Investing during a Great Depression - Marketplace (2024)

Question: How do you depression-proof your assets. My husband says there’s no way; that’s what a depression means. My grandmother who survived the Depression said to just keep working and hang onto what ever real property you can; she never has believed in stocks, bonds, or anything “that I can’t see”. Nancy, Columbus, OH

Answer: I don’t think we are going into another Great Depression. That said, it’s a question I’ve been getting more and more. The bottom line is that if we were heading into another deflationary depression the best assets to own are default-free Treasury bills and Treasury bonds, with some other very high quality fixed income securities thrown into the mix.

In my book, “Deflation: What Happens When Prices Fall”, I looked into what investments did well during the Great Depression. Here’s what I found out:

Now, mention deflation and the markets, and most people will recall the stock market crash of 1929. Stocks had been lurching lower after reaching a peak in September, and on October 29th the Dow plunged by 30%. Volume reached a record 16.4 million shares, an infamous benchmark that held for 40 years. From its 1929 peak of 381.17, the Dow Jones industrial average plunged to 41.22 in July 1932. At the end of the decade the Dow stood around the 150 mark, and equity investors had earned a mere real 1.43% from 1929 to 1939. It wasn’t until 1954 that the benchmark index passed the level it had reached before the 1929 Crash.

Like the 1990s, the stock market seemed everywhere during the go-go years of the 1920s. Yet despite colorful tales of cab drivers, bootblacks, clerks, housewives, doctors, lawyers, and other ordinary folk gambling their life savings in the stock market, historians now believe that no more than 8% of the population owned stocks, and most of those investors were well heeled. Wealthy or not, many investors lost fortunes. Comedian and singer Eddie Cantor supposedly lost a million dollars. Songwriter Irving Berlin didn’t heed the advice of Charlie Chaplin to get out and lost a bundle. Irving Fisher, widely ranked among America’s greatest economists, damaged his reputation by loftily predicting shortly before the 1929 crash that stock prices had reached “a permanently high plateau.” Worse, a large part of his wealth disappeared in the crash.

Again, reminiscent of Enron, WorldCom, Global Crossing, and other current examples of corporate greed and malfeasance, the reputations of Wall Street’s leading lights were also tattered. Richard Whitney, acting president of the New York Stock Exchange during the crash and a famous broker with the prestigious firm J.P. Morgan as his client, grandly lived well above his means. When insolvency loomed, he defrauded customers, his wife’s trust fund, and the New York Yacht Club. He was caught, convicted, and sentenced to Sing-Sing prison. Charles Mitchell, known as “Sunshine Charley” and head of National City Bank, relentlessly pushed the salesmen in his financial supermarket with branches in more than 50 cities to peddle junk bonds and junk stocks on to an unsuspecting public. He was forced to resign in 1933, and indicted for income tax evasion the following year, although acquitted.

Obviously, stocks did horribly during the Great Depression. But bonds did well. Interest rates and bond prices are two ends of a seesaw. When bond yields are rising (usually from investors anticipating higher inflation), bond prices go down–and vice versa. Bond prices soared as bond yields came down sharply during the depression. For instance, the prime corporate bond yield average went from 4.59% in September 1929 to 3.99% in May of 1931. By June of 1938 the average corporate bond yield fell to a new low of 2.94%. Bonds returned 6.04% during the 1930s. Short-term fixed income securities or bills returned 3.39% over the same time period. But even fixed income investors are wary of deflation since unwary creditors absorbed huge losses during the 1930s as cash-strapped corporations and municipal governments defaulted on their debts.
Two Wall Street tycoons that ended up with “pockets full of money” after the Crash were Alfred Lee Loomis and his partner and brother-in-law Landon Thorne. The two had been leading financiers for the new electric power industry in the 1920s. Loomis was also a scientist, and he became a major supporter of some of the century’s greatest scientific minds at his Tuxedo Park home. By early 1929, the two partners had liquidated all their stock holdings and put the gains into long-term Treasury bonds and cash. The reaction by their peers, so many of them forced out of business, seemed more like envy than admiration since “in the midst of so much despair, with the economic situation deteriorating day after day, Loomis and Thorne continued to profit handsomely,” writes Jennet Conant, author of the Loomis Biography Tuxedo Park: A Wall Street tycoon and the Secret Palace That Changed the Course of World War ll.

How do you depression-proof your assets.

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Investing during a Great Depression - Marketplace (2024)

FAQs

What was the best thing to invest in during the Great Depression? ›

The best performing investments during the Depression were government bonds (many corporations stopped paying interest on their bonds) and annuities.

