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What (Returns) To Expect When You’re Expecting

Investing decisions should always be made in the context of your overall financial plan. And although we know short-term forecasts are futile , a retirement plan needs to include some assumptions about returns and risk over the long term. To help with this important task, my colleague Raymond Kerzérho , PWL Capital ‘s director of research, has just updated our white paper, Great Expectations: How to estimate future stock and bond returns when creating a financial plan . As we explain in the paper, there are two main approaches to estimating future stock returns. The first is to rely on a historical premium: over the last 50 years, stocks have delivered returns of about 5% above inflation, so one could simply expect that to continue. The second approach raises or lowers that expected premium depending on whether stocks are currently undervalued or overvalued. You can apply similar methods to expected bond returns, using either the long-term premium (about 2.7% over inflation) or the current yield on a benchmark index. Both methods are flawed, but an average of the two is likely to be a useful estimate. Imagine that you are doing retirement projections going out 30 years. Using an expected return of 4.5% for bonds based on their long-term average seems wildly optimistic. But on the other hand, assuming bonds will yield just 2% for the next 30 years (based on their yield today) seems unnecessarily conservative. An average of these two estimates (3.3%) is a reasonable compromise. You can dig into the paper for all the details, but here are the numbers we’re using for inflation, bonds and stocks in our plans these days: Estimated long-term returns (as of December 2015) Asset class Expected return Inflation 1.80% Canadian bonds 3.30% Canadian equities 7.10% U.S. equities 6.30% International developed equities 7.20% Emerging markets equities 9.80% Source: PWL Capital And here’s how those numbers combine in various balanced portfolios. In the table below, we’ve also included the standard deviation (a measure of volatility) for each asset mix, and the maximum drawdown (or cumulative decline) experienced in similar portfolios since 1988: Expected return and risk of various portfolios Equities/Bonds Expected Return Standard Deviation Cumulative Decline 0% / 100% 3.30% 3.90% -11% 10% / 90% 3.60% 3.80% -10% 20% / 80% 4.00% 4.00% -10% 30% / 70% 4.40% 4.50% -10% 40% / 60% 4.80% 5.30% -14% 50% / 50% 5.10% 6.20% -18% 60% / 40% 5.50% 7.20% -23% 70% / 30% 5.90% 8.20% -28% 80% / 20% 6.30% 9.20% -33% 90% / 10% 6.70% 10.30% -39% 100% / 0% 7.00% 11.40% -44% Sources: PWL Capital, Morningstar Direct How low can you go? In this new edition of our paper (which was first published almost two years ago), we’ve added a postscript to help put these numbers in context. If you’ve looked at the returns of a balanced portfolio over the long term , you may be surprised (and disappointed) by the expectations we describe in the paper. Even since the late 1980s, traditional index portfolios delivered annualized returns in excess of 7% or 8%, even with a conservative asset mix, compared with our expectation of just 5.1% for a portfolio of half stocks and half bonds. Why so gloomy? The first important point is that over the last 20 to 30 years, bonds enjoyed a long bull market as interest rates trended steadily downward (10-year Government of Canada bonds yielded close to 10% in 1988). This cannot be expected going forward, so we think it’s reasonable to plan for conservative portfolios to deliver significantly lower returns in the foreseeable future. It’s also reasonable to expect equity returns to be lower than they have been since 1988. By traditional valuation measures, stocks are relatively more expensive today: for example, the S&P 500 had a price-to-earnings ratio of 14 at the beginning of 1988, compared with 24 at the end of 2015. Finally, inflation was 4% in 1988, compared with just 1.4% in 2015. The numbers in the tables above are nominal returns, which are not adjusted for inflation. Remember that a 6% return with 2% inflation is very similar to an 8% return with 4% inflation. When viewed in terms of purchasing power, the gap between historical returns and expected future returns is not as wide as it first appears. Disclosure: Holdings include: ZRE, HXT, XRB, XMD, VAB, VTI, VXUS.

