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What You Need to Know About Dow vs. S&P 500
Q. What's the difference between the Dow Jones industrial average and the Standard & Poor's 500 average, aside
from the obvious fact that the S&P includes many more stocks?
A. There is a huge difference between the two, and it goes far …Read more.
Stock Market Rewards Patient Investors
It happened so quietly and under the cover of volatility that you might have missed it. But two weeks ago, the stock market reached its highest level since May 2008. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at its highest level since before the …Read more.
First Comes Love -- but Before Marriage, a Financial Heart-to-heart
Valentine's Day is just around the corner, and this column is meant to serve as a reminder. First, remember to buy a card for your valentine before they're all sold out. And second, don't get so caught up in the romantic season of hearts and flowers …Read more.
Your Financial Options and How to Weigh Safety vs. Risk
You have some basic investment choices, and not only do you need to understand how they work, you also need to allocate an appropriate portion of your savings to at least two or more of them.
All of this presumes that you have some savings or …Read more.
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Battered Investors Tired of Hearing Recession Is OverThe American public is starting to get more than mildly annoyed at those who tell them the economy is bouncing back. For every economist or politician who tells you the recession is over, there are a dozen people who think we're in the midst of a depression. For every administration official who points to the success of the stimulus plan in creating jobs, there are many thousands of ordinary citizens in line at the unemployment office. For every market analyst who debates whether this is a tradable correction in a bull market rally, there are hundreds of retirees wondering how they will survive on their shrunken IRAs. And for every pundit who proclaims that things are getting better, there is a University of Michigan or Conference Board survey of consumer sentiment that tells us people are growing more worried. It's hard to blame the public. They feel they were suckered into buying the stocks that sent their hard-earned money down the drain. They feel anger at those who took the rewards, while they, the American taxpayer, took all the risks. And they are bewildered that the market could rebound as it has, while they are still suffering. It's ironic that the stock market seems to be faltering just when the numbers like gross domestic product start turning up. The stock market always leads the real economy. It did so back in the gloom of March — telling us that the global financial system really wasn't going down the drain. Lately, the stock market is showing its skepticism toward the economic statistics that point toward growth and recovery. If you're an investor, it's small comfort to note that you've lived through the worst decade in stock market history — quite a reversal from recent memory. The decade starting Jan. 1, 1980, produced a 399.5 percent total return. The decade starting on Jan. 1, 1990, produced a 430.8 percent return. But the decade starting Jan.1, 2000, has so far produced a loss approaching 15 percent! That is astoundingly worse than the 1.7 percent loss posted for the decade starting in 1930! (Statistics courtesy of Jim Stack at Investech.com.) What's next? Opinion is about equally divided here — as you see the tug-of war between the bulls and the bears.
Now, with third-quarter stock and mutual fund statements firmly in hand, it's time to again ask that most important question: Will you feel worse if you sell, and the market moves higher — or will you feel worse if you don't sell, and the market declines? This is not an "all-or-nothing" question. You may want to make slight adjustments in the amount of "chicken money" vs. capital you're willing to risk. It's just a reminder that investing blindly leaves you in the dark! But investment results are not the only gauge of the economy these days. Many people are simply worried about survival. Unfortunately for our future, that has created a wider divide in our society — and more calls for immediate action on the part of the government. We should be careful what we wish for. The public antipathy is understandable. People are understandably angry that banks are posting profits on the wallets of consumers who now pay 29.9 percent interest on their credit card balances. And they're angry that those improving corporate profit reports are made possible because companies have shaved costs by cutting their jobs. Americans can't cheer a stock market rally that grows out of their misery. And they're starting to applaud the comeuppance that Washington is giving to business executives. Ordinary citizens are getting fed up with the free enterprise system that seems to leave them behind to pay the tax bill, while the bosses get bonuses. That is the greatest loss of this recession — the loss of respect for business — the only engine of growth that can bring us back to lasting prosperity. Sorry to say, Wall Street has only itself to blame. And that's The Savage Truth. Terry Savage is a registered investment adviser and is on the board of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. She appears weekly on WMAQ-Channel 5's 4:30 p.m. newscast, and can be reached at www.terrysavage.com. She is the author of the new book, "The New Savage Number: How Much Money Do You Really Need to Retire?" To find out more about Terry Savage and read her past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2009 TERRY SAVAGE PRODUCTIONS DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM
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