$1,000 in the Stock Market at Birth

There’s a real chance that newborn children in the US will begin receiving $1,000 in an investment account at birth if President Trump’s budget bill passes Congress in the months ahead.  CEOs of some major public companies are actually meeting at the White House today to discuss the “$1,000 at birth” provision.

Below is a chart we created showing how much $1,000 at birth would be worth today if it were invested in the S&P 500 at the end of each month going back 50 years (with dividends re-invested).

As shown above, $1,000 invested in the S&P fifty years ago and not touched would be worth nearly $350,000 today.  That number drops to roughly $127,000 if the $1,000 were invested at the end of November 1980 and $40,000 if the start date is August 1987.  Even still, there are a lot of 37-year olds out there born just before the 1987 crash that wouldn’t mind having $40k in an investment account right now!

The second chart above shows the same data over just the last 25 years for better scale.  Because of the Dot Com bubble and burst of the late 1990s and early 2000s and the Financial Crisis of the late 2000s, people born in various months during this period would have quite different account values right now.  $1,000 invested in August 2000 just after the Dot Com peak would be worth roughly $6,200 today, while $1,000 invested nearly ten years later in February 2009 would be worth nearly $5k more at $11,000.  If this provision comes to pass, we may see birth rates go up during lengthy bear markets!

Bespoke’s Consumer Pulse Report – June 2025

Bespoke’s Consumer Pulse Report is an analysis of a huge consumer survey that we run each month.  Our goal with this survey is to track trends across the economic and financial landscape in the US.  Using the results from our proprietary monthly survey, we dissect and analyze all of the data and publish the Consumer Pulse Report, which we sell access to on a subscription basis.  Sign up for a 30-day free trial to our Bespoke Consumer Pulse subscription service.  With a trial, you’ll get coverage of consumer electronics, social media, streaming media, retail, autos, and much more.  The report also has numerous proprietary US economic data points that are extremely timely and useful for investors.

We’ve just released our most recent monthly report to Pulse subscribers, and it’s definitely worth the read if you’re curious about the health of the consumer in the current market environment.  Start a 30-day free trial for a full breakdown of all of our proprietary Pulse economic indicators.

B.I.G. Tips – A Look at 45 Recent IPOs

The IPO market is getting some renewed interest with AI-stock CoreWeave (CRWV) performing well and the upcoming offering of fintech company Circle (CRCL) later this week.  While the AI boom has been raging for over two years now, we have yet to see a big uptick in IPOs similar to what we saw during the Dot Com boom of the late 1990s.  Most of that is due to successful private companies now preferring to stay ‘private for longer’, but we’d expect at least an eventual uptick in companies going public if AI is going to have staying power.

We looked at all of the stocks that have gone public in the US over the last couple of years and found 45 that are above $250 million in market cap save a few single-drug biotech offerings.  We’ve broken them up into four categories: ones that are in uptrends, ones that are in the process of breaking downtrends, ones that are in sideways trends, and ones that are in downtrends.  Our goal with this analysis is to give Bespoke subscribers some ideas to research further to see if any pique their interest.

To unlock our latest B.I.G. Tips report taking a look at 45 recent IPOs, login or start a two-week free trial to either Bespoke Premium or Bespoke Institutional.