Even with a challenging economy and dynamic swings in stock prices, the market has begun to advance over the last couple of months. While the U.S. economy teeters on the edge of recession, is it really that bad out there? That certainly depends on your individual situation, but for the most part we’re managing to get by, even with gas and commodity prices that are out of control.  Interest rates have dropped quite a bit and that’s provided some relief to homeowners with ARM loans.
But is the Fed finished cutting rates? Many experts believe so, and that from here will be a long pause to allow the economy to work its way back into growth mode. Maybe the Fed Has Bought Enough Anti-Recession Insurance for now. But we’ve got to put our money to work somewhere, and for most of us that means staying invested even in difficult times.
The amount of negativity about the economy and markets have been amazing this past year, and Jason Zweig’s near-contrarian view offers some good advice for Why Acting Bearish is a Dumb Move.
“This has been one ferocious stock market. Not only has Wall Street been flirting with a bear market - conventionally defined as a 20% decline in the major indexes - but we’re now in “the second-worst eight-year period for stocks since the 1930s,” says money manager Martha Ortiz of Aronson Johnson & Ortiz in Philadelphia.”
“…a growing chorus of bears thinks that the worst is yet to come and that investors should get out of the market. After all, everyone knows stocks will keep sagging since it’s obvious the economy is sinking into recession, right?”
“Even if the economy is headed for real trouble, don’t assume that your portfolio is too. Larry Swedroe, director of research at Buckingham Asset Management, notes that the U.S. economy has experienced 11 recessions since World War II. From the first day of those economic contractions to the last, stocks still managed to deliver average gains of 7.1% vs. 5.1% for cash.”
Bottom line? Stay invested, stay long, and focus on living positively each day. It’s not always easy to do, but I try to tune out the economic noise, and remember what’s important at home and with family.  If there’s something I’ve learned from this almost-recession and high gas and grocery prices, it’s that we really don’t need a lot of the things we spend money on.
Cutting back spending and becoming more frugal isn’t that difficult. I don’t know about you, but when I save money or do something more efficiently, it really makes me feel good in other areas of my life. It helps me to focus on the important aspects of life, and the goals I have for personal growth. I’m not tied to worries or stress about the market, and how my retirement funds are doing. Â
It’s about improving the quality of our lives and experience versus the quantity of something that is always changing. Â
Laura Rowley describes it very well as feeling blessed.Â
“Money can certainly buy us a measure of freedom or security, but money itself is none of those things. If we think money is security, we’ll never amass enough to feel secure. If we think it’s freedom, we’ll never earn enough to be free.”
“Once we remove the emotional baggage, we can acknowledge that money is just one component to achieve our goals instead of an all-encompassing solution. If freedom is a value, we have to ask which people, qualities, and experiences have made us feel most free in the past: Where do I need to live to be around those people? What should I do for my work, and how should I spend my leisure time? How much money do I need to help me create a life with those qualities and experiences? Being as specific as possible about how to manifest these qualities in our lives will keep us from running on the hedonic treadmill.”Â
“… long-term flourishing requires discipline, persistence, hard work, faith, and, most important, pursuing goals that are close to your heart and based on your personal gifts.”
When we take time to appreciate what we do have in our lives, we begin to understand more about ourselves, our relationships and where we want to go. It’s an essential part of the process of discovery, not only for whatever personal gifts we possess, but for the direction of the journey itself. Â
Is money the reason for the journey?  Not by a long shot. But it certainly helps. A little balance and reflection helps even more.  Growing our money, like growing our lives, takes time and staying invested. Money provides a lot of things in life, but it can’t buy long term happiness. Money is simply a tool to take along the journey. Sure it’s important, but if we forget our goals and what’s important in our lives, then we really haven’t gone anywhere have we?
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