Now try a situation where the government and Fed aren’t pumping trillions of dollars to help the market.
Sure thing, lets eliminate anything from the current bull market that starts at the bottom of the 2007 crash. Lets end in 2006, and begin 19 years early in 1987 (to keep the same sample length from the prior example).
The same $10k in the S&P500 on Jan 1 of 1987 ending in 2006 would be $91,857. This would be a 818.57% total return and a 11.73% compounded annual growth.
You’re missing the point. Ever since Reagan, “the economy” has been in service of the stock market and shareholder primacy has been the rule of the land. This isn’t something that should be assumed natural.
I’m missing the point? I’m contradicting your point from your first post where you said this:
All the “just save $X per month” advice hinges on this, but for some reason, finance “gurus” take our current longest bull run in history and pretend high returns are guaranteed.
I demonstrated your “longest bull [market] in history” point was irrelevant by completely excluding that bull market and showing coincidentally even higher returns from the period before. Simple investing in the S&P500 has been historically shown to produce consistent returns over time. Does that guarantee it will forever? Of course not, but its much more likely it will produce that not compared to all the other choices for investing.
Here’s the entire history of the S&P 500 from its inception in 1926:
You’re welcome to argue against that line for investing in something else, and in the short term, you may even be right. However, so far there isn’t a more consistent performer for growth over a long period of time.
Ever since Reagan, “the economy” has been in service of the stock market and shareholder primacy has been the rule of the land.
Reagan sucks for lots of reasons, but that condition about the stock market and the economy you’re describing existed long before Reagan. The Great Depression during the Hoover administration (also a shitty president for the time) shows that clearly.
This isn’t something that should be assumed natural.
Natural? All of these rules and economies are human constructs. There’s nothing natural about nearly anything humanity does. I find it odd that “isn’t natural” is even a criticism in this conversation.
Sure thing, lets eliminate anything from the current bull market that starts at the bottom of the 2007 crash. Lets end in 2006, and begin 19 years early in 1987 (to keep the same sample length from the prior example).
The same $10k in the S&P500 on Jan 1 of 1987 ending in 2006 would be $91,857. This would be a 818.57% total return and a 11.73% compounded annual growth.
You’re welcome to run your own numbers. Here’s the simple S&P500 calculator I’ve used for our discussion here.
You’re missing the point. Ever since Reagan, “the economy” has been in service of the stock market and shareholder primacy has been the rule of the land. This isn’t something that should be assumed natural.
I’m missing the point? I’m contradicting your point from your first post where you said this:
I demonstrated your “longest bull [market] in history” point was irrelevant by completely excluding that bull market and showing coincidentally even higher returns from the period before. Simple investing in the S&P500 has been historically shown to produce consistent returns over time. Does that guarantee it will forever? Of course not, but its much more likely it will produce that not compared to all the other choices for investing.
Here’s the entire history of the S&P 500 from its inception in 1926:
source
You’re welcome to argue against that line for investing in something else, and in the short term, you may even be right. However, so far there isn’t a more consistent performer for growth over a long period of time.
Reagan sucks for lots of reasons, but that condition about the stock market and the economy you’re describing existed long before Reagan. The Great Depression during the Hoover administration (also a shitty president for the time) shows that clearly.
Natural? All of these rules and economies are human constructs. There’s nothing natural about nearly anything humanity does. I find it odd that “isn’t natural” is even a criticism in this conversation.