New Money

What Veterans of the 1973-74 Bear Market are Buying Now

By Katy Marquardt

Posted: April 6, 2009

Amid these market rallies and pullbacks, what are the pros buying? The WSJ asks a handful of market veterans who invested throughout the treacherous 1973-74 bear market. There are different opinions about when the recovery will occur, but one common theme: now is absolutely the time to invest.

Here are the highlights:

Will Browne of Tweedy, Browne: "Three or four years down the road, this will have proved to be an extraordinary time to invest." He says the tricky part is when to buy. One thing's for sure: he's avoiding companies saddled with debt.

John Gunn of Dodge & Cox: "The U.S. economy is very strong and resilient...It's bad in the long-term to bet against it." He sees a possible turnaround by the end of 2010 or midway through 2011.

Chuck Royce of Royce Funds: "The opportunities are excellent" right now, so investors should keep at it. He thinks the stock market will improve this year, ahead of the economy.

Harry Cohen of ClearBridge Advisors: He's been buying consumer goods and other high-quality companies that pay out dividends, but thinks it could be two to three years before the market returns to its high.

I agree with Jim, misleading headline

Sorry Katy, lousy story, lousy headline. Not up to the standard we'd expect from US News.

Chris of MT @ Apr 08, 2009 00:48:22 AM

Personally, I Love It

Consider it a gift. This market finally levels the playing field. It's a great opportunity for young investors to get in and "old" investors to dollar cost average. If you haven't started investing yet, just open a Roth IRA through Scottrade or TD Ameritrade (both offer easy flat-price trading systems and don't charge inactivity fees), deposit what you're able, use it to buy 75% VTI and 25% AGG, and repeat this over time. Both ETF's provide (approx.) 4.5% dividends and your VIT purchases will rise in value over time.

Patrick of PA @ Apr 07, 2009 05:17:35 AM

lack of writing skills

The editors of this magazine must be taking lessons from AOL on how to steer readers to their website using misleading headlines. The article headline says "What Veterans of the 1973-74 Bear Market are Buying Now", but not a single security, company, commodity, or investment was mentioned in the article. Of the four money managers interviewed, only one actually mentioned one specific market segment. Instead, the four focused on when the market and economy might recover. And this was written by a senior editor??

Jim of NY @ Apr 07, 2009 01:21:20 AM

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New Money

Katy Marquardt, a senior editor at U.S.News & World Report, takes a contemporary look at happenings in the financial world and aims to help young investors get going with their portfolios--or just sound cool at cocktail parties. Have a question? E-mail Katy at newmoney@usnews.com

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