Gordon - As predicted, you cannot substantiate your statement and also you will not acknowledge this. I note repetition of the falsehood has given way to personal attacks. I have better things to be doing on a bank holiday weekend than this.
it’s not enough to say “ nobody has ever lost money” if you invest 10,000 and 20 years later your investment is worth 10,000 you have lost money to inflation .
you have to compare stocks investment to something else to say you haven’t lost , the nobody has ever lost money is not a valid argument . Id want to be rewarded for taking extra risk
if you invest for 20 years and fail to beat state savings I would consider that as money lost .
The way to deal with this country’s retirement tsunami is to persuade people to invest in equities, not to scaremonger (I am not accusing you of that).
I stand by the assertion that a globally diversified investor with a 20 year time horizon will not lose (even if Monday is 1929, 2008, Pearl Harbour, etc).
Gordon
No, stocks are never a "safe bet" - equities are an inherently risky (volatile) asset class, although historically the dispersion of returns has certainly diminished significantly over longer holding periods.Do you not accept that, with a 20 year time horizon, equities are a safe bet?
Regulators accross the planet insist that investment product documentation carries a clear statement to the effect that past returns are not indicative of future returns. That is entirely appropriate in my opinion.I fundamentally disagree with your assertion regarding extrapolating the future.
That is a staggering statement. So global equites with a 20 year horizon is guaranteed not to lose you money. Why the hell don’t fund managers ever tell you these things? Actually why are there even fund managers in existence. We don’t need them.
The statement that it is foolish to fear what has never happened is equally as ridiculous. There are risk management professionals all over the world lying awake at night fearing what has never happened before happening on their watch because their risk models wont have captured it.That tail risk is the real concern and yet you just belittle it. Scary.
Regulators accross the planet insist that investment product documentation carries a clear statement to the effect that past returns are not indicative of future returns. That is entirely appropriate in my opinion.
cremegg’s claims that his/her approach has worked,.
cremegg,
This is your main issue; you’re behaving as if the last crisis is about to happen again. There was a “trade war” with China a couple of months ago and then they came to an agreement!
In my view, from today’s starting point, an investor in global equities will not lose money.
Fund managers have benchmarks and parts of the market that they have to look at (or cannot look at).
I worry for you if you subscribe to the view that as private investors we should be chopping and changing our portfolios as a result of political or economic events.
But we appear unlikely to agree.
I agree.
But I don’t agree that it’s appropriate to look at the overall market which has done extraordinarily well over very long time-horizons and fear the opposite happening.
Frightening. Hope you won’t be offended if I don’t take advice from someone who says an investor in global equities will not lose money.
Thanks for worrying about me but at least I understand I can lose money. I sincerely hope you never have a rude awakening.
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