So the S&P 500 closing price of 1527.46 on 3/24/2000 wasn't topped until 5/30/2007. Low was 776.76 on 10/9/2002. It hit a high of 1565.15, oddly, exactly 5 years later on 10/9/2007. It crashed down to 676.53 on 3/9/2009 and didn't surpass the 3/24/2000 closing price until 2/19/2013 and the October 2007 high on 3/28/2013.
So the S&P 500 closing price of 1527.46 on 3/24/2000 wasn't topped until 5/30/2007. Low was 776.76 on 10/9/2002. It hit a high of 1565.15, oddly, exactly 5 years later on 10/9/2007. It crashed down to 676.53 on 3/9/2009 and didn't surpass the 3/24/2000 closing price until 2/19/2013 and the October 2007 high on 3/28/2013.
So the S&P 500 closing price of 1527.46 on 3/24/2000 wasn't topped until 5/30/2007. Low was 776.76 on 10/9/2002. It hit a high of 1565.15, oddly, exactly 5 years later on 10/9/2007. It crashed down to 676.53 on 3/9/2009 and didn't surpass the 3/24/2000 closing price until 2/19/2013 and the October 2007 high on 3/28/2013.
So the S&P 500 closing price of 1527.46 on 3/24/2000 wasn't topped until 5/30/2007. Low was 776.76 on 10/9/2002. It hit a high of 1565.15, oddly, exactly 5 years later on 10/9/2007. It crashed down to 676.53 on 3/9/2009 and didn't surpass the 3/24/2000 closing price until 2/19/2013 and the October 2007 high on 3/28/2013.
But you are only at the index and ignoring dividends.
Only looking
I was starting to worry about you, thought we might need a wellness check. From January 1972 to the end of March 2000 the total return for the S&P 500 was 13.65% (CAGR). What was the total return CAGR from 3/24/2000 to 3/24/2025?
I was starting to worry about you, thought we might need a wellness check. From January 1972 to the end of March 2000 the total return for the S&P 500 was 13.65% (CAGR). What was the total return CAGR from 3/24/2000 to 3/24/2025?
The average annual return of the S & P for the last 20 years is about 10.3%. I haven't found for the last 25 years - but 2003 and 2004 gains pretty much cancel out the losses in 2000, 2001 and 2002.
I was starting to worry about you, thought we might need a wellness check. From January 1972 to the end of March 2000 the total return for the S&P 500 was 13.65% (CAGR). What was the total return CAGR from 3/24/2000 to 3/24/2025?
Can you please show how you are getting the total return from Jan/1972 to 3/2000?
I was starting to worry about you, thought we might need a wellness check. From January 1972 to the end of March 2000 the total return for the S&P 500 was 13.65% (CAGR). What was the total return CAGR from 3/24/2000 to 3/24/2025?
Can you please show how you are getting the total return from Jan/1972 to 3/2000?
I was starting to worry about you, thought we might need a wellness check. From January 1972 to the end of March 2000 the total return for the S&P 500 was 13.65% (CAGR). What was the total return CAGR from 3/24/2000 to 3/24/2025?
Your 13.65% is not the total return during that time period. That is the average annual total return for that time period.
I was starting to worry about you, thought we might need a wellness check. From January 1972 to the end of March 2000 the total return for the S&P 500 was 13.65% (CAGR). What was the total return CAGR from 3/24/2000 to 3/24/2025?
Your 13.65% is not the total return during that time period. That is the average annual total return for that time period.
Analyze and view portfolio returns, sharpe ratio, standard deviation and rolling returns based on historical asset class returns and the given asset allocation
From 4/1/1975 to 3/31/2000 (25 years) the average was 16.37% and the CAGR was 15.11%. The following 25 years after 3/24/2000 Total Return Index for the S&P 500 (3/24/2000 = 100 ) 7.45% CAGR, less than half of the previous 25 years!
From 4/1/1975 to 3/31/2000 (25 years) the average was 16.37% and the CAGR was 15.11%. The following 25 years after 3/24/2000 Total Return Index for the S&P 500 (3/24/2000 = 100 ) 7.45% CAGR, less than half of the previous 25 years!
From 4/1/1975 to 3/31/2000 (25 years) the average was 16.37% and the CAGR was 15.11%. The following 25 years after 3/24/2000 Total Return Index for the S&P 500 (3/24/2000 = 100 ) 7.45% CAGR, less than half of the previous 25 years!
Saw this on the politics thread and thought it describes the current moment well.
“No matter where you stand politically, all can agree that what's good for the economy is massive, roiling daily uncertainty and the interruption of crucial, dominant supply chains with only the vaguest idea of outcomes.”
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