Showing posts with label Stock market. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stock market. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 22, 2017

Warning: The US Stock Market Is An Anomaly


Stock Market DROPS! These Chart Show Something Ready to BLOW!

U.S. stocks have delivered incredible stock market returns for a long time: the average compounded total return on the U.S. stock market has been nearly 10 percent per yearfrom 1927 through 2016(Using data from Ken Frenchs website on the market-capitalization weighted CRSP index).

Doesnt sound impressive?

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Consider the fact that a $100 invested for 90 years at 10 percent would compound to over $530,000. Perhaps this is why my two favorite investors of all time suggest that savers stash the bulk of their cash in the US stock market:

First,Warren Buffets advice:

Put 10% of the cash in short-term government bonds and 90% in a very low-cost S&P 500 index fund. (I suggest Vanguards.)

Next,Jack Bogles advice:

I wouldnt invest outside the U.S. If someone wants to invest 20 percent or less of their portfolio outside the U.S., thats fine. I wouldnt do it, but if you want to, thats fine.

When great minds speak, we should listen, but we should also ask a critical question: Are Warren and Jack making this recommendation based on evidence? Or are they basing this recommendation on their experience as long-time US equity market investors?

In this short essay, I explore the idea that Buffett and Bogles advice should be digested with a healthy dose of skepticism. To make this point, I highlight several recent research articles that suggest US stock returns are exceptional relative to all other stock markets across time. The US stock market is an anomaly and perhaps the ubiquitous disclaimer, Past performance may not indicate future performance, is an important consideration with respect to the expected performance of the US stock market over the next century.

What is the Equity Premium Puzzle?

The exceptional performance of the US stock market has been deemed the, The equity premium puzzle, by academic researchers and was first discussed in an influential academic paper by Rajnish Mehra and Edward Prescott in 1985.

Here is a quote from the original paper:

Restrictions that a class of general equilibrium models place upon the average returns of equity and Treasury bills are found to be strongly violated by the U.S. data in the 1889-1978 period

The authors find that stocks beat bonds by an average of 6% a year, which is simply too high to be justified by any equilibrium model in existence at the time. Here is the key table that outlined the real risk premium for US stocks:

US Stock MarketHow Academics Tackled theEquity Premium Puzzle

Academics struggled to build theoretical models that would predict such a high return for the U.S. stock market. Despite significant efforts, the research community never seemed to form a general consensus that the equity premium puzzle would be solved.

Nonetheless, one of two solutions was explored in an effort to answer the puzzle:

  • Approach #1: Build elaborate models that predict why the expected US equity premium is justifiablyhigh.
  • Approach #2: Refute the premise that the historical US equity premium is a valid estimate: perhaps high past US stock market returns simply reflected a lucky run?

Researchers continue to explore solution #1, but there seems to be no clear answer in sight. Other academics have explored option #2, by collecting more data on various stock markets across different points in time. Philippe Jorion and William N. Goetzmann provide a good example of this research in their paper, Global Stock Markets in the Twentieth Century. The authors examine 39 global stock markets from 1921 through 1996 and, as before, saw evidence of the outperformance of the U.S. stock market, which provided a real return (i.e., adjusted for inflation) of 4.32% over the period, the highest of all countries (the median performance was 0.80% for the other countries). But the US stock markets strong performance was old news and not the point of their story. Their key insight was identifying a clear survivor bias in the data: The longer a countrys stock market existed, the higher the annual return.

This relationship is best captured in Figure 1 from their original paper:

In short, the returns of the winners depend on their past survival. If investors can predict with perfect foresight which countries will survive and which countries will die, using the past results might be meaningful. However, is it realistic that investors have the ability to know future winners? Unlikely.

To make matters worse for those who have been conditioned to believe the US stock market experience is normal, a new paper by Notre Dame professor Benjamin Golez and Stanford professor Peter Koudijs, titled, Four Centuries of Return Predictability, performs a similar out of sample study as Jorion and Goetzmann. In their research the authors look at data from the Netherlands and the UK from 1629 to 1812, the UK market from 1813 to 1870, and US stock markets from 1871 to 2015. They estimate that the equity risk premium, or the spread in average returns between stocks and bonds, are around 2.3% to 3.5%for the Netherlands and the UK in the earlier time periods and around 6% for the US market.

