Submitted by Tyler Durden: Want to buy stocks on anything than a greater
fool theory, or hope and prayer that someone with "other people's money"
will bail you out of a losing position when the market goes bidless?
That may change after reading the latest monthly letter from Pimco's
Bill Gross whose crusade against risk hits a crescendo. Yes, he is
talking his book (and talking down his equity asset allocation), but his
reasons are all too valid: "The cult of equity is dying. Like a once
bright green aspen turning to subtle shades of yellow then red in the
Colorado fall, investors’ impressions of “stocks for the long run” or
any run have mellowed as well. I “tweeted” last month that the souring
attitude might be a generational thing: “Boomers can’t take risk. Gen X
and Y believe in Facebook but not its stock. Gen Z has no money.”....
Now in 2012, however, an investor can periodically compare the return of
stocks for the past 10, 20 and 30 years, and find that long-term
Treasury bonds have been the higher returning and obviously “safer”
investment than a diversified portfolio of equities. In turn it would
show that higher risk is usually, but not always, rewarded with excess
return."
So what is a cult chasing figure supposed to do? Well, the cult of
equities may be over. But the cult of reflating inflation is just
beginning: "The primary magic potion that policymakers have
always applied in such a predicament is to inflate their way out of the
corner. The easiest way to produce 7–8% yields for bonds over the next
30 years is to inflate them as quickly as possible to 7–8%! Woe to the
holder of long-term bonds in the process! Similarly for stocks
because they fare poorly as well in inflationary periods. Yet if profits
can be reflated to 5–10% annual growth rates, if the U.S. economy can
grow nominally at 6–7% as it did in the 70s and 80s, then America’s and
indeed the global economy’s liabilities can be “reflated” away. The
problem with all of that of course is that inflation doesn’t create real
wealth and it doesn’t fairly distribute its pain and benefits to
labor/government/or corporate interests. Unfair though it may
be, an investor should continue to expect an attempted inflationary
solution in almost all developed economies over the next few years and
even decades.
Financial repression, QEs of all sorts and sizes,
and even negative nominal interest rates now experienced in Switzerland
and five other Euroland countries may dominate the timescape. The cult of equity may be dying, but the cult of inflation may only have just begun."
What is Bill Gross really saying? Simple: that pressing CTRL-P for an
electronic currency is really, really easy and will be even easier in
the future once it becomes a quarterly, monthly, weekly, daily, hourly
habit. And it will work in an interrelated relativistic system, until
one day it doesn't, and all faith in fiat goes out of the window. Then
he who laughs last will be he who has no fiat currency in their
disposal. Finally, since we have hit the exponential phase in the
terminal CTRL-P experimentation, the time until said even will not be
long.
From Bill Gross:
Cult Figures
- ? The long-term history of inflation adjusted returns from stocks shows a persistent but recently fading 6.6% real return since 1912.
- The legitimate question that market analysts, government forecasters and pension consultants should answer is how that return can be duplicated in the future.
- Unfair though it may be, an investor should continue to expect an attempted inflationary solution in almost all developed economies over the next few years and even decades.
? The cult of equity is dying. Like a once bright green aspen turning
to subtle shades of yellow then red in the Colorado fall, investors’
impressions of “stocks for the long run” or any run have mellowed as
well. I “tweeted” last month that the souring attitude might be a
generational thing: “Boomers can’t take risk. Gen X and Y believe in
Facebook but not its stock. Gen Z has no money.” True enough, but my
tweetering 95-character message still didn’t answer the question as to
where the love or the aspen-like green went, and why it seemed to
disappear so quickly. Several generations were weaned and in fact grew
wealthier believing that pieces of paper representing “shares” of future
profits were something more than a conditional IOU that came with risk.
Hadn’t history confirmed it? Jeremy Siegel’s rather ill-timed book
affirming the equity cult, published in the late 1990s, allowed for
brief cyclical bear markets, but showered scorn on any heretic willing
to question the inevitability of a decade-long period of upside stock
market performance compared to the alternatives. Now in 2012, however,
an investor can periodically compare the return of stocks for the past
10, 20 and 30 years, and find that long-term Treasury bonds have been
the higher returning and obviously “safer” investment than a diversified
portfolio of equities. In turn it would show that higher risk is
usually, but not always, rewarded with excess return.
