Ivan Seeking said:
I don't agree. Just recently there was a discussion about this [I think on PBS] with an investment analyst who stated that historically, stocks are a bad investment. He cited numbers related to life savings lost by retired people, investment cycles, recessions and the depression, and I don't remember all of the details but his point seemed well made at the time. I'll look around later for a link.
The stock market is a good investment as long as you're not stupid about it. At its most fundamental, you're betting that the American economy will grow - and over all but the shortest timeframes (1-2 years), it does. And the stock market over only slightly longer timeframes (10-15 years) is
always a winner. There has
never been a 15 year period in US history in which the stock market has lost value.
Another example that comes to mind is something that was done every year for many years - the monkey picks. In New York, every year somebody [maybe the NY Times] had a monkey throw darts at a dartboard to select stock picks. The next year these were compared to stocks recommended by one of the top investment companies. The monkey often won; which may explain why I haven't seen it for a long time. This fact was quite famous when I was a kid.
Thats true but that doesn't make the stock market a loser, it just means that if you follow the rules, any monkey can make money. Ie, you don't need a broker or a managed mutual fund.
True. Unless you wish to become an expert your chances are not so good.
That's simply not true (I think you miss the point). The point of the monkey example is that even a monkey can make money on the stock market. Its just that you can't expect to be a quick milionaire like Evo's friend. The big winners and big losers are the exception, not the rule. The vast majority of investors are people holding stocks for decades in a retirement plan. What the stock market
is virtually guaranteed to provide you if ou follow that is a couple of million dollars to retire on.
In betting, odds are based on the fraction of the money taken in vs paid out. A good bet at a casino made over and over, such as black on a roulette wheel will yeild you something like a 95% return - for every $100 you put in (for example, 50 $2 bets in a row), you'll get $95 back. Obviously, that's a losing proposition, but not a terrible one (slots, on the other hand...). If you play long enough, the odds will eventually catch up with you and you'll lose. But the stock market has had an
average of a 112% yearly return over its history. Long term, its a winning bet - throw darts at the NY times or hire a monkey to pick your stocks for you, it doesn't matter - if you spread your money out and let the odds take over, eventually they will take over and make you a winner.