Anonymous wrote:Asset prices are insanely pumped right now, anyone just starting their career with no family money to help is screwed. Growth is probably going to suck for the next 20-30 years because of how overvalued the stock and real estate markets are right now. I’m pissed that I was born too late to benefit from any of it. Older generations got their 7%+ returns and now gen Z and younger millennials will be stuck with crappy 3-5% returns based on most forecasts.
Anonymous wrote:On the other hand, you'll be alive 30-50 years longer than the others..
Anonymous wrote:Asset prices are insanely pumped right now, anyone just starting their career with no family money to help is screwed. Growth is probably going to suck for the next 20-30 years because of how overvalued the stock and real estate markets are right now. I’m pissed that I was born too late to benefit from any of it. Older generations got their 7%+ returns and now gen Z and younger millennials will be stuck with crappy 3-5% returns based on most forecasts.
Anonymous wrote:Asset prices are insanely pumped right now, anyone just starting their career with no family money to help is screwed. Growth is probably going to suck for the next 20-30 years because of how overvalued the stock and real estate markets are right now. I’m pissed that I was born too late to benefit from any of it. Older generations got their 7%+ returns and now gen Z and younger millennials will be stuck with crappy 3-5% returns based on most forecasts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Asset prices are insanely pumped right now, anyone just starting their career with no family money to help is screwed. Growth is probably going to suck for the next 20-30 years because of how overvalued the stock and real estate markets are right now. I’m pissed that I was born too late to benefit from any of it. Older generations got their 7%+ returns and now gen Z and younger millennials will be stuck with crappy 3-5% returns based on most forecasts.
True. But at least we get to benefit from our parents’ wealth. I got a six-figure down payment for my house and also get a $30,000 annual gift tax-free from my parents. Their parents could never have afforded to give them those types of things.
Lol as if anyone not in the top 1% gets this from their parents
Anonymous wrote:On the other hand, you'll be alive 30-50 years longer than the others..
Anonymous wrote:Asset prices are insanely pumped right now, anyone just starting their career with no family money to help is screwed. Growth is probably going to suck for the next 20-30 years because of how overvalued the stock and real estate markets are right now. I’m pissed that I was born too late to benefit from any of it. Older generations got their 7%+ returns and now gen Z and younger millennials will be stuck with crappy 3-5% returns based on most forecasts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Asset prices are insanely pumped right now, anyone just starting their career with no family money to help is screwed. Growth is probably going to suck for the next 20-30 years because of how overvalued the stock and real estate markets are right now. I’m pissed that I was born too late to benefit from any of it. Older generations got their 7%+ returns and now gen Z and younger millennials will be stuck with crappy 3-5% returns based on most forecasts.
True. But at least we get to benefit from our parents’ wealth. I got a six-figure down payment for my house and also get a $30,000 annual gift tax-free from my parents. Their parents could never have afforded to give them those types of things.
Anonymous wrote:Try graduating in 2002. We got great jobs and made great money. We invested what were very significant sums of money for us very early. By 2008, after putting basically all excess cash in the market for 5 years we had an annualized negative 20%+ rate of return.
You know what. It worked out fine. And yours will too. You can’t time when you are born. Clearly good timing helps some and hurts others but over the course of a lifetime it won’t really affect you.
Anonymous wrote:Try graduating in 2002. We got great jobs and made great money. We invested what were very significant sums of money for us very early. By 2008, after putting basically all excess cash in the market for 5 years we had an annualized negative 20%+ rate of return.
You know what. It worked out fine. And yours will too. You can’t time when you are born. Clearly good timing helps some and hurts others but over the course of a lifetime it won’t really affect you.
Anonymous wrote:I was first able to invest money in the late 90's. If you look at the DJIA, the market was basically flat for the next 15 years. It went up (tech runup), then down (tech crash), climbed a bit, great recession, recovery. It wasn't until the mid-2010's that I started to see real, long-term growth in my retirement accounts. So complaining about "missing out" is nothing new.