If your risk tolerance is unduly low, this might serve as a data driven reminder to shake yourself out of that a little. If you already have too much of a risk appetite, don't let this fuel your humorous rule number one about investing: We have no idea what the future holds. Same as true of life. And the moment you forget that, you learn it in the most painful manner possible.
#333: In the 1890s and early 1900’s, we had recessions every two years.
From 2009 to 2020, we enjoyed an 11-year bull run, the longest bull run in history. And when we finally had a recession, it lasted only two months. It was the shortest recession in U.S. history.
The duration between recessions is growing longer (these days, we average 10 years between recessions, as opposed to two years at the turn of the previous century).
And when recessions strike, we recover faster. The average length of recessions is growing shorter.
What does this mean? If we project these trends into the future, are we bound for the end of recessions?
That’s the question that kicks off this discussion with Ben Carlson, Director of Institutional Asset Management at Ritzhold Wealth Management and the host of the Animal Spirits podcast.
For more information, visit the show notes at https://affordanything.com/episode333
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