reasonable. factor in taxes. we're
all screwed.
You have the unfortunate luck of being whalloped by equities AND international because of the dollar strengthening (or should I say, other currencies weakening faster than we are)... yikes.
If this crisis is anything like the depression it'll take about 18-20 years for your stocks to recover. On the bright side things that you buy during that time will be cheap and rise in value.
Of course it could all end up like Japan and just stay flat for years and years. Not every stock market in the world averages a positive return over the medium to long term.
I prefer to invest in individual companies because I'd rather invest my money into great companies I understand (in my circle of competence) than invest in ALL companies, many of which are poorly managed or capitalized. I don't want 'average' market returns either... I invest in businesses, not the entire economy and will settle for the returns I get, which I think will be better than the overall economy... if not, so be it. At least I'm comfortable with my investments and with any drops or rises in their valuations. I know when the price goes down below a certain point, my company is undervalued, and when it goes above a certain point, its overvalued... So when the value goes down, many on Wall Street freak out, but I might be sitting there buying more shares in a PARTICULAR company that I know is being thrown out with the bath water... even if the economy has a grim outlook for a few years...
The real problem is the REAL rate of inflation in regards to your returns. Then taxes come into account afterwards.
Lately, I've been wondering if the 8-10% expectations we've had is sustainable long term. If you think about it, stock prices are related to earnings. How can earnings of companies grow 10% each year if wages aren't growing (i.e. you need people to make more to be able to buy more products or pay higher prices). I don't think wages haven't been growing at 10%, but historically we've added another income (largely women entering the workforce and making larger salaries) and living on more credit.
If those two things were what lead to the big historical gains that may be a problem in the future. We aren't adding more incomes to our families and living on credit doesn't seem to be the option any more.