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Hope for Decade Lost: How 2010 Becomes the Pivotal Year


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Managing the Financial Crisis

For eighteen months, from the time of the fall of Lehman Brothers until December of 2009, we covered the financial crisis. And while there are still pockets of concern throughout the economy, the rebuilding process has begun in earnest. Here is an archive of those articles.


Special Report 12.18.09: Comparing the Mutual Fund Manager

Special Report 12.16.09: Once upon a Time, Investors Panicked

Special Report 12.15.09: Utilizing Your 401k - It's not how Educated You are

Special Report 12.14.09:The 401k Rollover

Special Report 12.10.09: Dividends Tell All

Special Report 12.09.09: 401ks, The Information Excuse

Special Report 12.07.09: Comparing Mutual Funds: Fees

Special Report 12.06.09: Mutual Fund Comparison: Performance

Special Report 12.03.09: Has Your 401(k) Recovered?

Special Report 11.24.09: Another Look Inside Your 401(k)

Special Report 11.19.09: Vacations and Retirement Planning - Use it or Invest it

Special Report 11.18.09: Yes, There is a Difference between Mutual Funds and ETFs

Special Report 11.17.09: Retirement Planning: The Dividend Difference

Special Report: 11.16.09: We believe it is Never Too Late for Retirement Planning

Special Report 11.12.09: No Match for your 401(k)? Here's a Strategy

Special Report 11.11.09: Mutual Fund Investing, The Mean Reversion

Special Report 11.10.09: Is Roth IRA investing Different?

Special Report 11.09.09: Time, Transfers and Temptations: Your 401(k)

Special Report 11.05.09: Five 401(k) Questions

Special Report 11.04.09: Your Retirement Plan Goes to Court

Special Report 11.03.09: Mutual Funds have Tax Consequences.

Special Report 11.02.09: Do Analysts Predictions Mean Anything?

Special Report 10.29.09: Those Target Date Funds are still Worrisome.

Special Report 10.27.09: Are You a Return Chaser? A Look at Mutual Fund Inflows

Special Report 10.26.09: A Little Retirement Planning Trick or Treat

Special Report 10.23.09: Index Funds in Your 401(k) Plan<

Special Report 10.22.09: Could a Change in Tax Law Save the 401(k)?

Special Report 10.21.09:Surviving Retirement: Outwit, Outlast, Outplay

Special Report 10.20.09: Subtle Changes in Your 401(k)

Special Report 10.16.09: Diworsifying, the Art of Looking at the Downside

Special Report 10.15.09:
Shining a Light on Your 401(k)

Special Report: 10.13.09: Understanding Risk or the Risk of Too Little Risk

Special Report 10.09.09: Should it be called risk tolerance or anxiety tolerance?

Special Report 10.08.09: Green; Not so Green: The Pluses and Minuses of Socially Responsible Mutual Funds

Special Report 10.07.09: Adding Less Risk: The Safe Harbor Option

Special Report 10.05.09: Risk: It is What You Don't Know that Matters

Special Report 10.01.09: The Risk of Less Risk; The "Yeah, But" Syndrome

Special Report 09.28.09: Your 401(k), the Do's and Don'ts of a Good Investor's Plan

Special Report 09.22.09: The Beginning Investor's Dilemma

Special Report 09.19.09: Your 401(k) - The Odds are Not in Your Favor

Special Report 09.15.09: Can Wall Street be Fixed with Moral Authority?

Special Report 09.10.09: A Look Outside of the S&P 500

Special Report 09.09.09: Fix that Credit Score Now!

Special Report 09.08.09: Obama's Retirement Plan is Worth It

Special Report 09.07.09: A Year in the Life of Labor, A Labor Day Commentary

Special Report 09.03.09: The DB(k): Not a 401(k), Not a Pension, Not a Bad Idea!

Special Report 09.02.09: There are New Options in Your Retirement Plan

Special Report 09.01.09: Is Changing the 401(k) Worth Thinking About?

Special Report 08.27.09: Your Retirement: The Double-edged Sword of Inflation

Special Report 08.26.09: Understanding Money Market Mutual Funds: Do We Need Them?

Special Report 08.25.09: Will the 401(k) Match Return? Maybe; maybe not

Special Report 08.19.09: Unfortunately, Regulation comes with a Cost

Special Report 08.18.09: Which Recovery is Good for Your Retirement?

