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5 Lessons From the Crash -- and Recovery

It's been one year since the market hit bottom. Here's what investors can learn from that experience.

By Steven Goldberg, Contributing Columnist, Kiplinger.com

March 8, 2010
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One year ago, the global economy lay flat on its back. More than a few experts thought another Great Depression was in the offing. Investors, meanwhile, were dumping stocks as fast as they could. The market had tumbled a staggering 55% from its peak on October 9, 2007 -- and much of that sickening slide had occurred since the September 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers. It was the worst bear market since the catastrophic period from 1929 through 1932.

As we know now (but had no way of knowing then), the stock marketed bottomed on March 9, 2009. Between that date and March 8 of this year, Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index skyrocketed 68%. Many indexes -- particularly foreign ones -- did much better. And although unemployment remains uncomfortably high, the Great Recession apparently ended in the third quarter of 2009.

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We will remember the financial meltdown of 2008 the rest of our lives. The question for us, as investors, is what we can learn from that near-death experience and subsequent resurrection. Here are five crucial lessons.

Almost everyone got it wrong this time. Don’t think you’re dumb because you lost money. Precious few economists and market strategists foresaw the financial collapse. And most of those who did remain bearish -- and heavily in cash -- today. You simply can’t predict the market’s short-term moves. No one can. Usually, that doesn’t matter all that much. This time, the market’s extreme volatility made it painfully expensive to be wrong.

It’s not the economy, stupid. The stock market started to rebound while the economy was still getting worse. Poring over economic data and earnings releases to gauge where the market will head next is often about as helpful as driving with your gaze fixed on your rear-view mirror. Both will tell you where you’ve been, not where you’re going.

Buying when things look blackest is often a great strategy. However, occasionally -- as in the last bear market -- the future can appear pitch black for many agonizing months before the market hits bottom.

Diversify sensibly, then stay put. As the market plunged, individual investors yanked many billions of dollars out of stock funds. Since stocks hit bottom, individual investors have continued to unload stock funds and replace them with bond funds. That’s foolish. With bond yields already low, bonds are likely to lag stocks for years (although, of course, bonds will prevail during some periods).

Instead of investing in what has done well lately, allocate your holdings in stocks and bonds based on when you’ll need your money. Are you investing for retirement 20 years from now or for your daughter’s college tuition next fall? Your goals don’t change whether the market plunges or soars; neither should your asset allocation. Invest with your brain, not your gut.

Don’t get too cute. The mutual fund industry is forever churning out shiny new products that enrich the industry -- and no one else. You can buy exchange-traded funds that invest in every obscure corner of the market, from single countries to narrow sectors. You can buy exchange-traded notes that track the price of everything from live cattle to coffee, cotton and sugar. And you can use ETFs to make bets that will yield you two times or three times the market’s daily returns -- or that will rise when the market falls. Stay far away from these kinds of daffy products. If you want to gamble, go to Las Vegas. You’ll have a lot more fun.

Turn off the financial news. There is no smart money. The many people spouting opinions on television, on the Internet and in the print media know little more than my cat does about which way the market will head over the short term. It can be fun to watch these talking heads -- especially when they disagree. The trouble is, the more information you absorb, the more you feel the urge to do something. And usually the best course of action is to do nothing. Stick with one or two sources of information that dispense sensible long-term advice.

We’re not out of the woods. Although the economy is healthier than it was a year ago and the worst of the financial crisis is behind us, now is not the time to be complacent. The U.S. faces a massive and growing debt problem, as well as protracted high unemployment. Some European nations -- notably the PIIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain) -- have serious debt problems of their own. The high rollers on Wall Street are attacking Greece using, believe it or not, credit-default swaps, the same weapons they employed to deep-six Lehman Brothers and other huge financial firms in 2008. It’s incomprehensible that governments haven’t regulated these financially destructive tools out of existence.

With all these problems, don’t expect the U.S. stock market to continue going straight up. It never does. But if you can invest for the long term, look to stocks because they have always been the most profitable place to be. That hasn’t changed.

UPDATE: In past columns I’ve recommended Winslow Green Solutions (symbol WGSLX), most recently on February 2. The fund is liquidating March 31, returning cash to its shareholders. It’s closing because it’s small, with assets of $35 million, and very similar to Winslow Green Growth (WGGFX), which boasts the same manager and analysts and the same green philosophy.

Steve Goldberg is an investment adviser in the Washington, D.C., area.

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Reader Comments (4)

Posted by: Nomen at 03/09/2010 01:43:41 PM

Lesson 6: What Crash and Recovery? We've just lost our economic engines and are out of fuel. The real crash is yet to come. With the unemployment rate where it is, this is just the eye of the storm and certainly not clear flying ahead. Compared to the vision of our current financial and government pilots, Mr. Magoo was far sighted. Lesson 7: The Great Depression was not just one market dip and partial recovery NOR will our current recession be. It went on for many years. There will be more severe dips. Look forward to more Great Depression WPA and TVA style solutions to handle the continuing huge numbers of unemployed. The National Debt will continue to snowball out of control. Lesson 8: While Wall Street was moaning about the subprime mess, the REAL culprit on Main Street for most of the country was the cost of energy and that $4+ gasoline. After filling the tank to drive to work, there was little cash left over to make house and credit card payments. (Remember the housing and credit card problem?) Notice that there was NO help or regulation from the government on energy prices. As current gas prices push past $3, watch this happen again. Lesson 9: Most people didn't learn a thing. They want to ignore the real problems, avoid any sacrifice or meaningful regulations, pass the blame, and charge on into a losing battle while marching under banners of false hopes and political promises. This is why history always repeats itself and every empire falls.

Posted by: Bob at 03/09/2010 01:52:33 PM

The real lesson. Our economy was built on manufacturing, good paying jobs, and affordable energy. Without those ingredients any long term investing plans will simply be a matter of trying to outrun the train.

Posted by: Steven Goldberg at 03/17/2010 08:30:08 PM

Hi, I'm the author of this column. Nomen, Bob, both of you make good points. I think they're the kind of things, however, that people tend to talk about after a big bear market, not before. Elroy Dimson, who has written the definitive history of global stock market returns titles his book, "Triumph of the Optimists." That's why it usually pays to be one. Diversifying overseas, particularly into emerging markets, offers a good deal of protection against most of the dangers Bob mentions. As far as energy, I think we've only begun to tap our ability to conserve energy and profit from alternative fuels. Nor would I underestimate the strength and ingenuity of the American people and our economy. Thanks for your comments.

Posted by: Nomen at 03/18/2010 06:27:05 PM

Well Steve, as much as I'd like to share your optimism, I can't. No one in Washington seems to have any interest in helping or protecting the average worker. Wall Street got bonuses, Main Street lost jobs and the national debt skyrocketed. As far as diversifying overseas, isn't that how we are losing most of our manufacturing and technical jobs already? I can't get to excited about foreign investments when I don't have a decent job to pay today's bills. Energy isn't fairing much better either. Two local ethanol plants have gone bankrupt along with a new high efficiency battery start up company. Several other alternative energy start ups appear to be more about quick profit scams rather than any long term energy solution. At the same time gas is pushing $3 a gallon and rising. Maybe there's optimism on Wall Street but NOT on my street.




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