by Robert Arnott, Research Affiliates
Stocks ought to produce higher returns than bonds in order for the capital markets to āwork.ā Otherwise, stockholders would not be paid for the additional risk they take for being lower down the capital structure. It comes as no surprise, therefore, that stockholders have enjoyed outsized returns for their efforts for mostābut not allālong time periods.
Ibbotson Associates, whose annual data compendium1 covers U.S. stocks and U.S. bonds since January 1926, shows the S&P 500 Index compounding through December 2010 at an annual rate of 9.9% vs. 5.5% for long-term government bonds, an excess return of 4.4%. This return compounds exponentially with time. A $1,000 U.S. stock investment in 1926 would have ballooned to $3 million by December 2010 vs. $92,000 for an investment in long-term bonds, a 32-fold difference.
Emboldened by the 1980s and 1990s (when stocks compounded at 17.6% and 18.2% per annum, respectively), āStocks for the Long Runā became the mantra for long-term investing, as well as a best-selling book. This view is now embedded into the psyche of an entire generation of professional and casual investors who ignore the fact that much of those outsized returns were a consequence of soaring valuation multiples and tumbling yields. In this issue we examine historical U.S. equity performance from a larger perspective and find that todayās overwhelming equity bias is built on a shaky foundation, reliant on a short and unrepresentative time period.
Letās Talk Really Long-Term
For those willing to do the homework, longer-term stock and bond data exist for the United States. But that picture isnāt quite as rosy as from 1926ā2010; therefore, it doesnāt receive as much attention from Wall Street optimists. From 1802ā2010, U.S. stocks generated a 7.9% annual return vs. 5.1% for long-term government bonds.2 Our realized excess return was cut to 2.8%āa one-third reductionāby adding 125 years of capital markets history!
Of course, many observers will declare 19th century data irrelevant. A lot has changed! The survival of the United States was in doubt during the early part of the century (War of 1812) and during the debilitating Civil War of the 1860s. The United States was an āemerging marketā! The economy was notably short on global trade and long subsistence agriculture. Furthermore, there were three major wars and four depressionsātwo were deeper than the Great Depressionābetween 1800 and 1870, a span when data on market returns were notably thin.
By the following century, the United States and its equity markets enjoyed good fortune. It was not invaded and occupied by a foreign power. It did not suffer a government overthrowā¦ just ask Russian investors their return on capital after the Bolshevik Revolution! As Ben Graham might caution, beware the difference between the loss on capital (a drop in price, from which we can recover) and a loss of capital (100% loss, from which we cannot). Russiaās stock market wasnāt alone in the 20th century as three additional top 15 markets in 1900āEgypt, Argentina, and Chinaāsuffered a 100% loss of capital while Germany (twice) and Japan (once) came very close.3
Whether we use 200+ years or 80+ years, how many people are pursuing an investment program of that duration? No one, of course. Even āperpetualā institutions such as university endowments arenāt exempt. As the late economic historian Peter Bernstein commented, āā¦this kind of long run will exceed the life expectancies of most people mature enough to be invited to join such boards of trustees.ā4 Relevant horizons for all ālong termā investment programs are significantly shorterā10 years or 20 years, maybe 30.
Shouldnāt a span of one, two, or three decades be sufficient for investors to be rewarded for bearing the risk of holding stocks? As displayed in Table 1, trailing returns for stocks havenāt come close to earning the excess returns that weāve all come to expect, even after stocks worldwide doubled from the early March 2009 lows during the Global Financial Crisis! Weāll save an exploration for how the Fundamental IndexĀ® concept radically reshapes this picture for another time.
Where is the wealth creation implied by the Ibbotson data? Stock market investors took the riskāriding out every bubble, every crash, every spectacular bankruptcy and bear market, over a 30-year stretch. How much were they compensated for the blood, sweat, and tears spilled with all this volatility? A measly 53 basis points per annum! Indeed, investors who have incurred the ups and downs over the past decade have lost money compared to what they could have earned from long-term government bonds. Theyāve paid for the privilege of incurring stomach-churning risk. Not only did Treasury bond investors sleep better, they ate better too!
