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Here's How Much Money You'd Have if You Bought Stocks When the Market Hit Bottom 14 Years Ago

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Fourteen years ago, the stock market hit its lowest point in the financial crisis. A look back offers investors a lesson about why it's so important to avoid panic-selling and to keep your money in the market for the long haul.

Since that low at closing on March 9, 2009, the S&P 500 has rallied 490% as of Wednesday's close, strategists at Bespoke Investment Group wrote in a note to clients Thursday morning. That's an annualized return of 13.5% without including dividends, the strategists said.

In other words, a $10,000 investment in the S&P 500 during that low in 2009 would be worth roughly $59,000 now, not including dividends.

"Obviously, returns will look remarkable when you measure them from the absolute low, but what may be even more notable is to look at how an investor would have fared had they gone 'all-in' at the highs in October 2007 right before all hell broke loose," the strategists wrote.

What the data says

Even if you measure from before the absolute low, you see that investors would have reaped significant gains had they stayed in the market.

Money's advice

"Things weren’t looking good for the market or the global economy back then," the Bespoke strategists wrote of 2009. But investors who stayed invested through the tough times are now sitting on significant gains compared to those who panicked and pulled their money out of the stock market during a low.

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