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Tuesday, March 9, 2010

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Dow Jones rebounds from crisis low

Traders work on the floor of the NYSE

A year ago, the stock market hit its low as the Dow closed at 6547. Now, the Dow's about 4,000 points higher and climbing. Jeremy Hobson reports.

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

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TEXT OF STORY

Kai Ryssdal: A year ago today, Wall Street hit its Great Recession lows, so far we should add out of a sense of caution. The Dow closed at 6547. Retirement and savings accounts were right down there beside it. Today, the Dow is about 4,000 points higher and, mostly, climbing.

Marketplace's Jeremy Hobson reports from New York.


JEREMY HOBSON: In the last year, the Dow is up 61 percent. Globally, stocks are up 73 percent.

If that surprises you, Kevin Mahn says you're not alone. He manages investments at Hennion and Walsh.

KEVIN MAHN: I think it'd be hard to find many individual investors who had a 73 percent gain in their IRAs, most likely because you know when markets go down, investors tend to get fearful, when they get fearful they tend to sell.

And miss the rebound.

Fred Fraenkel has a word for that rebound: typical. He's chairman of investment policy at Beacon Trust Company.

FRED FRAENKEL: You had a business cycle recovery that from a very devastating recession was pretty normal. It was led by the rebuilding of inventories. It was joined by a productivity pop that pretty much always happens at the start of a business cycle.

And he says it'll be followed by a bottoming out in employment and more market growth.

Fraenkel forecasts a full recovery to pre-crash levels by 2012.

In New York, I'm Jeremy Hobson for Marketplace.

Comments

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  • By Jeff Janes

    From San Diego, CA, 03/10/2010

    Is that data to support Mr. Mahn's claim that almost all IRA investors didn't enjoy the upswing because they got fearful and sold near the bottom?

    I believe I've heard, perhaps on "Marketplace", that the median number of changes people make to their retirement account allocation, once they are set up, is zero. That hardly sounds fearful.

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