Subscribe

Millennials fled when stocks took a dive in March

millennials

Stock-market exposure for millennials dropped below the average for clients of all ages last month, according to a TD Ameritrade index

While stocks plummeted into a bear market at the fastest pace ever last month, millennials were losing their cool.

For the first time ever, a measure of stock-market exposure for millennials who use TD Ameritrade dropped below the average for clients of all ages in March. That shift came as the firm’s Investor Movement Index, which has tracked clients’ positioning since 2010, fell to a seven-year low, the brokerage said Monday.

“That has to do with living through a crisis as an adult — for many of them it’s their first time,” said JJ Kinahan, chief market strategist at TD Ameritrade. “Every generation has that sort of moment where it’s like, ‘Wow.’”

Each month, the brokerage pulls a sample from its client base of more than 12 million accounts to assess how exposed investors are to stocks. At the end of 2019, the measure rose to the highest in a year, before one of the most volatile periods in history sparked the latest bout of de-risking.

[More: Gundlach sees stocks falling past the lows reached in March]

Still, clients of the firm were net buyers overall in March. According to Kinahan, most of the selling occurred in the first half of the month, before a notable surge in equity purchases by clients. But they stuck to safer companies with larger cash balances and lower volatility profiles. Two weeks into March, the S&P 500 Index had fallen roughly 20% from its record high.

“Then it was like somebody pulled the plug or something and said, ‘Time to buy, these stocks are just so low,’” Kinahan said. “They were heavy buyers the last two weeks of the month. A lot of the stocks they bought had been through 2008 before.”

[More: Still overlooking millennials? Not OK, Boomer

Related Topics:

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Quant King Jim Simons passes away at 86

The former code breaker and mathematician-investor behind the secretive hedge fund Renaissance Technologies leaves behind an indelible legacy.

BofA, Barclays strategists split on muni bond rally odds

Two of the biggest players in the $4T space offered contrasting views on what the summer will bring for investors.

Equities rally continues ahead of Fed speeches

The data suggests cuts but what will Fed officials signal?

UBS mulls bonuses for wealth management referrals

Fees would be paid for bankers introducing wealthy clients.

Bill Ackman confronted at Milken over DEI views

Hedge fund veteran faced his critics at premier business event.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print