By David Sterman
In the 1980s and '90s, an investor theme emerged that likely played a role in a 20-year upward move for the stock market. #-ad_banner-#
In that era, baby boomers reached financial maturity, spending hundreds of billions of dollars on housing, leisure, retirement savings plans, transportation and many other categories. Financial pundits sought ways to suggest profitable ways to track baby boomer spending, coining the phrase "boomer investing."
Of course, as the oldest baby boomers (born right after World War II) are now near retirement, and younger boomers pass their peak spending ages as well, it's time to shift gears and focus on the next massive demographic trend. The "millennials" or "echo boomers," mostly born in the '80s and '90s, which are set to overtake the economy. How big is this group? Demographers suggest that there are (or were) 77 million baby boomers. The millennials: 82 million.
Risks to Consider: The millennial boom will take a number of years to reach full fruition, so this isn't a strategy for short-term trades. Instead, it's wise to start building a research list of potential beneficiaries from this theme -- and be prepared to pounce on them if they temporarily slump in value.
Action To Take--> The millenials will only slowly become a powerful economic demographic. That makes this a good time to study their consumption patterns and start identifying the companies that stand to most benefit from their coming wave of spending. The decade ahead should show signs of rising spending from this group, and by 2025, they will be approaching middle age, which often represents the peak in discretionary spending for most people.

-- David Sterman
In that era, baby boomers reached financial maturity, spending hundreds of billions of dollars on housing, leisure, retirement savings plans, transportation and many other categories. Financial pundits sought ways to suggest profitable ways to track baby boomer spending, coining the phrase "boomer investing."
Of course, as the oldest baby boomers (born right after World War II) are now near retirement, and younger boomers pass their peak spending ages as well, it's time to shift gears and focus on the next massive demographic trend. The "millennials" or "echo boomers," mostly born in the '80s and '90s, which are set to overtake the economy. How big is this group? Demographers suggest that there are (or were) 77 million baby boomers. The millennials: 82 million.
Skinflints Or Spendthrifts? |
In a similar vein, when I got out of graduate school in the early '90s, the job market was locked shut, and a few years of temp jobs led me to question my future. An eventual economic boom helped me and my friends land on our feet and do our patriotic duty: spend with abandon. Today's millennials are poised for the same opportunity: The U.S. economy is so large and resilient that the next robust economic upturn is inevitable -- even if it seems to be taking its sweet time getting here. So how can you profit from millennial investing? We can already draw some early reads on their changing consumption patterns. |
Housing |
Right now, homebuilders are benefiting from the sale of larger, more expensive homes, largely because baby boomers are still flush and millennials are still struggling. That's playing right into the hand of high-end homebuilders such as Toll Brothers (NYSE: TOL [2]). But look for the tide to turn. As millennials approach their 30s, they are likely to focus on smaller, less expensive homes. As an investor, you should focus on homebuilders that cater to this trend. For example, D.R. Horton (NYSE: DHI [3]) focuses on first-time buyers in their 20s and 30s. The company's average price for a new home is around $230,000, compared with around $300,000 for the rest of the industry. PulteGroup's (NYSE: PHM [4]) 2009 acquisition of homebuilder Centex provided entry to the starter-home market.Shares of Pulte have slid 35% since mid-May on concerns that rising mortgage rates may impede housing sales in the near term, but investors with a long-term view of demographic changes should see that as a fresh opening. |
Cars |
The E-tail Onslaught |
As an investor, you should be spending more time researching which online retailers are building a strong and loyal base of customers. Conversely, you should tread lightly with any legacy bricks-and-mortar retailer that has failed to embrace the world of digital shopping. Amazon.com (Nasdaq: AMZN [10]) is clearly the biggest beneficiary of the shift to e-tailing. but I highlighted a few other e-tailing firms recently [11]. Along with "pure play" e-tailers such as Blue Nile (Nasdaq: NILE [12]) and Expedia (Nasdaq: EXPE [13]), though many traditional retailers such as Best Buy (Nasdaq: BBY [14]) are building huge online followings as well. |
Ethnicity |
The Next Boom |
This suggests this this 82 million-strong demographic will be buying a lot of baby formula and diapers, and consuming a lot of educational programming on TV and online. Then again, I recall being flat broke in my mid-20s, and though it didn't make me want to be rich, I eventually cared a lot more about earning a good living and owning my own home than I did when I was in my early 20s. So maybe these millennials will become as spendthrift as their parents, even if they now profess otherwise. |
Action To Take--> The millenials will only slowly become a powerful economic demographic. That makes this a good time to study their consumption patterns and start identifying the companies that stand to most benefit from their coming wave of spending. The decade ahead should show signs of rising spending from this group, and by 2025, they will be approaching middle age, which often represents the peak in discretionary spending for most people.
-- David Sterman
David Sterman does not personally hold positions in any securities mentioned in this article.
StreetAuthority LLC does not hold positions in any securities mentioned in this article.
StreetAuthority LLC does not hold positions in any securities mentioned in this article.
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