Lessons From Japan’s Great Depression
Investment U (March 6th, 2009) Writes:
Lessons From Japan’s Great Depression
by Alexander Green, Oxford Club Investment Director
Monday I wrote about investment lessons from the Great Depression. Chief among these is that if you bought stocks after the Dow declined 50% from its 1929 peak, you did very well in the decade ahead, even though stocks continued to fall for the next 18 months.
In the decade from January 1931 to January 1940 - amidst the worst economic stretch in our history - bonds, real estate, commodities and cash all lagged the long-term performance of the Dow with dividends reinvested.
That’s a surprise to most investors - and a head’s up to those wondering what the heck to do with their money now that the Dow has lost half of its value.
But what about the other Great Depression, the recent one in Japan? In 1989, the Nikkei 225 traded above 40,000.
...Alex Green, Alexander Green, America, Berkshire Hathaway, Contrarian Perspectives, Depression, Dow 30, Electricity, InvestmentU, iShares MSCI Japan Index;, Japan, Japan, Jeremy Siegel, MSCI Japan;, Nikkei 225, Oxford, Oxford Club, PacifiCorp, Real Estate, The Wisdom Tree Japan SmallCap Dividend Fund;, Tokyo, United States, Warren Buffett


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