Stocks, in General, Are Overhyped

by Cullen Roche, Pragmatic Capitalism

Felix Salmon wrote a nice explanation to his 2010 video saying you should sell your stocks. Basically, he admits that he made a mistake. Thatā€™s a pretty unusual thing to see from a high profile pundit so kudos to Felix for that. But he also finishes his piece with a salient point:

I still think that the optimum stock allocation is much lower than most financial advisors would recommend.

Iā€™m a financial advisor and I couldnā€™t agree more. After all, if you plug in Modern Portfolio Theory style thinking to most peopleā€™s risk profilesĀ you almost invariably end up with a stock heavy portfolio. Thatā€™s a pretty incredible thing when you consider that the global financial asset portfolio (GFAP) of equities is about 45%, but the vast majority of people who are risk profiled by an advisor will end up with a stock heavy portfolio.

This is even more absurd when you think about the fact that the 60/40 stock/bond portfolio has become THE benchmark for the entire financial industry despite the fact that the GFAP is almost the exact opposite weighting. Ā How in the world can 60/40 be the benchmark in a world where we know, for a fact, that 45/55 is the actual outstanding market cap weighting of stocks and bonds?

I think the reason is simple. The idea of ā€œinvestingā€ has been sold to people as some sort of high risk & high reward pursuit. So we inevitably end up thinking about ā€œthe stock marketā€ when we think about asset allocation. In reality, we should be thinking about the full menu of options out there and theyā€™re much more expansive than just stocks. We actually shouldnā€™t even think about ā€œinvestingā€ as ā€œinvestingā€. We should think of it purely as an allocation of savings. But the allure of ā€œmarket beatingā€ returns and getting rich in the markets is too powerful to convince people to pursue a more pragmatic approach.

Anyhow, I could beat up on Modern Portfolio Theory all day long and Iā€™ll spare you the regurgitation of many of the points that I regularly make here about it. But Felix is right ā€“ stocks are consistently overhyped. We donā€™t need opinions there. We just need to look at the actual markets for confirmation about that.

Copyright Ā© Cullen Roche, Pragmatic Capitalism

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