There’s nothing like the fastest bear market in history, followed by one of the fastest bear market rallies ever, mixed in with the highest layoffs America has ever seen, to bring out the animal spirits in investors. Their reactions, though, have uncovered a notable split between what younger, less-affluent, long-term investors are doing, versus the behaܫvior of older Gen X’ers and Baby Boomers with a s🌼horter time until retirement and more money at risk.
That risk has been polarized as younger investors hunt and gather the riskiest stocks in the hope of greater rewards, while older investors seek the safety of blue chips, money mark🅺et funds, and the old-fashioned piggy bank.
Investopedia’s latest survey of active investors reveals that the recent market turbulence has caused a broad re-thinking of risk: two-thirds of respondents state they have changed their overall investing approach, but how they’re changing appears split down the middle. Those going bigger,🃏 buying blue chips on a bargain and grabbing shares in the beaten-down airline sector tend to be Millennials, though there are some Geꦚn Xers and Boomers in the bunch. By contrast those seeking safer havens like money market funds and high-yield savings tend to be Boomers.
Money Moves
The change in investment patterns isn’t just what our readers are buying, but how much. 37% of younger, riskier investors are investing more money than they were in March, and 39% are investing more often. They may see a generational opportunity to buy stocks at a discount and are counting on a return of the same stock market dynamics from 2010-2019 withꦡ an accommodative Federal Reserve and trillions of fiscal stimulus.
Older investors saw that movie play o⛦ut over a decade ago, and while it ended well, they likely don’t have the patience to ꦅwatch, are planning on retiring too soon to reap its benefits, or doubt it will end the same way this time.
Another notable finding is that while the market has been rising, more money than ever has been flowing out of stocks and into money market funds and bonds, both corporate and government. Part of that can be explained by the Federal Reserve’s pledge to continue quantitative easing by buying government securities, and backing the corporate bond market through its support of so-called Fallen Angels. Money market funds have seen record inflows, topping $4.1 trillion this year.ౠ
As institutional investors bail out of the stock market, older investors, according to our survey, are following them. They’re ditching their ಌ🌜mutual funds, and parking in designated safe zones.
Younger investors are taking the riskier path, piling ౠinto ETFs, individual equities and options, as they try to play the bounce and make up for lost returns. The strategy was effective in April, as the overall market climbed 14.5%.
While continuing to add blue chips and big tech stocks, many have been bꦜuying riskier airline stocks, which have been decimated in the pandemic. Even Warren Buffett threw in the towel on airlines, despite saying in February 2020 he would hold them. He claims the business is broken, but apparently many investors, particularly young ones, believe stocks in the sector may recover. They have the time to figure that out.
Our readers’ recent behavior and overall market activity tells us a few things, besides the obvious. The extreme volatility of the past several months has not scared individual investors out of investing altogether. Older generations may have bailed on the stock market for now, and maybe forever, but they have been making methodological moves with their money to protect their nest eg൩gs and prepare for a long downturn.
🦩 Younger and riskier investors, who may not have suffered losses in the Great Financial Recession, are playing two hands at the table. One bets on past winners,🦩 piling into the blue chips that have been driving market performance. The other is bravely venturing into the most devastated sectors of the stock market, searching for alpha amid the ruins.
(Research and charts by Amanda Morelli)