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"Everything Is Going to Crash"

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wealthyretirement.com

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wealthyretirement@mb.wealthyretirement.com

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Tue, Nov 28, 2023 09:32 PM

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Oh, the things you hear at the Thanksgiving table... SPONSORED 92-year-old newfound multimillionaire

Oh, the things you hear at the Thanksgiving table... [Shield] AN OXFORD CLUB PUBLICATION [Wealthy Retirement]( [View in browser]( SPONSORED [92-Year-Old Multimillionaire's Strange Deathbed Regret]( [Old man in garden]( 92-year-old newfound multimillionaire Marvin turned $635K into $3.6M in 9 years. It's a rare example of spectacular financial success, especially at that stage in life. His only regret... he won't live long enough to do it again. YOU still can use his moneymaking secret. See how, [by clicking here.]( [MARKET TRENDS]( ["Everything Is Going to Crash"]( [Marc Lichtenfeld, Chief Income Strategist, The Oxford Club]( [Marc Lichtenfeld]( On Thanksgiving, I was speaking with a relative's friend, who was new to our Thanksgiving table this year. He is a full-time real estate investor, and he seemed to be very successful. With real estate prices surging nearly everywhere, I asked him how he's approaching new investments. He told me he's sitting on the sidelines. "Everything is going to crash," he replied. "Real estate, stocks, everything." When I pressed him on why he thinks so, he told me, "Inflation is too high, mortgages are too high and unemployment is too high." I couldn't argue with him about mortgages. After years of ultra-low interest rates, a 7.5% mortgage feels very high, especially combined with inflated housing prices. And while inflation is coming down significantly, our guest still had a point: That decline isn't providing much relief. Lower inflation simply means prices are rising at a slower pace. It doesn't mean prices are coming down. (Now, energy prices have fallen recently, but I don't expect that to last.) I was stumped by his statement that unemployment is too high, though. There are plenty of things that aren't going well in the United States right now. Unemployment is not one of them. The current unemployment rate of 3.9% is higher than the 3.4% rate from a few months ago, but that is primarily due to more people reentering the workforce. In fact, 22,000 fewer people were jobless during the week ending November 11 than during the prior week. Perhaps our guest was referring to the fact that the number of new jobs being created is dropping. As we came out of the pandemic in 2021, more than 600,000 jobs were being created each month. Last year, the number was 400,000. This year, it's fallen again to an average of 239,000 jobs added per month, including just 150,000 in October. So nearly anyone who wants a job can get one, and with wages increasing, workers are getting paid more. That doesn't feel crashy to me. SPONSORED [Get Marc's Top 5 Dividend Stocks (FREE PICKS)]( World-renowned income expert Marc Lichtenfeld just released his [Ultimate Dividend Package](. Inside, you'll find his TOP FIVE dividend stocks right now. And today, he's giving you this package... completely free of charge! To get your FREE dividend recommendations, [click here now](. No doubt, shoppers are looking for bargains and for ways to cut spending with prices higher than they were last year. We'll see soon where holiday retail sales come in. That could be a good signal of the health of the consumer in 2024. There are a lot of moving parts that affect the economy and markets, but as long as unemployment stays very low, I have a hard time envisioning "everything" crashing. If anything tumbles, I'd expect it to be real estate, as homes are becoming unaffordable for many people. As a real estate investor, my new friend may be very smart to wait to put money to work. But for stock investors, it's vital to remember that the stock market goes up over the long term. Timing a crash is impossible. Now, it's always a good idea to keep some cash on the side in case the market or some individual stocks you're watching go on sale. But sitting out of the stock market because you're afraid of a crash is always a losing proposition. Let's face it. On the rare occasions that stocks do crash, there