Special Report 08.16.09: The Index Fund Argument Continues...

Special Report 08.11.09: New for Small Business: The All ETF 401(k)

Special Report 08.08.09: The Cost of Small Business Retirement

Special Report 08.04.09: Retirement Planning - H is for Hedge Fund in Disguise

Special Report 08.02.09: What's a Mutual Fund Manager To Do?

Special Report 08.01.09: Could Saving Sink This Recovery?

Special Report 07.23.09: Retirement Planning: Estimated Recovery of Your 401(K)

Special Report 07.21.09: The Danger of Opting for Lazy

Special Report 07.21.09: What Do Mutual Fund Directors Do?

Special Report 07.17.09: Retirement Planning: Making Realistic Assumptions about Retirement

Special Report 07.16.09: Why Mutual Fund Portfolio Turnover Matters

Special Report 07.14.09: A Good Retirement Plan - 401(k) - Gone Bad

Special Report 07.13.09: Prepping for the Third Quarter

Special Report 07.10.09: Should We Measure Performance Using Rolling Averages?

Special Report 07.07.09: Some TIPS and Terms (like inflation, deflation, etc.)

Special Report 07.06.09: Measuring Mutual Fund Performance

Special Report 07.02.09: Rookie Mistakes

Special Report 06.30.09: Seeing But Not Seeing - What's in Your Mutual Fund?

Special Report 06.29.09: Will We Ever Learn?

Special Report 06.26.09: Trash Talking Target Dated Mutual Funds

Special Report 06.23.09: What's Hot - Emerging Markets

Special Report 06.19.09: Deep End of a Dark Pool

Special Report 06.10.09: A Target-Dated Mutual Fund Critic Makes His Case

Special Report 06.09.09: Retiring with a Plan - Is the Roth 401(k) Conversion Worth Trying?

Special Report 06.07.09: Retiring on Time: The 401(k) Accumulation Problem

Special Report 06.05.09: Mandatory is Not an Option

Special Report 06.04.09: Why do People Trash Talk Mutual Funds?

Special Report 06.03.09: Mutual Fund Fees: Value When Needed the Most

Special Report 05.30.09: Mutual Funds vs Stocks: Better Cheaper, Easier?

Special Report 05.27.09: Mutual Funds - Blind Ambition

Special Report 05.22.09: Do You See What I See (in you 401K)?

Special Report 05.21.09: Bond Funds make PIPP-ing Noise

Special Report 05.18.09: What Those Financial Planners are Planning

Special Report 05.17.09: The Curious Case of (Index Fund) Fees

Special Report 05.14.09:The Social Security Solution

Special Report 05.11.09: Just in Time. A Stern Warning from the SEC

Special Report 05.10.09: Do You Know Where Your Mother's, Wife's, Daughter's Retirement Plan Is?

Special Report 05.06.09: The Alternate Investing Universe

Special Report 05.05.09: Retirement Planning: Close but Not Quite Close Enough

Special Report 05.04.09: Sidestepping Risk as Bond Funds Offer More of Less

Special Report 04.29.09: Retirement Planning: Bouncing Back

Special Report 04.27.09:Double Inverse Whatchamacallit - a New ETF

Special Report 04.21.09: Retirement Planning: The Health Insurance Component

Special Report 04.14.09: A Road Bump in Your Retirement Plan

Special Report 04.10.09: Risk in Municipal Bonds

Special Report 04.06.09:Conservative Investments: Have we gone too far?

Special Report 04.02.09: Embracing Mediocrity

Special Report 03.30.09: The Doubling Effect: Health Care in Retirement

Special Report 03.26.09: Mutual Fund Fees in 2009

Special Report 03.25.09: Perhaps Not So Bad... But Then Again

Special Report 03.22.09: Second Guessing Your Mutual Fund

Special Report 03.18.09: The Proof is in the Fund

Special Report 03.17.09: Not all Pain and Suffering

Special Report 03.16.09: Averaging Your Investments

Special Report 03.12.09: Confusing Saving with Investing

Special Report 03.08.09: The Mutual Fund Manager's Delimma, a commentary

Special Report 03.04.09: Target Dated Funds Miss

Special Report 03.02.09: Retirement Planning from an Insurance Company?

