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04-22-2016, 08:32 AM
(This post was last modified: 04-22-2016, 08:34 AM by Robandcindy2.)
https://staticseekingalpha.a.ssl.fastly....431eea.png
Just curious if the (as we say in Massachusetts) "Smahtah" folks here would explain what changed around 1982 and again around 1995 to drastically increase the slope?
I'm trying to relate this to the two drastic declines which followed in 2002 and 2008.
Thank you....
Rob
There are people who use up their entire lives making money so they can enjoy the lives they have entirely used up
Frederick Buechner
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1995 and up was the .com bubble, powered by the internet and easier access to trading online or over the phone (instead of using real paper) but I don't know why it happened in the early eighties, looking forward to learn as well.
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You may want to look at a log scale chart when trying to compare over very long time periods. The effect of compounding distorts things when looking at long time frames.
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This reminds me about something I ponder all the time. What I think happened in the 80s is that stock ownership changed from something available to only the wealthy to something available to everyone. Regulatory changes (I think!) and lower-cost brokerages meant that huge swaths of the population could reasonably play in the stock market that never could or did before. This created a huge, decades-long tailwind to stock prices as massive new demand arose for securities. This long, but nonetheless one-time, event has more or less played itself out, and this tailwind is gone. Now, pretty much everyone who is going to play in the market already does, through index funds and/or their 401(k)s, etc. Not only is this tailwind gone, but as the boomers retire and pass away, it may actually reverse a bit, as demographic trends lower (somewhat) the demand for securities.
When people talk so glibly about the fortunes made in the market if you had just bought, say, $10,000 of KO in 1985, I think they ignore this dynamic. It has skewed how we think about the market and expected returns.
I've never read anything about this, but if anyone knows of any books or articles that discuss it, I would love some links.
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In the early 80's, Reagan took over from Carter (please let's not start a politics discussion) and our economy pulled out of the general malaise. Technology really started to balloon, in the 90's, the internet age really expanded things, as well. Also, discount brokers made stock ownership easier (Kerim mentioned this). They've also changed the structure of the indices. Maybe inflation impacted things, as well? Just bringing up some ideas that may have contributed.