• Thought of the Day

    Thought of the Day

    2000: We'd best all count on a coming era of lower returns in the stock market, and then hope we're wrong. But I hardly need remind you: Relying on hope is an unsound investment strategy.

    –John C. Bogle, "A Lot Can Happen In 25 Years," speech, Association of Investment Management Sales Executives, April 29, 2002,

Today in Financial History

1933: Less than a week before Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt is inaugurated, the stock market forecasts a gruesome future. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closes at 50.16, a new low for the year and barely above its all-time nadir of 41.22, set on July 8, 1932. Stocks are selling at 0.65 times book value and 10.3 times reported earnings, with an average dividend yield of 8.7% (among those that can afford to pay dividends). Five trading days later, after Roosevelt's banking moratorium and financial reforms kick in, the market is 23.8% higher; by the end of June, it has doubled.

Barrie A. Wigmore, The Crash and Its Aftermath: A History of Securities Markets in the United States, 1929-1933 (Greenwood Press, Westport, CT, 1985), p. 538;Phyllis S. Pierce, ed., The Dow Jones Averages 1885-1980 (DowJones Irwin, Homewood, IL, 1982), not paginated

1891: David Sarnoff, future president of Radio Corporation of America and the greatest visionary of the radio and television industries, is born in Uzlian, Russia.