NU Online News Service, Aug. 13, 10:39 a.m. – Investors between the ages of 23 and 35 may be more cautious than they were a year ago, but they still seem to be optimistic about their finances, according to results of a new survey by New York Life Investment Management L.L.C., Parsippany, N.J.
New York Life Investment, a unit of New York Life Insurance Company, recently had a research firm survey 530 U.S. residents born between 1967 and 1979.
The rules the researchers used to pick the participants might have skewed the results.
To fill out a survey, participants had to have at least $50,000 in investable assets. That minimum screened out some of the "Generation X" investors hit hardest by the recent market slump.
But researchers found that the GenX consumers eligible to participate this year expressed different attitudes about investing than participants polled for a similar survey conducted in early 2001.