A 30-year stock market excess return of approximately zero is a huge disappointment to the legions of āstocks at any priceā long-term investors. But itās not the first extended drought. From 1803 to 1857,5 U.S. equities struggled; the stock investor would have received a third of the ending wealth of the bond investor. Stocks managed to break even only in 1871. Most observers would be shocked to learn there was ever a 68-year stretch of stock market underperformance. After a 72-year bull market from 1857 through 1929, another dry spell ensued. From 1929 through 1949, stocks failed to match bonds, the only long-term shortfall in the Ibbotson time sample. Perhaps it was the extraordinary period of historyāThe Great Depression and World War IIāand the spectacular aftermath from 1950ā1999, that lulled recent investors into a false sense of security regarding long-term equity performance.6
The Odds
Fortunately for the capital markets and equity investors, an examination of history shows that, yes, stocks have a high tendency to outperform government bonds over 10-year and 20-year periods. Figure 1 illustrates rolling 10- and 20-year āwin ratesā for equities versus government bonds. We break the data into Ibbotson (1926ā2010) and Total (1802ā2010). The Ibbotson timeframe confirms investor behavior in the 30 years since Ibbotson and Sinquefield published their groundbreaking study.7 For the vast majority of periodsā86% for 10 years and 96% for 20 yearsāequities outperform bonds. But the longer term data are less convincing. For 10-year periods, equities outperform in 71% of the observations, rising to 83% for 20 years.
A 70% or 80% win rate still offers pretty good odds. In professional basketball, those are average to above-average free throw percentages. But the relatively small probability of failure masks the magnitude of a miss. Just as a single missed free throw can cost a basketball championship, so too can an equity āmissā lead to drastic consequences, as the past 10 years have shown. There is no guarantee of superior equity returns, which begs the question: Why does our industry act like thereās one? More important, why take all that risk for a skinny equity premium?
Conclusion
We arenāt saying that we should expect bonds to beat stocks over the next 10 or 20 years. Rather, this brief history lesson illuminates that the much-vaunted 4ā5% risk premium for stocks is unreliable and a dangerous assumption on which to make our future plans. In our view, a more normal economic environment would suggest 2ā3%, which is the historic risk premium absent the rise in valuation multiples in the past 30 years. But these are not normal times. Todayās low starting yields, combined with the prospective challenges from our addiction to debt-financed consumption and aging population, would put us closer to 1%.
It would be foolish to act as if the past 200 years is fully representative of the future. For one thing, the United States was an emerging market for much of that period, with only a handful of industries and an unstable currency. In the past century, we dodged challenges and difficulties that laid waste to the plans of investors in many countries. Nassim Taleb points out that āBlack Swansāāunwelcome outliers that exceed the bounds of normalcyāare a recurring phenomenon; the abnormal is, indeed, normal. Our own stock market history is but a single sample of a large and unknowable population of potential outcomes.
Peter Bernstein relentlessly reminded us there are things we can never know, that prosperity and investing success are inherently āriskyā; they can disappear in a flash. Uncertainty is always with us. The old adage puts it succinctly: āIf you want God to laugh, tell him your plans.ā Concentrating the majority of oneās investment portfolio in one investment category, based on an unknowable and fickle long-term equity premium, is a dangerous game of āprobability chicken.ā
Endnotes
1. IbbotsonĀ® SBBIĀ® 2011 Classic Yearbook: Market Results for Stocks, Bonds, Bills, and Inflation 1926ā2010, Morningstar.
2. For much of this section, we rely on the data that Peter Bernstein and I assembled for āWhat Risk Premium is āNormalā?ā Financial Analysts Journal, March/April 2002. We are indebted to many sources for this data, ranging
from Ibbotson Associates, the Cowles Commission, Bill Schwert of Rochester University, and Bob Shiller of Yale. For the full roster of sources, see the FAJ paper.
3. See Arnott and Bernstein (2002).
4. See Peter Bernstein, āWhat Rate of Return Can You Reasonably Expectā¦ or What Can the Long Run Tell Us about the Short Run?ā Financial Analysts Journal, March/April 1997.
5. 20-year bonds were used whenever possible but the longest maturities tended to be 10 years for much of the nineteenth century. Also, in the 1840s, there was a brief span with no government debt (we should be so lucky!),
hence no government bonds. Under these circumstances, the equivalent to todayās Government Sponsored Enterprises, railway and canal bonds, were used as these projects typically had the tacit support of the government.
6. For more on this, see Robert Arnott, āBonds: Why Bother?ā Journal of Indexes, May/June 2009.
7. Roger G. Ibbotson and Rex A. Sinquefield, āStocks, Bonds, Bills and Inflation: Year-by-Year Historical Returns (1926ā1974),ā Journal of Business, January 1976.
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