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Strategies & Market Trends : VOLTAIRE'S PORCH-MODERATED

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To: Voltaire who wrote (1818)9/16/2000 10:43:51 PM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (2) of 65232
 
Tom....

Forecaster Sees Dow Going to 110,000

BEAVER CREEK (Reuters) - While day trading captures the
headlines and investors check their portfolios daily on the
Internet, others are looking further down the road to see where
the Dow Jones industrial average will head.

One of them, Roger Ibbotson, of Yale University and
Ibbotson Associates of New York and Chicago, forecasts the Dow
will rise to, hang on to your hats, 110,000 by 2025.

Crazy, you say?
Ibbotson was the same man who in 1974, when the Dow stood
at 851, forecast the index would reach 10,000 by 1999. The Dow
closed on Friday at 10,927.

``Over the long run stocks will out perform money markets or
bonds,'' Ibbotson said after giving the key note address Friday
night at a conference of investment professionals and
university professors sponsored by the Burridge Center for
Security Analysis and Valuation at the University of Colorado's
College of Business.

But Ibbotson was quick to add that his 2025 forecast was
''just a probability -- it's not guaranteed.''

He bases his estimate on stock market gains of about 12
percent a year -- far short of the 20 percent plus returns some
investors have gotten used to and think is their due.

``It was sort of hard to comprehend. They were all asking
when it was going to go to 1,000 and I said it would go to
10,000,'' Ibbotson said, looking back at his forecast of 25
years ago right after a big stock market decline.

He points out 25 years isn't an eon away when it comes to
planning for retirement. ``That's you -- that's your planning
-- 25 years.''

Ibbotson's forecast should make it easier for investors who
have not taken advantage of the current bull market to jump in.

``The game isn't over. It's as good to start now as anytime.

The next 25 years is going to be a lot like the last 25 years,''

he said.

NOTE OF CAUTION
But for the investor who wants to put everything in stocks
Ibbotson has a note of caution. ``You need to diversify. If you
can afford the risk -- go more into stocks.''

Age, wealth, cash flow needs and the ability to take risk
all go into the percentage of stocks a person should have in a
portfolio along with real estate, cash and bonds.

Ibbotson isn't expecting a straight line up and he noted
that his forecast model, which uses the past 75 years of data,
includes the Great Depression.

``Nothing steady about it -- that's the key. If it were
steady growth it wouldn't grow that fast.''

For instance, an investor in 1967 who was 15 years from
retirement, saw the real return on his portfolio fall to zero,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology economics professor James
Poterba told the group on Saturday.

Financial planners fret that investors, especially young
ones, who have no experience of a bear market, think it will be
easy as pie.

``Unrepresentative'' is how Ibbotson describes the big
returns of the past few years. Yet investors think the bull
market will continue at its present rate.

``When you poll individual investors that seems to be what
they think,'' he said. ``They should be terrified. They shouldn't
be complacent,'' Ibbotson said, adding that stocks do better
than bonds because they carry a greater risk.
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