Hedged And Inverse Bond ETFs To The Rescue If Rates Rise

The behavior of the fixed income market is different this week from the last. This is because a few hawkish comments from some Fed officials completely ruled out the dovish mood felt last week after the Fed announced no rate hike in its latest meeting and cut the number of projected rate hikes for this year (read: Buy Ranked Dividend Growth ETFs in Focus after Fed Meeting ). In any case, the recent data points corroborated sturdy U.S. economic growth. Plus, comments from Atlanta Fed president Dennis Lockhart, San Francisco Fed president John Williams and Richmond Fed president Jeffrey Lacker once again stirred up the rate hike talks, going by Reuters . As per these officials, the reduced rate hike projection mainly reflected the tantrums thrown by the global financial market, which are now showing signs of cooling off. The two important indicators to measure the timing of another rate hike – labor market and inflation – are both stabilizing. San Francisco Fed president even said that he would promote a hike as early as April. Against this backdrop, speculation of a sooner-than-expected hike in the Fed interest rates is rife again. As a result, U.S. treasury yields recorded the biggest single-day rise in over a week on March 21, 2016. On March 21, yields on 10-year Treasury notes jumped 4 bps to 1.92% while yields on two-year Treasury notes rose 3 bps to 0.87%. Investors should note that fixed-income investing has enjoyed a great show so far in 2016, especially in the longer part of the yield curve, as risk-off trade sentiments have brightened the appeal for safer assets. However, the prospect of rising rates and risks to capital gains of the bond holdings have left investors jittery about the safety of their portfolio. Given the situation, many investors may pull their money out of the bond market. At a time like this, investments in U.S. bonds with significant protection from potential rising rates can be good bets. Some opportunistic investors could capitalize on this backdrop in the form of inverse ETFs too. Market Vectors Treasury-Hedged High Yield Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: THHY ) The fund seeks to replicate the price and yield performance of the Market Vectors U.S. Treasury-Hedged High Yield Bond Index. THHY has a weighted average maturity of 9.83 years while its effective duration is at negative 0.50 years. The product is high yield in nature as evident from its 30-day SEC yield of 6.04% (as of March 21, 2016). THHY charges 0.50% of expense ratio. The fund added about 5.5% in the last one month (as of March 21, 2016) (see all the junk bond ETFs here ). ProShares High Yield Interest Rate Hedged ETF (BATS: HYHG ) HYHG is another ETF which has an interest rate hedge built into its strategy as it takes a duration-matched short position in U.S. Treasury futures. Like HYGH, it also has a pretty high yield (and a modest expense ratio of just 50 basis points) of 8.77% in 30 Day SEC terms (as of February 29, 2016), indicating that this could be a safer bond and yield play for investors anxious about rising rates. This $85.1 million ETF was up 8.1% in the last one-month frame (as of March 21, 2016). ProShares Investment Grade-Interest Rate Hedged ETF (BATS: IGHG ) This investment grade fund too offers interest-hedge benefit to investors. The fund looks to track the Citi Corporate Investment Grade (Treasury Rate-Hedged) Index which comprises long positions in USD-denominated investment grade corporate bonds issued by both U.S. & foreign domiciled companies while adopting short positions in US Treasury notes or bonds of approximate equivalent duration to the investment grade bonds. The index seeks to achieve an overall effective duration of zero. Its 30-Day SEC yield stands at 3.93% (as of February 29, 2016) while it charges 30 bps in annual fees. The $135.4-million fund was up 4.4% in the last one month (as of March 21, 2016). Barclays Inverse US Treasury Aggregate ETN (NASDAQ: TAPR ) The note provides investors a unique strategy to hedge against or benefit from the rising U.S. dollar interest rates by tracking the Barclays Inverse US Treasury Futures Aggregate Index. This benchmark employs a strategy, which follows the sum of the returns of the periodically rebalanced short positions in equal face values of each of the 2-year, 5-year, 10-year, long-bond and ultra-long U.S. Treasury futures contracts. If the price of each Treasury futures contract increases or decreases by 1% of its face value, the value of index would decrease or increase by 5% over the same period. The $15.5-million fund charges 43 bps in annual fees. It added about 4.4% in the last one month (as of March 21, 2016). Link to the original post on Zacks.com