I am afraid the Wall Street casino has caused Main Street to back away and for a very long time. The blue collar worker trying to build up his 401k in Mutual Funds is disillusioned and will be reluctant to come back. I look at the load Mutual Fund Industry going the way of the makers of buggy whips.
The only problem with that line of thinking is that it assumes 1 of 2 alternative paths. First, it assumes that there are places to park your money in lieu of the stock market that will still provide a reasonable return on investment enough to grow your money so that you can provide for yourself during retirement. On average, that needs to be somewhere in the 7-8% per year neighborhood to get most people to where they would feel "comfortable." And don't get me started on what people my age would have to do given that I'm not expecting social security to still be around for me.
The second path, if the first path is either not feasible or not acceptable from a risk standpoint, is to increase your savings rate. For as long as I can remember, the US has had a savings rate of less than 5%, usually approaching zero, and for the last few years residing in the negative number. We're a consumer-driven economy, fine, but the negative savings rate and crazy leveraging is part of what got us into this mess. Still, use the stimulus package that was shipped out earlier this year - how many people do you know actually took that and put it into the bank and are saving it for retirement or a rainy day? I didn't know anyone. Everyone I saw was happy to have an extra $600 or $1200 to stay an extra day on vacation or whatever. I don't see us changing the consumer-driven, gotta have it nature of our economy anytime soon.
So basically, neither of my two options are really all that feasible. Thus, I have a really hard time seeing people "staying out of the market" for any significant length of time, regardless of what Wall Street does.
Right now, news is negative, but despite the whole "buy low, sell high" thing, it's amazing how difficult it is for people to follow and how few people really do it. It's also amazing to me how much more willing people are to throw their money into the market when prices are going up! The ole "I'm going to wait until the market goes back up before I put my money back in" excuse.... excuse me?!?!? Sure, it makes no sense, but it's what people do. So my final reason that people won't stay out of the market for too long is, wait until the market starts to go back up (because it will) and see how many people come running back in because "they feel better."
It'll be the people who bought or averaged in when the news was awful that make the money (does anyone realize the market is up 20%+ from it's recent bottom?), and the average investor will be left wondering "how come my portfolio isn't up 20%?"
The fact of the matter is that, on average, 80% of Equity money managers lose to their index every year, no matter whether the market is up or down.
Yeah, but is it the same 80% every year? If you're looking on a year-by-year basis, sure. But I'd be willing to bet you that your 80% number is closer to 50% if you expand your time horizon by 3 or 5 years. So yeah, if you use index funds religiously, you'll do better every so often, but I'll still take my chances with active management over the long haul every time.