Research Affiliates runs a regular analysis of expected risk
and return using valuations making use of the “Schiller CAPE”. For all its
faults the Shiller P/E is the “best we have” in predicting long term returns.
But not as a market timing tool. The basic premise is that high current returns
which is accompanied in most cases by high valuations is a predictor of low
future returns and vice versa.
Of course the model doesn’t have as an input forecasts of
Federal Reserve Policy or other economic and political developments so it
always makes sense to always ask “what can go wrong”.
As a short term predictive tool the model as not been
particularly useful. It has produced an analysis of US stocks and bonds as
highly valued and thus lower future returns for several years and the opposite
for non US equities. Needless to say that did not turn out to be the case.
It is useful to note that the most widely cited reason for
the ability of US stocks to produce high returns despite high current valuation
is because of the low level of interest rates…raising a note of caution for
those that expect US rates to rise in the near future.
Expectations for returns on US Treasuries are also predicted
to be low going forward despite the fact that short term traders/investors have
benefited from positions in long term bonds despite their past high valuation.
With 10 Year Treasury Bond yields at 2% well below their long term average it
is not hard to see why the analysis forecasts both low returns and high
volatility for US long term bonds going forward.
Country data is included in this graph and shows US stocks
with low expected returns relative to non US stocks. In terms of the “sweet
spot” in terms of prospective risk and return the cluster would include
emerging markets in Asia and Western Europe. Notably two members of the BRIC
club….Russia and Brazil would be in the highly speculative category of high
expected return and high risk…something not only justified “by the numbers” but
also with regards to the political economic situation.
Of course China is the “elephant in the room” factoring in
all the uncertainty not “in the numbers” it would probably be prudent to
increase the volatility number in light of political and economic uncertainty
for China.
It is also useful to have perspective on recent and historical returns for asset classes. While of course there is no guarantee there is a tendency for asset class returns to "revert to the mean".
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