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The ‘Why’ Behind Michael Kitces’ Strange Finding That High Valuations Point To Low Returns For Only A Time And Then To Higher Than Normal Returns

By Rob Bennett Last week’s column examined a recent article by Michael Kitces ( Should Equity Return Assumptions in Retirement Projections Be Reduced for Today’s High Shiller CAPE Valuation? ) that advanced the amazing (but entirely true) claim that: The ideal way to adjust return assumptions…[may be] to do projections with a ‘regime-based’ approach to return assumptions. This would entail projecting a period of much lower returns, followed by a subsequent period of higher returns.” Stock returns do not play out in the pattern of a random walk. Not at all. The same pattern has been repeating for the entire 145 years of return data available to us today. Valuations move steadily up for a long time, perhaps 20 years. Then valuations move steadily down for a long time, perhaps 15 years. When valuations are very high, as they are today, you should expect 10-year returns to be low. But 30-year returns will be better. After the passage of 15 years or so of poor returns, a new period of gradually increasing valuations kicks in, countering the effect of the 15 years of poor returns. By the end of 30 years, the overall return may not be so bad. This is strange stuff. It’s one thing to agree that valuations affect long-term returns. That wouldn’t be possible if the market were efficient, as was once believed to be the case. But most investors have come to accept that Shiller is right that valuations matter; prices matter in every other market that exists, so it is not hard to understand that they would matter in the stock market too. But it’s something else to say that prices go up, up, up for many years and then down, down, down for many years. What’s that about? I was shocked by this result when I discovered it through my work with John Walter Russell at the old Safe Withdrawal Rate Research Group discussion board. Investing experts who engage in technical analysis are often ridiculed by investing experts who instead believe that market prices are determined by economic factors as engaging in some sort of voodoo. Citing return patterns sounds about as scientific as predicting a person’s future by asking him what Zodiac sign he was born under. It sounds too “out there.” This was my first reaction when John’s research revealed the pattern that has been governing stock prices for the entire history of the U.S. market. But puzzles bother me. When there is some facet of a phenomenon that I do not understand well, I find my mind returning to it again and again, searching for a reasonable explanation. Until all puzzles are resolved, I worry that I do not understand the matter under consideration as well as I need to to possess confidence in my beliefs about it. So for several years I found myself often wondering why the reality that Michael Kitces points to in his recent article is indeed a reality. Why do stock valuation levels head upward for a long time (with temporary drops mixed in, to be sure) and then head downward for a long time (with temporary rises mixed in). What could explain such a pattern? I often comment in my column how Shiller described his 1981 finding that valuations affect long-term returns as “revolutionary.” I believe that it really is that. I believe that what Shiller showed is that our fundamental belief about what causes changes in market prices is in error. The common and long-held belief is that it is economic realities that cause stock prices to change. What Shiller showed is that that is not so. If it were economic realities causing stock price changes, future returns would not be predictable because future economic realities are of course not predictable. If future returns are highly predictable, as Shiller showed, it must be something else causing stock prices to change. It’s investor emotion that is the primary cause of stock price changes, not economic realities. That’s the Shiller breakthrough. That changes everything. The strange pattern described in the Kitces article makes sense once you accept that it is investor emotion that is the primary cause of stock price changes. The key reality of the stock market is that it is stock investors who set prices. By bidding up or bidding down prices, we can collectively see to it that our portfolios reflect our personal desires. The economic realities don’t really matter. If we all want to retire early (and who doesn’t?), there’s nothing stopping us from bidding stock prices up to two times fair value or even to three times fair value. Stock investors can as a group collectively grant themselves raises at any time they please. Is that not so? Now – There must be some limit on this power we possess to vote ourselves raises. If there were no limit, we would not stop at increasing stock prices until valuations were at three times fair value (as they were in early 2000). We would take them to four times fair value, then five times fair value, then ten times fair value. Why not? The full reality is that, while we all possess a Get Rich Quick urge that prompts us to push stock prices higher until they reach two times fair value or perhaps three times fair value, we all also possess common sense, which makes us fearful of additional price increases once valuations have risen to insanely high levels. After about 20 years of rising valuations, the collective investor psychology always flips and instead of pushing prices up, up, up, we begin pushing them down, down, down. After a complete cycle has been completed, the long-term return for the cycle is always something in the neighborhood of 6.5 percent real, the long-term average return justified by the U.S. economic realities for as far back as we have records. So the strange reality explained by Kitces in his article applies: high valuations assure low returns 10 years out but returns closer to average for time-periods of 30 years or more. High-return periods are always followed by low return periods and low return periods are always followed by high return periods. The strategic implications are far-reaching. We once thought that stock investing risk was constant; it’s not – it’s variable. We once thought that investors should stick with the same stock allocation at all times. That’s wrong; investors who want to maintain the same risk profile MUST change their stock allocations in response to big valuation shifts to do so. We once thought that stocks were an inherently risky asset class. That’s not so. Investors who invest more heavily in stocks when valuations are low than they do when valuations are high earn higher long-term returns while reducing risk dramatically. I believe that Michael’s article will be the subject of widespread discussion following the next price crash. This is exciting stuff. This is the future. Disclosure : None