Did people invest in the stock market during the Great Depression? ›

The 1929 crash didn't cause the Great Depression outright, with only 10% of Americans invested in the market, but it lowered consumer spending, caused panic that worsened an ongoing recession, reduced corporations' assets and hurt their future prospects, and contributed to a banking crisis.

Can I lose my IRA if the market crashes? ›

Roth IRAs are not 100% safe, but they offer the potential for growth over time. Market fluctuations and early withdrawal penalties can cause a Roth IRA to lose money. Investing late or contributing too much can also result in potential losses.

How did the stock market crash of 1929 affect banks invested in the stock market? ›

The crash affected many more than the relatively few Americans who invested in the stock market. While only 10 percent of households had investments, over 90 percent of all banks had invested in the stock market. Many banks failed due to their dwindling cash reserves.

What are the best assets to own during a depression? ›

Domestic Bonds, Treasury Bills, & Notes

Mutual funds and stocks are considered to be a big gamble during depressions. While Treasury bonds, bills, and notes are more secure investments. These items are issued by the U.S. government. They give the purchaser a fixed rate interest once they mature.

Who got richer during the Great Depression? ›

Business titans such as William Boeing and Walter Chrysler actually grew their fortunes during the Great Depression.

What assets survived the Great Depression? ›

Obviously, stocks did horribly during the Great Depression. But bonds did well. Interest rates and bond prices are two ends of a seesaw. When bond yields are rising (usually from investors anticipating higher inflation), bond prices go down–and vice versa.

What type of stocks survived the Great Depression? ›

The Top 10 Depression Stocks
CompanyIndustryReturn, 1932 to 1954
Electric BoatDefense55,000%
Container Corp. of AmericaPackaging37,199%
Truax Traer CoalCoal30,503%
International Paper & PowerPaper, hydroelectric power30,501%
7 more rows
Mar 22, 2010

What does well in a depression? ›

Cash, large-cap stocks and gold can be good investments during a recession. Stocks that tend to fluctuate with the economy and cryptocurrencies can be unstable during a recession.

Where is the safest place to put your money during a recession? ›

Investors often gravitate toward Treasurys as a safe haven during recessions, as these are considered risk-free instruments. That's because they are backed by the U.S. government, which is deemed able to ensure that the principal and interest are repaid.

Can you lose all your money in a 401k if the market crashes? ›

Your investment is put into various asset options, including stocks. The value of those stocks is directly tied to the stock market's performance. This means that when the stock market is up, so is your investment, and vice versa. The odds are the value of your retirement savings may decline if the market crashes.

Where to move your 401k money before a recession? ›

Those with retirement quickly approaching may want to consider rolling any of their old 401(k) accounts into either IRAs (which offer more investment options) or annuities (which can provide a set rate of return during uncertain times).

Do you lose all your money if the stock market crashes? ›

When the stock market declines, the market value of your stock investment can decline as well. However, because you still own your shares (if you didn't sell them), that value can move back into positive territory when the market changes direction and heads back up. So, you may lose value, but that can be temporary.

Who profited from the stock market crash of 1929? ›

Several individuals who bet against or “shorted” the market became rich or richer. Percy Rockefeller, William Danforth, and Joseph P. Kennedy made millions shorting stocks at this time. They saw opportunity in what most saw as misfortune.

What are the best stocks to buy during a market crash? ›

The best recession stocks include consumer staples, utilities and healthcare companies, all of which produce goods and services that consumers can't do without, no matter how bad the economy gets.

What was good during the Great Depression? ›

UNDERNEATH the misery of the Great Depression, the United States economy was quietly making enormous strides during the 1930s. Television and nylon stockings were invented. Refrigerators and washing machines turned into mass-market products. Railroads became faster and roads smoother and wider.

What business did the best during the Great Depression? ›

Industries that thrived during the Great Depression.
  • This has all happened before and it will all happen again.
  • Food. ...
  • Household products + essential consumables. ...
  • Healthcare. ...
  • Communications. ...
  • Capital goods. ...
  • Security. ...
  • Anyone who keeps advertising & innovating.
Mar 20, 2024

What stocks will go up during a Depression? ›

Historically, the industries considered to be the most defensive and better placed to fare reasonably during recessions are utilities, health care, and consumer staples.

How to make money during a Depression? ›

Recessions can also push you to reexamine your finances, develop passive income streams, and consult financial advisers to make sure your assets are safe.
  1. Cut living expenses. ...
  2. Build an emergency fund. ...
  3. Develop new skills. ...
  4. Speak with a financial adviser. ...
  5. Create passive income sources. ...
  6. Start a business. ...
  7. Consumer staples. ...
  8. Bonds.
Jan 5, 2024

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