So the US experienced an equity risk premium that was 2-3x that of other markets. Wow.

Will High USEquity Premium Continue into the Future?

On one hand, perhaps the US stock market will continue to defy market expectations and generate high realized returns in the future. However, on the other hand, investors may be wise to acknowledge the incredible amount of potential luck the US has experienced. Perhaps Jack Bogel, who ironically suggests a huge overweight position to US equities, makes the best case that we should think twice about this recommendation.

Consider a PBS interview with Jack Bogle where he states the following:

Good markets turn to bad markets, bad markets turn to good markets. So the system is almost rigged against human psychology that says if something has done well in the past, it will do well in the future. That is not true. And its categorically false. And the high likelihood is when you get to somebody at his peak, hes about to go down to the valley. The last shall be first and the first shall be last.

As Bogle points out, it may be precisely the past winners who are about to fail.

Famed Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel has a related statement in his paper, The Equity Premium: Stock and Bond Returns since 1802:

Certainly investors in1872did not universally expect the United States to become the greatest economic power in the next century. This was not the case in many other countries. What if one had owned stock in Japanese or German firms before World War II? Or consider Argentina, which, at the turn of the century, was one of the great economic powers.

Its probably likely that Argentinian investors predicted continued economic dominance at the turn of the century. They were wrong. Perhaps US investors are suffering from a similar level of hindsight bias? Can we determine with certainty that the U.S. will be a superpower 100 years from now? We should consider the fact that when we look at past U.S. returns, we are looking at a market that did

Source: http://www.valuewalk.com/2017/03/warning-us-stock-market-anomaly/

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Saturday, June 25, 2016

These Five Charts Show How Brexit Rocked Europe"s Stock Market


10 Steps To Become A Stock Market Millionaire

Britains shock decision to secede jolted Europes stock markets and resulted in the resignation of U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron.

While investors fled Italy, Spain and Greece the fastest, U.K. companies that rely on international markets for revenue got a boost from a plunging pound. Trading surged around the region, with the Stoxx Europe 600 Index tumbling by the most since the global financial crisis of 2008.

European Stocks Fall More

Even as global markets shook from the impact of Brexit, the U.K.s main benchmark FTSE 100 Index fell less than regional peers. Exporters including ARM Holding Plc and drugmaker AstraZeneca Plc climbed as the pound plunged to a 30-year low, trimming the U.K. gauges losses to 3.2 percent. The Stoxx 600 slid 7 percent, while benchmarks of Greece, Italy and Spain -- perceived as the regions riskiest -- tumbled more than 12 percent.

Theres always a knee-jerk reaction, but this particular case is profound and it has an impact from a political perspective, said Guy Miller, chief market strategist in Zurich Insurance Group AGs investment management team. You have to think longer term: has this changed the way the euro zone is functioning? Theres many long-term implications from this vote which are likely to be long lasting. One has to be prepared for high levels of volatility in the months ahead.

Hurt Shows in Local Stocks

The real impact was felt by British mid-cap companies most dependent on the domestic market. The FTSE 250 Index plummeted 7.2 percent, the most since 1987 and twice as much as the FTSE 100. Veronika Pechlaner, who helps oversee $10 billion at Ashburton Investments, says the large-cap index is not really a good indicator for the U.K. domestic economy as its many exporters are aided by the weaker sterling. British banks and homebuilders are far more exposed to the uncertainty surrounding the economic impact of an exit.

Traders Rush In

Traders were busier than ever as turbulence was felt across Europe. Almost 18 billion Stoxx 600 shares changed hands today, while volume surged eightfold in FTSE 100 stocks versus the 30-day average. At least one dark pool was suspended.

Lenders Are Losers

Lenders led the selloff, tumbling the most on record, amid doubts about the regions economic outlook and the political future of the EU. Many industry leaders had previously warned that a Brexit could cause them to move thousands of jobs from the U.K., and expressed dismay after the result became clear.

Gold Rush

Gold producers Fresnillo Plc and Randgold Resources Ltd. were the biggest beneficiaries both in the run-up to the referendum as well in the immediate aftermath, as investor demand grew for haven assets including the precious metal. Fresnillo, the best Stoxx 600 performer in June, surged to levels deemed overbought after todays 12 percent boost.