are very few ice-in-the-veins investors who are bold enough to deploy money as prices are tanking. Lots of people say they're going to buy when prices go lower, but in reality, most investors are too scared to do so because they're afraid of further losses. It's not until stocks have recovered in a big way that they finally feel comfortable investing their cash. The solution is to not play that game. Since 1957, the S&P 500 has returned an average of 10.7% annually with dividends reinvested. That's a very solid return and includes many crashes, such as the COVID-19 crash in March 2020, the global financial crisis from 2007 to 2009, the dot-com crash at the beginning of the century, the 1987 crash, etc. Another way to avoid fearing a crash is to take any money out of the market that you'll need within around three years. This way, your long-term money will still be invested and growing while the funds you'll need in the short term to pay bills will be protected. (I recommend putting that money in short-term Treasurys and certificates of deposit, which can earn you more than a 5% return.) Lastly, some of your portfolio should be in corporate bonds. Today, you can earn nearly stocklike annual returns with a fraction of the risk of stocks. Having bonds in your portfolio provides ballast when stocks tank. Bonds pay you interest twice a year, and you get your money back at maturity no matter what the stock price of the underlying company is doing. A company's stock could be down 90%, but as long as the company doesn't go bankrupt, bondholders will continue to receive interest and will get paid back at maturity. I'm not worried about a stock market crash at all. But if it does happen, I'll rest assured knowing that stocks go up over the long term and that the money I need to pay the mortgage and college tuition won't be affected. I hope to see this new friend next Thanksgiving to compare notes and see what moves he's made in reaction to the markets. I know that I won't have done much. Good investing, Marc [Leave a Comment]( [Investment U Conference 2024 at the Ojai Valley Inn & Spa in Ojai, California, February 26-29, 2024]( RECOMMENDED LINKS ["My First Impression Was 'You've GOT to Be KIDDING Me!'" - Bill O'Reilly]( [Discover the $12 Energy Company Paying a Nearly DOUBLE-DIGIT Yield That Just STUNNED Investors With Plans to Increase It Much Higher]( MORE FROM WEALTHY RETIREMENT [Image of the Roberto Clemente Health Clinic provides clean water to school children]( [Charitable Giving: Giving Back This Holiday Season]( [Image of the words ]( [3 Retail Stocks Set for a "Black Friday Boost"]( [Image of A family giving thanks before their Thanksgiving dinner ]( [Financial Lessons to Be Thankful For]( [Image of family members giving thanks at the dinner table]( [Is Thanksgiving Dinner More Expensive This Year?]( [Facebook]( [Facebook]( [LinkedIn logo]( [LinkedIn]( [Email Share](mailto:?subject=A%20great%20piece%20from%20Wealthy%20Retirement...&body=From%20Wealthy%20Retirement:%0D%0A%0D%0AOh, the things you hear at the Thanksgiving table...%0D%0A%0D [Email Share](mailto:?subject=A%20great%20piece%20from%20Wealthy%20Retirement...&body=From%20Wealthy%20Retirement:%0D%0A%0D%0AOh, the things you hear at the Thanksgiving table...%0D%0A%0D [Push Alert]( [Push Alert]( SPONSORED [Claim Your FREE Ultimate Dividend Package]( [Ultimate Dividend Package]( Today, you can claim the Ultimate Dividend Package... For FREE. (No credit card required!) Inside, Marc Lichtenfeld - bestselling author of Get Rich with Dividends and world-renowned income expert - is giving away his [top five dividend picks](. [Click here to get the names and ticker symbols of the top dividend stocks in the market!]( [The Oxford Club]( You are receiving this email because you subscribed to Wealthy Retirement. Wealthy Retirement is published by The Oxford Club. Questions? Check out our [FAQs](. Trying to reach us? [Contact us here.]( Please do not reply to this email as it goes to an unmonitored inbox. [Privacy Policy]( | [Whitelist Wealthy Retirement]( | [Unsubscribe]( © 2023 The Oxford Club, LLC All Rights Reserved The Oxford Club | [105 West Monument Street](#) | [Baltimore, MD 21201](#) North America: [877.808.9795](#) | International: [+1.443.353.4621](#) [Oxfordclub.com]( Nothing published by The Oxford Club should be considered personalized investment advice. 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