It’s 3 P.M. Do You Know Where Your Money Is?

Specialists Donald Vaneck, center, and Robert Tuccillo work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange Tuesday. (AP)

Specialists Donald Vaneck, center, and Robert Tuccillo work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange Tuesday. (AP)

The stock market experienced the biggest drop since December 2008 on Monday. On Tuesday, it made up some of that lost ground.

The drop in the markets followed the news that the credit rating agency Standard & Poor’s downgraded the country’s until-then-faultless credit rating. But that’s not the only thing that could be contributing to a volatile market. The possibility of more quantitative easing and an ongoing European debt crisis are both likely playing roles in market swings.

So what is one to do with this information? Is the stock market still a smart bet? Should you sell off your 401(k) investments and move your nest-egg into T-bills? Or should you just tune out all the hysteria, hold firm and embrace the conventional wisdom — that in the long term, the stock market is still the place for your money?

We speak to two experts that have two very different ideas of where your money should be.

Guests:

  • Zvi Bodie, professor of finance and economics, Boston University School of Management; author, “Risk Less and Prosper: Your Guide to Safer Investing”
  • Cheryl Costa, managing director, AFW Wealth Advisors
  • Anonymous

    Great show. I listen every day. I am from Boston.

    Can you ask your guest what they think of commodities?  I hear alot of ads on the radio for investing in gold and silver, and if I look at the trend for either metals, it looks like these ads are right.  Gold has been up every year for 15 years with a brief dip during the 2008 meltdown.  

    Anyways, I am always skeptical about investing, I’m wondering what your guests think.  thanks.

  • Bagholder

    The stock market is a scam. The market is not efficient
    (information is not freely available to all participants) so institutional
    investors and others in the know or who are willing to do insider trading move
    the market leaving the rest of us who own mutual funds (and that can only trade
    at the end of the day) holding the bag.

     

    Better odds at Vegas.
     

  • Anonymous

    Quick question?

    When you say that the I Bond is Inflation Adjusted, can you explain what you mean by that?  I thought Bonds paid a set amount of interest, where does the Inflation Adjustment come from?

Hosts Meghna Chakrabarti and Anthony Brooks introduce us to newsmakers, big thinkers and artists and bring us stories of relevance to Bostonians here and around the region. Live every weekday at 3.

  • Listen: Weekdays, 3 p.m. on 90.9 FM
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