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A final dispatch from editor-in-chief Andy Serwer
Andy Serwer (Gino DePinto/Oath)
Andy Serwer (Gino DePinto/Oath)

This will be my last Saturday column — after nearly 8 years as editor-in-chief, I am leaving Yahoo Finance. And the time feels right to be moving on.

Before turning to my time at Yahoo Finance and what the future might hold for the company (and myself), what I’d like to do is take a look back at the last year.

Goodbye to 2022

Let’s start by acknowledging that 2022 was a weird one for investors, with the S&P 500 hitting a record high and high for the year on January 3rd, the first trading day of the year.

Which makes 2022 the first year since 1977 the S&P 500 hit its high watermark for the year on day one, and the first time ever that high for the year also marked a record high for the index.

After that, well, it wasn’t a crash so much as the beginning of a long, slow collapse, particularly for tech stocks and the more speculative parts of the market that made buying stocks seem so fun back in 2021.

With stocks swooning as we headed into the summer, crypto had decamped for its latest “crypto winter.” By the time fall came around in the Northern Hemisphere, it was looking more like an Ice Age for crypto, exacerbated by the Sam Bankman-Fried scandal.

The S&P 500 peaked on the first day of the trading year.
The S&P 500 peaked on the first day of the trading year.

Which brings me to something else I observed in 2022 — a reminder that so many lessons are learned over and over again. It’s a painful process for investors, but one which benefits people in my line of work.

In 2022, Elon Musk, SBF, and the employees of Warner Bros. Discovery were all taught that leverage can 1) make you act like a wingnut, 2) make you allegedly commit massive fraud, or 3) get you fired en masse, respectively. To paraphrase the great sage Mike Tyson, everyone has a plan until too much debt punches them in the mouth.

Another notable development in 2022 is that it appears we are in the throes of a new cycle resetting interest rates higher.

I’ve tried to explain what this might mean to you, our audience, and to the Yahoo Finance team, but it’s a difficult concept to wrap your brain around unless you’ve experienced an extended period of rising rates. A concept made more challenging because U.S. investors have lived through one long, extended decline in interest rates since 1982.

Rising rates are bad for stocks, which is why the market went nowhere from 1966 to 1982. I’m not saying we’ll have a 16-year sideways market, but it makes sense to understand why we might.

Right now, most of Wall Street thinks Fed chair Jay Powell didn’t attack inflation early enough and is now playing catch up, which, to continue the conventional wisdom narrative, is certain to tank the economy next year.