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The study compared how returns differ if someone starts investing during a weak decade for stocks that's followed by a strong one
-- and vice versa. Somebody who invested $500 a month in a fund replicating the S&P 500 starting in 1970 and continuing through the bull market of the 1980s would have ended 1989 with $589,707
-- for an annualized rate of return of 11.5 percent. The 1970s were characterized by high inflation and high unemployment and a flat market, setting the stage for the 1980s when the S&P 500 tripled. If the decades are reversed, and the strong years of the 1980s were followed by the 1970s bear market, the account would be valued at $358,972, even though the annual rate of return would still be 11.5 percent. The difference is that the investor in the first situation would have been buying more shares of stock each month during the bad years of the
'70s.
"We need to be shouting from the rooftops that this is not the time to get out of the market if you're young," says Christine Fahlund, a senior financial planner with T. Rowe Price. "This is the time to be in the market." For young people to take advantage of deals, however, they need to have a job
-- and cash. Neither is a given. The unemployment rate for workers ages 20 to 24 jumped to 14.9 percent in September, up from 10.8 percent in the same month a year ago. Unemployment for those 25 to 34 is 10.6 percent, almost a point above the rate of 9.8 percent for people of all ages. And the skyrocketing cost of undergraduate education means graduating seniors who borrowed money for tuition enter the work force with an average of $23,118 in student-loan debt, according to the Department of Education. About 65 percent of students take out a loan to finance their education. Plenty of people, though, are taking advantage of this recession's generation gap. Ann Seiden, 28, bought a home in Phoenix last November for 15 percent below the asking price. Some people are casualties of the recession, she says. "And there are those who have kind of seized on the opportunities in it."
[Associated
Press;
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