Special Report 02.27.09: Are we at an Economic Standstill?

Special Report 02.24.09: Redefining Conservative

Special Report 02.23.09: Embracing Zero Risk Bias

Special Report 02.20.09: Retiring at Different Times

Special Report 02.17.09: Separate Retirements but the Same Plan

Special Report 02.11.09: When Your Company No Longer Matches

Special Report 02.06.09: The Perfectly Engineered Retirement Plan

Special Report 02.04.09: What happens to Your Retirement Plan when You Change (or lose a) Job?

Special Report 02.02.09: Explaining the 401(k) Rules for Withdrawal

Special Report 01.29.09: How responsible is your 401(k) fiduciary?
Justifying Fees, Part One | Part Two

Special Report 01.25.09: Is bankruptcy right for you?

Special Report 01.21.09: Old Thinking was Not the Problem

Special Report 01.19.09: Are there lessons to be learned? Can we admit we were wrong?

Special Report 01.14.09: Do women need a different retirement plan?

Special Report 01.12.09: A Chance to Redefine Our Futures

Special Report 01.06.09: Roth 401(k)s and Future Taxes

Special Report 01.05.09: When it comes to Retirement Planning:No shortage of Tips for 2009

Special Report 01.01.09: Our 2009 Financial Outlook: An Even Tempered Reconciliation

Special Report 12.29.08: Is it time to look at credit counseling?
If so, how do you pick a credit counselor?

Special Report 12.19.08: Time for a fixed rate mortgages?

Special Report 12.18.09: Buying a mortgage from a broker or a bank?

Special Report 12.12.08: Can Inflation help Your Taxes?

Special Report 12.11.08: The Pension Paradox: A Commentary

Special Report 12.01.08: The 4% Retirement Withdrawal Rule.

Special Report 11.21.08: Can My Mutual Fund Fail?

Special Report 11.20.08: Flotsam Economics A Commentary

Special Report 11.19.08: ScatterShot Solutions, A Commentary

Special Report 11.11.08: A Not-so-Fond Farewell, A Commentary

Special Report 11.06.08: No More Fine Print

Special Report 10.28.08: A Tight Labor Market Ahead!

Special Report 10.23.08: The Pain of Investing

Special Report 10.20.08:The Elections and Asset Allocation

Special Report: 10.18.08: Three Questions for the Finance Guy - Paul Petillo

Special Report 10.15.08: So many redemptions... Was it wise? We don't think so.

Special Report 10.13.08: After the Meeting: Pledges, Plans and Vows

Special Report 10.12.08: FICO, Your Credit Scores and your Debt History

Special Report 10.11.08: Over fifteen months, as of June 30th, we are down $2 trillion in retirement savings.

Special Report 10.09.08: What are the warning signs you are in a financial crisis?

Special Report 10.03.08:Retirement Planning: The Top Three Lessons to be Learned post-Bailout

Special Report 09.30.08: Retirement Planning: Your Retirement Plan;Your Time Frame; Your Elected Officials

 

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Hope for Decade Lost: How 2010 Becomes the Pivotal Year


Perhaps the best way to find out whether there is any validity in these sorts of year-end predictions is to look at the one made about this time a year hence.

I referred to 2009 as an “Even Tempered Reconciliation”. Wondering how we might survive was not the issue. I knew we all would just we all survive a the ride through the haunted house. Sure we come out changed but we are still very much the same people we were when we went in.

I wondered what economic nationalism would bring. Banks in major countries all were faced with unprecedented decisions, conundrums of epic proportions and no real template in which to test their theories of recovery. Fingers can still be pointed (mostly by the GOP, which had more than a heavy hand in the development of the crisis over the first eight years of this past decade) at such figures as Ben Bernanke, who in 2009 received the nod for another term as Federal Reserve Chairman and Tim Geithner, who was accused by numerous lawmakers and pundits as not only sleeping with the beast the banks had become but continuing the relationship after he was appointed Treasury Secretary.

Both of these men let the barn door open and both, without admitting they had done so, found all of the stray animals. For Mr. Bernanke, his participation in the fall of the economy was handcuffed by the same thing that gave all of us the hope that nothing would ever go wrong. Some voices rose in criticism but the vast majority simply remained silent. It will be interesting to see whether this will force Congress to do something about reforming the Fed.

