Here's an interesting take on long-term wealth building: if you look at the S&P's track record since the 1950s, it's been grinding out roughly 10.5% annual returns on average. That's actually pretty solid when you think about compounding over decades. Run the numbers—if someone dropped just $1,000 at birth and let it sit until retirement age, you're looking at somewhere north of $600,000 by the time they hang up their hat. It's not flashy, but that's the power of time in the market. The key assumption here is that historical performance holds, which obviously comes with its own set of caveats. Still, it's a neat illustration of why starting early and staying invested matters for building real wealth.
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DisillusiionOracle
· 13h ago
Speaking of which, investing 1,000 yuan for decades could turn into 600k? Sounds great, but there are a bunch of prerequisites... You can't need the money in the middle, you can't panic sell during dips, and you have to bet that history will repeat itself... This is extremely difficult for retail investors.
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MidnightGenesis
· 20h ago
I traced back the historical curve of the S&P 500 on-chain, and the average figure of 10.5% is interesting... but you have to understand the underlying assumptions. Unsurprisingly, survivor bias is at play again.
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MissedAirdropBro
· 20h ago
Well, that's the traditional financial management approach, buy and hold really makes money.
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GhostAddressHunter
· 20h ago
10.5% annualized sounds good, but how many people actually get to keep it? Most people are still driven by emotions, selling off at the first dip.
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BearMarketHustler
· 20h ago
Wow, 1000 bucks compounded to over 600,000? This data looks incredible, but can anyone really withstand the bear market without selling?
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HalfBuddhaMoney
· 21h ago
This compound interest is indeed amazing, but the key is having spare money to dare to invest.
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GraphGuru
· 21h ago
Nah, this $1000 investment setup for having a baby is a bit outrageous haha. How many parents in real life would actually dare to do this?
Here's an interesting take on long-term wealth building: if you look at the S&P's track record since the 1950s, it's been grinding out roughly 10.5% annual returns on average. That's actually pretty solid when you think about compounding over decades. Run the numbers—if someone dropped just $1,000 at birth and let it sit until retirement age, you're looking at somewhere north of $600,000 by the time they hang up their hat. It's not flashy, but that's the power of time in the market. The key assumption here is that historical performance holds, which obviously comes with its own set of caveats. Still, it's a neat illustration of why starting early and staying invested matters for building real wealth.