Chicago Sun-Times

FORGET ALL THAT BAD NEWS: YOUR 401( K) IS DOING GREAT

- Adam Shell @ adamshell USA TODAY

Can the good times roll on for U. S. stock investors after eight straight quarters of gains for the blue- chip Dow?

Americans who own stocks in a 401( k) or other accounts should see bigger account balances when they review their quarterly statements after the U. S. market posted solid third- quarter gains as upbeat news on the global economy overshadow­ed a steady stream of negative news from hurricanes to cyber hacks and war chatter from North Korea.

And the gains could very well continue in the final three months of the year, thanks to a “resilient market fueled by rising expectatio­ns” for economic growth and corporate earnings, says Kate Warne, investment strategist at Edward Jones, a financial services firm.

Stocks also could get a boost if the market begins to price in higher odds of President Trump getting his tax- cut plan passed early in 2018.

“There’s renewed hope on the tax front,” says Nick Sargen, chief economist and senior investment adviser for Fort Washington Investment Advisors in Cincinnati.

The Standard & Poor’s 500, a broad stock index posted solid gains, rising 4% in the third quarter to a record and extending its year- to- date return to 12.5%.

The Dow Jones industrial average fared even better, rallying 1,055 points, or 4.9% in the July thru-September quarter. It is up 13.4% for the year.

The Dow hasn’t suffered a losing quarter since the third quarter of 2015.

Tech investors also were rewarded, as the Nasdaq composite continued its market leadership role with a 5.8% quarterly rise that left it up 20.7% in 2017 and at an all- time high. The small- cap Russell 2000, which had been lagging, picked up steam late in September to finish the quarter up 5.3% and in record territory.

Nothing seems to be able to slow down the nearly 9- year- old bull market.

“Although the hurricanes and political tensions dominated the headlines in the third quarter, they didn’t seem to diminish investor, consumer and CEO optimism,” says Warne.

What’s keeping what Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at The Leuthold Group investment firm, calls “The Teflon Market” going? “The economy,” he says.

The memory of slow 1.4% growth in the first three months of the year is fading after a 3.1% rebound in the second quarter and an economy on track for 2.3% growth in the just- ended quarter, according to Barclays.

The resilience of the domestic economy, and growth this year in most countries around the globe, has provided a lift to U. S. corporate profits, which are growing at their fastest pace in six years.

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GETTY IMAGES/ ISTOCKPHOT­O

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