In June of this past year, President Obama suggested that the Fed have greater power in regulation of more than just banks, proposing that the power of the Fed be extended to the whole of the financial system. With this expansion, the Fed would move beyond its control of interest rates and inflation (both of which were kept abnormally low and will begin their gradual uptick in 2010) to the role of financial police.

By the end of the year, the Fed had made moves against credit cards and executive compensation, the former has yet to completely wring itself out and the later will be shielded behind stock deals. The Feds rules on banks cash reserves will continue into 2010 and this is where Tim Geithner will need to step in.

There is no doubt that without the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) this economy would be in much worse shape than it is. Mr. Geithner suggested in a letter to the House that the program been extended until October of 2010. The embattled Treasury Secretary was often accused of too close of a relationship with the very banks he was to oversee. In a recent NPR interview, he defended that relationship as one of necessity but also added that banks, in particular the biggest three institutions still don’t get it.

Cash reserves are required but not at the expense of the customers they serve. Smaller banks and small businesses have yet to see the trickle down effect that was promised by Geithner. Until these institutions begin to play a more active role in the recovery, something that the largest banks have made difficult, housing will continue to slip in a great many parts of the country, the pressures of unemployment, not only among those who are counted but among those who have found the necessity to return to whatever sort of work they can find will continue to mount, and the general reluctance of business to innovate and/or create the next economic upturn will hamper many of these efforts. He admitted that the big banks “don’t get it”. Perhaps in 2010 they will.

The cost of the recovery has yet to be determined. Not in real dollars but in the benefits they will provide. Just as all cash infusions, the immediate response to such actions often takes much longer than expected. And despite the egg-hurling one political party has engaged in with the support of one “news” organization, the results will begin to bear fruit by mid-summer.

Most of us will feel a bit more comfortable in our own personal economic skins. We will have built up a small cash reserve, know what the future of our jobs are, and if we were smart, done what we could to readjust how we view the world of credit.

There will be a great deal of hand-wringing over the health care reform bill but it will prove that some reform, even if it falls short of what it should have been, will be an economic stabilizer for those on the fringes. It was those people that were driving up the overall costs for all of us. Too bad about the public option. It would have, once and for all, limited the overreach of insurance companies. 2010 may just be the beginning of reform. Expect it continue as the Democrats retain their majorities in Congress.

From an investment point-of-view, equities will level off in 2010 in large part to investor’s reaction to businesses reinvestment practices. Many companies will be called out over enormous cash reserves that are not needed and more importantly, not shared. With cost cutting and efficiency improvements having mostly run their course, businesses will be expected to explain why their profit margins are slipping and their forecasts are becoming more muted. (I predicted a third quarter recovery in employment spurred on by these business moves but I did not expect that businesses would refrain from any and all risk.) Despite this, you will still find the equity markets on the rise in 2010 with the S&P500 gaining between12-15% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average moving up a healthy 8%.

I also wrote: “recovering markets do not end a recession”.

This will have little effect on the company match, many of which were reduced or eliminated. If this happened to you, the best recourse would have been to increase your contribution by the amount that was cut. If this happens, the markets will continue to recover as they are historically the first signs that this mess has begun to ease. I have spent much of the year trying to persuade people away from too conservative of an investment plan in favor of one where risk might play a larger role. If you failed to follow that advice, 2011 will find exactly where you were at the beginning of 2010 – wrapped in the arms of another lost opportunity.

Housing will begin to show signs of recovery even as interest rates begin to rise. This will be the result of government bond sales no longer supported by rampant Treasury purchases. This will put a damper on some sales but not for everyone. There are, and still will be, incentives for the homebuyer. Builders and developers will continue to offer these incentives and this will act as the catalyst that will make you feel somewhat wealthier.

2010 will be the year of stabilization. A year where, if you have a job, you will probably still be working at the beginning of 2011 and if you are not, you may find employment; one where if you are prudent (and by that I mean not-so-conservative but cautious), you will find the equity markets still performing better (but not better than expected); one where we have learned lessons that should not be soon forgotten.

Looking back, a bull market emerged in July of 2009. When we look back on this year, we will be feel much more comfortable, with a deeper pool of savings on hand, a firmer grip on our personal finances, and the previous decade as a tutorial for what could go wrong.

Paul Petillo is the Managing Editor of Target2025.com