Before it"s here, it"s on the Bloomberg Terminal. LEARN MORE

Source: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-06-24/these-five-charts-show-how-brexit-rocked-europe-s-stock-market

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Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Stock market suffers steep loses to start 2016


Stock Market MELTDOWN as U.S. Tumbles Percent Decline Worst Since 1932!

CHICOPEE, Mass. (WWLP) A rocky start to 2016 on Wall Street.The stock market took a hit to start the year, leaving many wondering what this means for their investments.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down 276 points Monday. At one point, itwas on track to be the worst opening day in 84 years, down 476 pointsbefore close. Although, the market managed to recover slightly. Thatsone reason Raymond James financial advisor Mark Teed told 22News hes hopeful the market will continue to improve.

These events happen all the time. Dont let something like this ruin your long-term investment plans. You might sell off tomorrow based on what you hear tonight, and then tomorrow you could be sitting in cash for the rest of the year, Teed said.

Slowing growth in China and escalating tensions in the middle east contributed toMondaysmajor sell off. In China, new data on Chinese manufacturing sent a wave of financial concern across the Pacific.Chinas main index shed 6.9% of its value, forcing an emergency trading halt.

Chinese authorities have been trying for months to restore confidence in the countrys stocks after a plunge in June rattled global markets and prompted a panicked, multibillion-dollar government intervention.

In the Middle East, tensions are rising, which also contributed to Mondays selloff.After Saudi Arabia ended its diplomatic relations with Iran, Sudan and Bahrain followed suit. Thislead to fear concerningthe global oil supply and prices. Initially, crude oil prices rose 1.5% before the stock market erased the gains.

The damaged relations come after Saudi Arabia executed a prominent Shiite leader. That sparked violent protests against Saudis in Iran.Irans supreme leader warned Saudi Arabia would face divine revenge for the crime.

Teed said time will tell, but as of now, he expects oil prices to remain low for the coming weeks, and the stock market to recover.

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Source: http://wwlp.com/2016/01/04/stock-market-suffers-steep-loses-to-start-2016/

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Thursday, July 9, 2015

While China"s stock market melts down, investors ask, Where are our leaders?

While thousands of Chinese investors lose their savings in Chinas plummeting stock markets, the countrys leaders have remained conspicuously silent.

Chinese president Xi Jinping is in Russia to attend a BRICS summit, and premier Li Keqiang has said only that China has the confidence and ability to deal with economic risks. Neither have mentioned the fact that Chinese shares have fallen 30% over the past three weeks. Today, Chinese markets opened lower for a third day in a row, with about half of all listed companies shares suspended. By noon the benchmark Shanghai Composite had risen slightly by 0.4%, thanks perhaps to additional stimulus measures rolled out by the central bank and bank regulator.

The Peoples Daily on July 9th, showing Xi in Russia.(People"s Daily)

Investors were already questioning the governments ability to rescue the market, now they are growing frustrated with top officials silence on the subject. China is having its biggest stock crash in history, but where are its national leaders? one investor commented on an online forum, Guba.

Referring to Xis oft-touted slogan for giving Chinese citizens more economic opportunities, the blogger wrote, We were full of hope for this China Dream but who will believe in that now?

Others believe that only a statement of support from Xi or other top leaders can soothe panicky investors. The stock market is in such a plummet. The leaders should take a stand. Only this will restore confidence, one blogger wrote (link in Chinese) on the online forum Tianya.

Some say that the silence has been intentional. If they had commented, it would be a sign the problem is really serious. And they could be accused of intervening in the market, a source close to the Chinese leadership told Reuters. Another added, If it were a real crisis, Xi would be forced to cancel his trip.

The biggest danger for the Chinese leadership is that the drop in the stock market destroys the publics confidence in the government. If the government doesnt deal the stock crash well. Im afraid not only mom and pop investors will lose their hard-earned money, but the government will also lose its credibility and cohesion, the investor on Guba wrote.

Source: http://qz.com/448971/while-chinas-stock-market-melts-down-investors-ask-where-are-our-leaders/

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