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Slowly,
Americans
are
regaining
their
lost
wealth
By
JEANNINE
AVERSA
and DAVE
CARPENTER
AP
Business
Writers
Americans
are
recovering
their
shrunken
wealth —
gradually.
Household
net
worth
rose
last
quarter,
mainly
because
the
healing
economy
boosted
stock
portfolios.
But the
gain was
slight.
And it
was less
than in
the
previous
two
quarters.
The
Federal
Reserve
said
Thursday
that net
worth
rose 1.3
percent
in the
fourth
quarter
to $54.2
trillion.
It
marked
the
third
straight
quarter
of
gains.
But
economists
say
consumers
would
need a
stronger
and more
prolonged
increase
in their
wealth
to
persuade
them to
ratchet
up
spending.
Net
worth
had
risen by
a more
robust
4.5
percent
in the
second
quarter
of 2009
and an
even
faster
5.5
percent
in the
third
quarter.
Net
worth is
the
value of
assets
such as
homes,
checking
accounts
and
investments
minus
debts
like
mortgages
and
credit
cards.
Even
with the
gain,
Americans'
net
worth
would
have to
rise an
additional
21
percent
just to
get back
to its
pre-recession
peak of
$65.9
trillion.
That
illustrates
Americans'
vast
loss of
wealth
from the
worst
downturn
since
the
1930s.
Growth
in stock
portfolios
delivered
the
biggest
lift to
net
worth in
the
October-to-December
period.
The
value of
stocks
rose by
nearly 4
percent
to $7.7
trillion.
Higher
home
prices
helped a
bit. The
value of
real-estate
holdings
edged up
0.2
percent.
During
the
recession,
which
began in
December
2007,
household
net
worth
had
plunged
as low
as $48.5
trillion
in the
first
quarter
of 2009.
Stock
holdings
and home
values
nose-dived.
As their
net
worth
evaporated,
Americans
felt
less
inclined
to
spend.
For all
of last
year,
consumer
spending
dropped
0.6
percent.
This
year, as
wealth,
the
economy
and
financial
conditions
slowly
recover,
consumer
spending
is
projected
to grow
around a
modest
2.2
percent,
according
to the
National
Association
for
Business
Economics.
By
contrast,
in 1983,
when the
economy
was
recovering
from the
1981-82
recession,
consumer
spending
surged
5.7
percent.
Unlike
past
rebounds
led by
ordinary
shoppers,
this one
so far
has been
driven
more by
spending
from
businesses,
foreigners
and —
until it
runs out
—
government
stimulus.
Consumers
have
been
spending
more
lately.
But they
remain
cautious.
"It
would
take a
string
of
increases
of a
size
that
they
believe
can
continue
and that
they can
have
faith in
for
consumers
to
really
boost
their
spending,"
said
Scott
Hoyt,
senior
director
of
consumer
economics
at
Moody's
Economy.com.
Each
dollar
increase
in
household
wealth
translates
into
roughly
three to
four
cents of
consumer
spending
over two
years,
Hoyt
said.
That
isn't
much.
Just ask
Marcia
Karon,
55, of
Atlanta.
She's
felt
little
benefit
from the
economic
rebound
or the
stock
market.
Her
family's
finances
are
being
crimped
in other
ways.
Her
husband
has
taken
two pay
cuts in
the past
year,
their
property
taxes
remain
high and
"everything
else is
going
up," she
says.
"Things
are
tight,"
says
Karon,
who
works at
home as
a
calligrapher
and
bookkeeper.
"Over
the last
year
we've
had to
go
through
what
little
savings
we had
set
aside
just to
get by."
Not
until
2012
does
Hoyt
think
household
wealth
will
return
to its
pre-recession
levels.
A severe
setback
to the
economy
could
delay it
further,
he
added.
Concern
about
their
diminished
net
worth
also led
many
Americans
to
reduce
their
borrowing
last
year.
Household
debt —
including
mortgages,
credit
cards,
auto and
student
loans —
contracted
at an
annual
rate of
1.75
percent
in 2009,
the Fed
report
said. It
was the
first
annual
decline
on
record.
Benefiting
most in
the
fourth
quarter
were
those
invested
in the
stock
market.
The
Standard
& Poor's
500, a
broad
barometer
of
stocks,
climbed
5
percent
in the
quarter.
The Dow
Jones
industrial
average
gained 7
percent.
But the
gains
have
slowed
this
year.
The two
indexes
have
risen
just 2
percent
and 1
percent,
respectively.
Even
with the
market's
rally,
the S&P
500 is
still 27
percent
off its
October
2007
peak.
Holders
of
401(k)
retirement
accounts
have
recovered
somewhat
from the
walloping
they
took in
the
meltdown.
But even
with
continued
contributions
to those
accounts,
many are
still
struggling.
Average
account
balances
for
401(k)
contributors
ages 45
and
older
remained
2 to 3
percent
lower at
the end
of
December
than at
the end
of 2007,
according
to the
Employee
Benefit
Research
Institute.
Some
have
fared
better.
Julie
Arnheim,
43, of
Los
Altos
Hills,
Calif.,
returned
to work
a year
ago
because
the
economy
had
beaten
down her
and her
husband's
finances.
Now,
thanks
to the
stock
market's
rebound,
their
net
worth
has come
all the
way back
from a
30 to 35
percent
drop.
"We've
lost a
year and
a half
of
growth,
but it's
easy to
be
upbeat,"
says
Arnheim,
an
entrepreneur.
"There's
a lot of
retired
people I
know who
were
hurt,
and they
don't
have the
longevity
for the
market
to come
back and
keep
growing."
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