I am undecided on the question, but I have serious doubt about the generally accepted "stocks go up over the long run".
(Of course depends on what we call long run.)
Most of the time for backing up this claim people quote the Dow Jones index or other indexes, but they kindly forget 2 important things:
1. These indexes keep changing over the time, the underperforming stocks are replaced by new stocks, thus the index can not be compared by even itself 20-30 years ago. This change also helps that the index has a nice upward bias...
2. The little thing called inflation. Once we look at the inflation adjusted charts, the picture tells a completely different tale...
Now, I still can believe that most of the stocks have a slight upward bias, but I say it is much less than it is generally accepted and I sure would like to see some statistics/evidence on it.
Let's say randomly picking 10 stocks in every decade and holding them for 10 other years. I mean that is investment, right? That is also the long run, right?
I bet for every MSFT success there are 4-5 going out of business stories. Again, if somebody could point out relevant statistics on it, I would be glad to hear.
Until the discussion picks up, here is a Dow chart for the last 100 years, including the inflation adjusted one:
www.dogsofthedow.com/dow1925cpilog.htm
You might notice that after adjusting for inflation, the Dow was exactly at the same level in 1986 then 50 years earlier...
(Of course depends on what we call long run.)
Most of the time for backing up this claim people quote the Dow Jones index or other indexes, but they kindly forget 2 important things:
1. These indexes keep changing over the time, the underperforming stocks are replaced by new stocks, thus the index can not be compared by even itself 20-30 years ago. This change also helps that the index has a nice upward bias...
2. The little thing called inflation. Once we look at the inflation adjusted charts, the picture tells a completely different tale...
Now, I still can believe that most of the stocks have a slight upward bias, but I say it is much less than it is generally accepted and I sure would like to see some statistics/evidence on it.
Let's say randomly picking 10 stocks in every decade and holding them for 10 other years. I mean that is investment, right? That is also the long run, right?
I bet for every MSFT success there are 4-5 going out of business stories. Again, if somebody could point out relevant statistics on it, I would be glad to hear.
Until the discussion picks up, here is a Dow chart for the last 100 years, including the inflation adjusted one:
www.dogsofthedow.com/dow1925cpilog.htm
You might notice that after adjusting for inflation, the Dow was exactly at the same level in 1986 then 50 years earlier...