Driven by optimism over a massive tax cut, the Dow surged past 26,000 by the middle of January. Yet there are warning signs -- including rising energy prices and inflation driven by higher labor costs -- that this party won’t last.
Another warning sign: The savings rate fell to a 10-year low of 3.1 percentin September as Americans spent more money, rather than saving it. That was the weakest savings level since December 2007 when the financial crisis landed with a huge thud, the last rude reminder of our short memories and overconfidence.
In November, the personal saving rate -- personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal income -- fell to 2.9 percent according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Small business owners, meanwhile, appear to be overconfident in their ability to save for retirement. As Entrepreneur.com associate editor Lydia Belanger recently pointed out, 62 percentofsmall-business owners say they feel confident that they’re saving enough, but 25 percent say they aren’t saving a dime. Almost half are saving less than 10 percent of their income.
Here is why this trend has me -- and many economists -- worried.personal savings rates below 4 percentoccurred before the last two major market crashes. Fueled by a false sense of security over rising stock prices and home values, people plowed money into volatile investments just as the wave began to crest and then crash. The red warning lights were flashing then, and they are again now.
Behavioral economist Richard Thaler has made a career of studying irrational and temptation-driven economic behaviors. Thaler, who won the Nobel prize in economics in October of 2017, said in a recent interview,“we seem to be living in the riskiest moment of our lives, and yet the stock market seems to be napping.”
The only bull market since 1950 that’s lasted longer than the current one was the dot-com-fueled rally of the 1990s, before it spectacularly flamed out.
When bull markets end, it causes almost unimaginable pain for people. 58003 It has taken up to 25 years to recover from a major market crash. It seems as though many people have forgotten the lessons learned in the last two crashes. Each of themwiped out 50 percentor more of the typical investor’s hard-earned savings. That’stwicejust since the year 2000.
Whether the next market crash or “correction” occurs within weeks or months or years, a lot of people will be caught napping, just as they have been in the past. As a small business owner or entrepreneur, will you be among them?
As a financial investigator who has studied the nation’s cycles of boom and bust, I am on a mission to get people to save more of their hard-earned money in secure and liquid assets. This is especially crucial for the small business owners who keep our economy running.
The only solution is to save more in assets that aren’t subject to market volatility.
In today’s environment, the old advice of having a rainy-day fund equal to three to six months of household expenses won’t cut it. In the last recession, millions who lost their jobs remained unemployed for over a year, or even two.
To have real financial security, you must have safe and liquid cash reserves equal to two years of household income. By liquid, I mean money you can get your hands on:
When you need itFor whatever you needWithout begging for it or applying for itWith no penalties for accessing it and no restrictionsWithout sustaining a lossThis short list rules out most financial vehicles. 5800358003
This method provides guaranteed, predictable growth every year, even when markets are crashing. In fact, it has grown in value every single year for more than 160 years, including during the Great Depression. A key advantage for entrepreneurs and small business owners: it allows you to access your money whenever and for whatever you want, without requiring you to liquidate or sell income-producing assets to get cash.
This year, we face a crossroads. Will we continue to be swept along by the siren song of irrational exuberance? Or will we take solid steps to secure our financial future? It’s up to each one of us to decide.