Got Stocks?
Chart 1 displays a rather different storyline, one which overwhelmingly favors stocks over a century’s time – truly the long run. This long-term history of inflation adjusted returns from stocks shows a persistent but recently fading 6.6% real return (known as the Siegel constant) since 1912 that Generations X and Y perhaps should study more closely. Had they been alive in 1912 and lived to the ripe old age of 100, they would have turned what on the graph appears to be a $1 investment into more than $500 (inflation adjusted) over the interim. No wonder today’s Boomers became Siegel disciples. Letting money do the hard work instead of working hard for the money was an historical inevitability it seemed.
Got Stocks?
Chart 1 displays a rather different storyline, one which overwhelmingly favors stocks over a century’s time – truly the long run. This long-term history of inflation adjusted returns from stocks shows a persistent but recently fading 6.6% real return (known as the Siegel constant) since 1912 that Generations X and Y perhaps should study more closely. Had they been alive in 1912 and lived to the ripe old age of 100, they would have turned what on the graph appears to be a $1 investment into more than $500 (inflation adjusted) over the interim. No wonder today’s Boomers became Siegel disciples. Letting money do the hard work instead of working hard for the money was an historical inevitability it seemed.
Yet the 6.6% real return belied a commonsensical flaw much like that of a chain letter or yes – a Ponzi scheme. If
wealth or real GDP was only being created at an annual rate of 3.5%
over the same period of time, then somehow stockholders must be skimming
3% off the top each and every year. If an economy’s GDP could only
provide 3.5% more goods and services per year, then how could one
segment (stockholders) so consistently profit at the expense of the
others (lenders, laborers and government)? The commonsensical
“illogic” of such an arrangement when carried forward another century to
2112 seems obvious as well. If stocks continue to appreciate at a 3%
higher rate than the economy itself, then stockholders will command not
only a disproportionate share of wealth but nearly all of the money in
the world! Owners of “shares” using the rather simple “rule of 72” would
double their advantage every 24 years and in another century’s time
would have 16 times as much as the skeptics who decided to skip class
and play hooky from the stock market.
Cult followers, despite this logic, still have the argument of
history on their side and it deserves an explanation. Has the past
100-year experience shown in Chart 1 really been comparable to a chain
letter which eventually exhausts its momentum due to a lack of willing
players? In part, but not entirely. Common sense would argue that appropriately priced stocks should return
more than bonds. Their dividends are variable, their cash flows less
certain and therefore an equity risk premium should exist which
compensates stockholders for their junior position in the capital
structure. Companies typically borrow money at less than their
return on equity and therefore compound their return at the expense of
lenders. If GDP and wealth grew at 3.5% per year then it seems only
reasonable that the bondholder should have gotten a little bit less and
the stockholder something more than that. Long-term historical returns
for Treasury bill and government/corporate bondholders validate that
logic, and it seems sensible to assume that same relationship for the
next 100 years. “Stocks for the really long run” would have been a better Siegel book title.
Yet despite the past 30-year history of stock and bond returns that belie the really
long term, it is not the future win/place perfecta order of finish that
I quarrel with, but its 6.6% “constant” real return assumption and the
huge historical advantage that stocks presumably command. Chart 2 points
out one of the additional reasons why equities have done so well
compared to GNP/wealth creation. Economists will confirm that not only
the return differentials within capital itself (bonds versus stocks to
keep it simple) but the division of GDP between capital, labor and
government can significantly advantage one sector versus the other.
Chart 2 confirms that real wage gains for labor have been declining as a
percentage of GDP since the early 1970s, a 40-year stretch which has
yielded the majority of the past century’s real return advantage to
stocks. Labor gaveth, capital tooketh away in part due to the
significant shift to globalization and the utilization of cheaper
emerging market labor. In addition, government has conceded a piece of
their GDP share via lower taxes over the same time period. Corporate tax
rates are now at 30-year lows as a percentage of GDP and it is
therefore not too surprising that those 6.6% historical real returns
were 3% higher than actual wealth creation for such a long period.
