Call & Times

Millennial­s shouldn’t need to fear a recession

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Millennial­s can use a bear market to their advantage.

Bear markets that occur during your working career are good for your financial plan. Millennial­s are adding funds to their portfolios and poised to reap big rewards when the market recovers.

There are four key ways millennial­s can take advantage of bear markets

• Bear markets needn’t be a threat to financial success. In fact, for the well-prepared, they can be an opportunit­y to improve long-term returns. Here are some tactics that can help millennial­s make the most of a bear market.

• Bear markets hurt, especially for retirees.

• Bear markets will often mean a big bite out of retirement savings and investment portfolio values, which can be frustratin­g and scary, but that’s not necessaril­y a bad thing for everyone age is a maMor factor.

• For older investors, who are approachin­g retirement or already in retirement, bear markets represent a clear and present danger, because they might be forced to sell off their assets in order to pay their bills. Locking in losses can result in permanent damage, putting retirees at risk of depleting their retirement assets faster than expected. This risk is manageable using diversific­ation and holding safe assets to create a “buffer” between spending and market risk, but this protection isn’t free because it will incur a little opportunit­y cost (missing gains that you could have earned by taking more risk).

For millennial­s, risk can be reward

Fortunatel­y, bear market “risk” is reversed for younger investors. Despite popular belief, bear markets are a great opportunit­y for millennial­s—and all investors in their working years—to invest their hard-earned savings.

This might seem counterint­uitive. After all, most millennial­s (defined as people born between 1981 and 1996, aged 23-38 today) probably have very dismal memories of The *reat Recession.1 Even though most faced very few investment losses (they probably hadn’t saved much at the time), many millennial­s struggled to find employment or saw meager earnings growth during the last recession.

> Today, circumstan­ces are different. Many millennial­s are in their prime working years, earning more money than ever and intent on saving more.2, 3 If a bear market were to occur today, their “negative spending rate”— since they are adding funds to their portfolios—means that they would be buying, not selling, stocks during a recession.

This could mean a handsome tailwind to returns, especially for working-age investors who are adding to higher risk portfolios, since these portfolios’ “worstcase” characteri­stics (fast and large drawdowns, extended “plateau” periods, and long and slow recovery periods) give savers a longer window of time to put savings to work at bear market prices.

Make the most of a bear market

Of course, bear markets can still be frustratin­g, and pose risks, for young people with a long time horizon. By taking commonsens­e steps today, millennial­s can enhance their opportunit­y to take the utmost advantage during a potential bear market.

Make sure you have the right mix before the bear comes. Regardless of how old you are, bear markets pose a much greater risk to poorly diversifie­d portfolios. Sit down with your financial advisor to ensure your investment­s are well-diversifie­d, and to make sure your asset allocation (i.e., how your money is divided between stocks and bonds) is appropriat­e for your financial plan. It’s also important that you have some cash, but not too much, to buffer you against bear market risk. If you’re in your working years, you will usually want to put all of your cash to work, other than an emergency fund of about a year of spending in case you become unemployed. If you’re retired, setting about three to five years of cash flow needs in safe assets can protect you against damage from even the worst bear markets.

Bear markets are emotional experience­s, even if you’re well-prepared. You will hear a lot of doom and gloom, but don’t let short-term concerns and speculatio­n hold you back from pursuing your financial goals. The economy is cyclical, but recessions are rare and usually over quickly. In the last 75 years, the US economy has only been in a recession about 14% of the time, and stocks have only been in a bear market—or recovering from one— about one-third of the time. Stay the course, and continue saving and investing with confidence that you have time on your side.

“A penny saved is a penny earned” no matter what markets are doing, but finding ways to ramp up your savings rate during a bear market can pay particular­ly huge dividends (pun intended).

 ?? Vice President-Wealth Management UBS Financial Services ??
Vice President-Wealth Management UBS Financial Services

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