Saving by Historical Period

What if you started saving during the Great Depression, the dot-com era, or other pivotal periods?

What if you started saving during the Great Depression? Or right before the dot-com crash? These video shorts simulate the experience of savers who began investing at specific historical moments — both the best and worst times to start building wealth. Each simulation follows a consistent monthly investment through the actual market conditions of a specific era. You’ll see how dollar-cost averaging smoothed out the impact of crashes for some savers, while others benefited from buying in at rock-bottom prices during recessions. The historical-period approach makes these shorts particularly engaging because you can connect the investment outcomes to events you may already know about — world wars, oil crises, technology booms, and financial panics. They demonstrate that consistent saving eventually overcame every crisis in history, though the path was rarely smooth.
$1,000/Month Starting 1990: Two 50% Crashes, Still Hit $1M Video

$1,000/Month Starting 1990: Two 50% Crashes, Still Hit $1M

Starting in 1990 meant investing through the dot-com crash and the 2008 financial crisis. $360K in contributions still became $1.0M.

$500/Month During the Great Depression Became $542K Video

$500/Month During the Great Depression Became $542K

$500/month invested through the worst financial crisis in history. You put in $180K. The market turned it into $542K. 3x …