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Opinion: Gen Z is wildly unrealistic about how much money stocks,


Many in the Gen Z generation are essentially clueless about how to build up wealth over their lifetimes. A disturbingly large proportion of them have wildly unrealistic expectations about what they can achieve through their investing.

Consider a recent survey of more than 2,000 U.S. consumers conducted in late September by MagnifyMoney. The results: 27% of Gen Zers said they hoped to retire before the age of 50. According to my analysis of the typical Gen Zer’s financial situation, the chances are extremely remote that they will be able to retire that early — if at all.

I reached that conclusion by projecting how much retirement wealth the typical Gen Zer will accumulate by the age of 50. I focused on a hypothetical 25-year old, which is the upper-end of the age range for the generation, and made the following assumptions:

Given these assumptions, this Gen Zer by the time she turns 50 will have amassed a portfolio worth about $607,000 in today’s dollars. If she employs the standard 4% rule for yearly withdrawals from that portfolio, her annual income in retirement would be just over $24,000. That’s about 40% of her annual income in the last year before retirement. (All these amounts are expressed in current dollars.)

Yet even this finding, sobering as it is, is too optimistic. That’s because today’s stock market is wildly overvalued, making it unlikely that it will produce a 6% inflation-adjusted annualized return in coming years. Each of eight valuation measures with a long-term record of success suggests that stocks’ return in coming years will be below the historical average.

Some object to this bearish conclusion on the grounds that long-ago U.S. history is not relevant to the current stock market. But this argument, while compelling on the surface, doesn’t hold water. Consider what I found upon constructing a simple econometric model for each of the eight indicators, using only data back to 2000. On average they are projecting that the S&P 500
SPX,
+0.39%

over the next decade will produce an inflation-adjusted total return of minus 5.4%.

 Indicator

Projected annualized S&P 500 10-year inflation-adjusted total return, based on historical relationship between indicator and market since 2000



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