The legitimate question that market analysts, government
forecasters and pension consultants should answer is how that 6.6% real
return can possibly be duplicated in the future given today’s initial
conditions which historically have never been more favorable for
corporate profits. If labor and indeed government must demand
some recompense for the four decade’s long downward tilting
teeter-totter of wealth creation, and if GDP growth itself is slowing
significantly due to deleveraging in a New Normal economy, then how can
stocks appreciate at 6.6% real? They cannot, absent a productivity
miracle that resembles Apple’s wizardry.
Got Bonds?
My ultimate destination in this Investment Outlook lies a
few paragraphs ahead so let me lay its foundation by dissing and
dismissing the past 30 years’ experience of the bond market as well. With
long Treasuries currently yielding 2.55%, it is even more of a stretch
to assume that long-term bonds – and the bond market – will replicate
the performance of decades past. The Barclay’s U.S. Aggregate
Bond Index – a composite of investment grade bonds and mortgages – today
yields only 1.8% with an average maturity of 6–7 years. Capital gains
legitimately emanate from singular starting points of 14½%, as in 1981,
not the current level in 2012. What you see is what you get more often
than not in the bond market, so momentum-following investors are bound
to be disappointed if they look to the bond market’s past 30-year
history for future salvation, instead of mere survival at the current
level of interest rates.
Together then, a presumed 2% return for bonds and an historically low percentage nominal return for stocks – call it 4%, when combined in a diversified portfolio produce a nominal return of 3% and an expected inflation adjusted return near zero. The Siegel constant of 6.6% real appreciation, therefore, is an historical freak, a mutation likely never to be seen again as far as we mortals are concerned. The simple point though whether approached in real or
nominal space is that U.S. and global economies will undergo
substantial change if they mistakenly expect asset price appreciation to
do the heavy lifting over the next few decades. Private pension funds,
government budgets and household savings balances have in many cases
been predicated and justified on the basis of 7–8% minimum asset
appreciation annually. One of the country’s largest state pension funds
for instance recently assumed that its diversified portfolio would
appreciate at a real rate of 4.75%. Assuming a goodly portion of that is
in bonds yielding at 1–2% real, then stocks must do some very heavy
lifting at 7–8% after adjusting for inflation. That is unlikely. If/when
that does not happen, then the economy’s wheels start spinning like a
two-wheel-drive sedan on a sandy beach. Instead of thrusting forward,
spending patterns flatline or reverse; instead of thriving, a growing
number of households and corporations experience a haircut of wealth
and/or default; instead of returning to old norms, economies begin to
resemble the lost decades of Japan.
Some of the adjustments are already occurring. Recent elections in
San Jose and San Diego, California, have mandated haircuts to pensions
for government employees. Wisconsin’s failed gubernational recall
validated the same sentiment. Voided private pensions of auto and auto
parts suppliers following Lehman 2008 may be a forerunner as well for
private corporations. The commonsensical conclusion is clear: If financial assets no longer work for you at a rate far and above the rate of true wealth creation, then you must work longer for your money, suffer a haircut on your existing holdings and entitlements, or both. There
are still tricks to be played and gimmicks to be employed. For example –
the accounting legislation just passed into law by the Congress and
signed by the President allows corporations to discount liabilities at
an average yield for the past 15 years! But accounting acts of magic
aside, this and other developed countries have for too long made
promises they can’t keep, especially if asset markets fail to respond as
they have historically.
Reflating to Prosperity
The primary magic potion that policymakers have always
applied in such a predicament is to inflate their way out of the corner.
The easiest way to produce 7–8% yields for bonds over the next 30 years
is to inflate them as quickly as possible to 7–8%! Woe to the
holder of long-term bonds in the process! Similarly for stocks because
they fare poorly as well in inflationary periods. Yet if profits can be
reflated to 5–10% annual growth rates, if the U.S. economy can grow
nominally at 6–7% as it did in the 70s and 80s, then America’s and
indeed the global economy’s liabilities can be “reflated” away. The
problem with all of that of course is that inflation doesn’t create real
wealth and it doesn’t fairly distribute its pain and benefits to
labor/government/or corporate interests. Unfair though it may
be, an investor should continue to expect an attempted inflationary
solution in almost all developed economies over the next few years and
even decades. Financial repression, QEs of all sorts and sizes,
and even negative nominal interest rates now experienced in Switzerland
and five other Euroland countries may dominate the timescape. The cult
of equity may be dying, but the cult of inflation may only have just
begun.
William H. Gross
Managing Director
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