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In a few
days I'll be 50-years-old. My daughter so kindly reminded
me that most American cars become collector's items at 25-years-old,
and most other items become antiques at the half-century mark.
I love my daughter, truly I do.
But, after
I clean the house, cook, work, handle family life, and attend
grad school fulltime, at the end of the day I still don't
feel fifty. In fact, I rarely think about my age. However,
when I peek into the past, sometimes I feel much older than
fifty. Other times, I feel like I've just been hatched. For
instance, check out some of these headlines from November,
1954:
- Chris
Noth was born in Madison, Wisconsin. He's "Mr. Big" on HBO's
Sex in the City. I look just like him.
- Fay
Baker died. You don't remember Fay Baker? Think "sorority."
- The
Philadelphia Warriors beat the NY Knickerbockers by one
point at 87-86. If you don't remember the Philadelphia Warriors,
it's because this team is now known as the San Francisco
Warriors. They moved from Philly to San Fran in 1962, when
I was in second grade.
- Eddie
Fisher hit #1 on the music charts for three weeks straight
with his song, "I Need You Now." Don't remember this song?
Don't worry - neither do I. Other big hits that week included,
"Hey There," by Rosemary Clooney and Sammy Davis, Jr., and
"Dim, Dim The Lights (I Want Some Atmosphere)," by Bill
Haley & Comets. Rock on.
- The
2466th Air Reserve Flying Center Bakalar Air Force Base
in Columbus, Indiana celebrated its dedication. This place,
like me, still works, but they've added a museum.
- Executive
Order 10180 was signed, establishing "Special Personnel
Procedures in the Interest of the National Defense." This
order was issued four years earlier and revoked one week
after it was signed. Go figure.
- Elvis
just entered the building, specifically the Shreveport,
Louisiana Hayride Municipal Auditorium. Elvis graduated
from high school one year before I was born, and if he was
still alive, he'd be almost sixty (do YOU feel old now?).
- The
Senator from Wisconsin, Joe McCarthy, stated to the press
that the chairman of the select committee, Mr. Watkins,
was wrong to state that McCarthy was wrong. It was almost
the end of the McCarthy era. Almost.
- At
the intersection of Routes N28 and N319 in Buchy, France,
Mr. R. L. saw a luminous craft take off while he felt prickles
and was paralyzed. The engine of his car slowed down but
it didn't stall (some things never change).
- The
Dow Industrials hit a high of 386 in September, 1929, and
didn't return to that level until November, 1954. Today
we worry when the Dow goes below 10,000.
Were things
better fifty years ago? According to the BBC, many folks feel
things are worse
than ever?
Out
of 3,000 people polled, 93% said they missed respect for authority,
91% missed seeing bobbies on the beat and 81% missed the pride
people used to feel in being British.
Many
also felt that the only good things about modern life are
washing machines, inside toilets and central heating although
many admitted that it was better to be a pensioner today than
fifty years ago.
I can
come up with a few things that are better today than washing
machines and an inside toilet (and I've lived without both
at different times in my life). For instance, when I was a
kid I didn't have inline skates, a color TV, or a snowboard
(but I did have a piece of cardboard that worked fairly well
on downhill slopes). I didn't have a DVD or a VCR, either.
I didn't have a CD player or compact discs, and I didn't have
the Internet. I envy my daughter for these things, but not
much, because I can enjoy all this merchandise today, too.
In fact, I think I still have Social Security benefits hiding
out somewhere.
However,
there are a few things I don't have today. For instance, my
folks didn't put $100.00 into a compound-interest savings
account for me when I was born. If they did, and if they didn't
add another dime into an account that carried, say, 6% interest,
I'd have about $700 today to take myself out on the town (or
pay most of the rent, which is more likely). If they invested
$100.00 in the stock market fifty years ago and if they didn't
add another red cent, I'd have $18, 456.00 today if the stock
market returned the time-honored 11% annually. The securities
markets are subject to the risks of fluctuating prices and
the uncertainty of rates of return and yields inherent in
investing and past performance is no guarantee of future results.
All this
made me think about my daughter and what she'd like for her
fiftieth birthday. I don't think she'll mind that I'm a few
years behind on the initial investment. So, if I open an account
for her today with $100.00, and add $25.00 per month for thirty-five
years (that's about $300 per year - less then the cost of
a new color TV, and way less than a plasma TV), and if the
stock market continues to return an average of 11% per year,
what would this account yield?
In thirty-five
years, at age fifty, my daughter could empty her BUYandHOLD
account and have $117,606.81 in her hands. If she waits a
full fifty years, the account could climb to $574,157.28.*
Remember, past performance is no guarantee of future results.
Of course,
by that time I'll be one-hundred-years-old and ready to party.
I hope she's willing to share?
The point,
parents (and grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins), is
that we can give a gift to our kids, grandkids, nieces, nephews,
and kid cousins that they'll probably appreciate many years
down the road. At age fifty, they may look back at newspaper
headlines with astonishment and amusement, but they may remember
us with gratitude if we open a BUYandHOLD account for them
today.
Until
Next Week,
Linda Goin
* This
amount does not account for the low monthly fee that BUYandHOLD.
Today, that annual rate (paid on a monthly basis) is lower
than the cost of a pair of most brand-name jeans. Also, you
do not have to commit to $25 per month - you can adjust your
investments according
to your lifestyle.
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