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Ben Stein How Not to Ruin Your Life

Ben Stein, How Not to Ruin Your Life

Don't Panic - Buy Index Funds and Real Estate

by Ben Stein

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Posted on Thursday, July 3, 2008, 12:00AM
Now for some reassuring words. Of all of the columnists writing in this space, I suspect I am the oldest. This means I have seen the most economic fluctuations. This also means I am less terrified about them than younger heads.

Let me put this differently. I read recently in The Wall Street Journal that the stock market was at the time of that writing almost in " Bear Market Territory," which is to say, down roughly 20% or more from its high. This, said the author of the piece, shows that we are about to have very bad economic times. The author helpfully noted that the market has been down into "Bear Market Territory " some nine times since the mid-1960's. Without doubt, this author was trying to do his best, and to serve his readers.

But here's a relevant addendum: yes, the market may have fallen 20% or more nine times since then. But there have only been five recessions since then.
That is to say, the stock market predicts 10 out of five recessions. Not such a great record.

The truth is that while the economy is clearly slowing down we are not yet in a recession. There has so far not even been one quarter of negative economic growth, nor even a break-even quarter. We may well have one soon, but two in a row are required for the classic definition of a recession. And as I keep saying, if anyone can call anything a recession, the whole subject loses all intellectual or factual meaning. This too could happen-a real recession-but it has not happened yet.

There are still reasons for hope. Exports are phenomenally strong. Minerals and agriculture are strong. Medical is strong. The government sector is large and robust. Sadly, military must remain strong indefinitely.

The government is running an immense deficit, and this is stimulative. True, finance is in tatters, as is transportation, refining, and home building. These are large sectors. They may fall so much that they bring the economy into recession.

But think about this: somewhere out in the big wide world, there is voracious demand for minerals and commodities. That (along with speculation) explains their major price increases. It would be extremely rare for there to be a spectacular worldwide demand for commodities along with a serious fall in demand for other factors in an economy. That is, it would be rare for demand to be both rising and falling at the same time. It could happen, but it would be rare.

However, let's assume we do have a recession. I hope we don't, but we might. What do we do about it? What can we do about it? Just keep plugging along. Just keep buying broad indexes. Just keep a good chunk of liquid assets. None of us can control the economy. Thus, we just have to keep swimming in the roiled waters.

As we cling to our life jackets, please remember this: no recession lasts forever. I can well recall so many times in the past when every single headline in The Wall Street Journal was about some record growth of sales or profits. Then time passes and every single headline is about horrible news. Then time passes and there is mixed news, and then it's all good news again.

Economies go through cycles. But the long-term trend is up, and people who buy broad indexes when the news is bad, if they live long enough, live to be happy about it.
Besides, what alternative do you have? If you have money to invest, yes, keep some in cash. But cash loses its value in inflationary times. In fact, holding cash over long periods - beyond what you need for peace of mind - is a surefire way to make yourself unhappy. You will lose money on it over long periods as inflation nibbles at it.

The best bet usually is what has gone down the most, and that, for now, is real estate. I got a letter from a thoughtful reader saying he was going to wait until real estate had reached its all time low before he bought. But how will he know? And how rarely does he find a home he truly loves? Even when homebuyers buy at the top of the cycle, if they love their homes, and if they can hold on, they always end up delighted.

Yes, there will be news saying housing will not recover THIS TIME. But in fact, except in really depressed areas, housing recovers EVERY TIME and goes on to pass its prior record. The real story of real estate, as my brilliant money manager friend, Phil DeMuth, says, is of failing to buy, not of staying away successfully.

The plain fact is that you don't know when real estate will be at bottom until it's too late. If you see a home you love, buy it now if you plan to be in it a long time. And know that the headline writers want to whip you up and make you crazy about the economy. They sell fear. Stay calm and stay well to do.

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379 Comments

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  • Yahoo! Finance User - Tuesday, July 8, 2008, 8:01AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Yes Ben, the sub prime was only a 30 Billion dollar problem. If you want to lose money follow some his advice.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Tuesday, July 8, 2008, 8:11AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    "But in fact, except in really depressed areas, housing recovers EVERY TIME and goes on to pass its prior record." He is pretty good at useless cliches. Too bad he doesnt understand economics. Housing have never been this overvalued in terms of historic ratios such as price to rent or price to median salary. To compare the biggest housing bubble the US ever had to any other time is childish and ignorant. We still have another 30% to drop in most areas to get back into historic norms. He is just like a Realtor, always a good time to buy, and in the long run it will do ok. Why not buy in two years for 30% off? Why doesnt he use statistics and data to analyze the issue like a professional? Oh that's right, it wouldnt support his position. Buy now, lose your job during the recession/depression sometime in the next couple years and then sell for a loss or hand the keys back to the bank. This kind of reckless negligence is what got us into this mess. Totally and utterly irresponsible. Who needs terrorists to destroy America when we got parasites like Ben Stein right here?

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Tuesday, July 8, 2008, 8:19AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Dear Permabull, Please explain why this time its not different. Please explain why a market that rose over 1000% (Dow 1400 to 14000) in the past 15 years should not collapse back on itself. Please explain why I should buy an equity market index (S&P 500 3.9% annual return past ten years) that does not out perform the "safe" return I could get in an insured Certificate of Deposit? The risk/reward isn't there and the days of the stock market keeping up with inflation are over. The real rate of inflation when food and fuel is factored in is over 11%. Please explain why you continue to disguise the Greater Fool theory? Crabby

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Tuesday, July 8, 2008, 8:26AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Tim is exactly right. Ben wasnt able to spot the housing bubble or the danger of subprime mortgages. He asked us to buy financials right at the peak, and continued begging us to buy more at every 5% drop (if you took his advice you would have lost over 30% in the stock market, and if you brought a house in a bubbly area when he told you to, you would have lost between 10% to 30% of its value). Given his track record of always being wrong and never being able to understand the current situation, why hasn't he been fired yet? Sure prices will go up in 10-40 years. If you dont listen to this kind of ignorant advice, however, and find someone bright to listen to you can make money every single year on your investments. I certainly do. The secret is to not listen to cliches, and base you decisions on fundamentals and price. These point to a bear market for at least another 2 years in housing, and about 6 months for stocks.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Tuesday, July 8, 2008, 8:27AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    It took 25 years for stock market to recover from the 1929 high. There are time where it may not pay to be in the market. Please use facts data to support your investment thesis not just banalities...

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