ETF Trends For 2016: Part 3, Management Fees

In part 1 of this series, we reviewed the growth of the ETF market in 2015 and introduced the series by covering currency-hedged products. In part 2 , we took a look at robo-advisors, a well-covered topic that could have a huge impact on the way ETFs are utilized. In this final piece in the ETF Trends series, we will cover management fees and the competition it causes between issuers, and a conclusion on the potential for the ETF Industry in 2016. The ETF Fee War While some issuers are creating funds for specific market niches, other issuers are taking a different approach when looking to stand out in the sea of possible funds, as articulated by Crystal Kim for Barron’s : Early this November, BlackRock (NYSE: BLK ), the largest exchange-traded fund provider by assets, trimmed fees by two to three basis points (two to three one-hundredths of a percent) on seven iShares Core ETFs. The expense ratio of the iShares Core S&P Total U.S. Stock Market (NYSEARCA: ITOT ) was taken down to 0.03%, winning the crown for cheapest ETF on the market-briefly. That is, until Schwab (NYSE: SCHW ) matched it by lowering fees by one basis point on four large-cap ETFs. The Schwab U.S. Large Cap fund (NYSEARCA: SCHX ) now stands toe-to-toe with its counterpart at iShares, fee-wise. For every $10,000 invested, the rival funds cost a mere $3. That’s cheaper than a copy of Barron’s at the newsstand. There are pieces covering the ETF price war going back to 2010, so this is by no means a new discussion topic for ETF investors. However, price wars continue to play a role in the ETF investment scene as a way to attract retail investors. The Trefis Team lays this relationship out for us: The largest avenue of growth for ETF providers over the coming years is expected to be the retail investor market, which remains extremely under-served. As retail investors are much more sensitive to expense ratios, asset managers have been trying to attract them with a string of low-cost ETFs. The following image is another from the ICI 2015 Investment Company Fact Book, showing the growth in ETF AUM by retail investors. Assets in ETFs accounted for about 11% of total net assets managed by investment companies at year-end 2014 and net issuance of ETF shares reached a record $241 billion. Click to enlarge While there are a number of funds digging deep to keep costs low in an effort to attach larger clients, the average ETF expense ratio is still 0.44%. This is mainly due to the number of active and narrow-focused funds that can still afford to charge investors more, because they are the only ones currently available in the space. But as market saturation continues, being the only player may not be a given. This is great news for investors interested in these niche offerings but aren’t willing to foot the bill at this time. For reference, the average mutual fund expense ratio is 0.70% (down from 0.90% in 2000 before ETF competition started to take hold), so it is no small feat that ETFs are as cost effective as they are today. But as issuers continue to fight for retail investors in the coming year, we should expect to continue to see expense ratios slashed. This slashing is not just good news for institutions, but the individual issuers who get to enjoy cheaper management fees as well. Concluding Thoughts For 2016: ETFs Continue To Grow When asked about the ETF industry in early 2015, Amy Belew, Global Head of ETP Research at BlackRock stated : The global ETP (Exchange-Traded Product) industry continues to grow at a double digit pace as ETPs attract a broader base of global investors than ever before. ETPs are being used by capital market participants looking for deep liquidity, to investors seeking precision exposures, to a growing segment of the market using ETFs as buy and hold investment vehicles. We are forecasting global ETP assets to double to $6 trillion over the next five years. While future trends within the ETF industry are impossible to perfectly predict, I believe this an industry that will only continue to evolve and grow to meet investors’ needs in 2016.