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http://www.pimco.com/ca/bonds_commentary_investment_outlook_0902.htm
Investment Outlook
Bill Gross | September 2002
Dow 5,000
Okay, so what's a bond guy doing talking about the stock market again?
Shouldn't he stick to his "knitting?" Isn't he really just an equity
transvestite in disguise? A frustrated stock wannabe who couldn't get a job in
the early 1970s and took the best thing he could find - A Bond Manager? Yeah,
well maybe, but then again maybe you owners and managers of stocks could
benefit from a different perspective. We already "know" bonds are going to
yield/return 5% or so over the next umptyump years. How about asking the same
question for stocks? Afraid of the answer?
My message is as follows: stocks stink and will continue to do so until they're
priced appropriately, probably somewhere around Dow 5,000, S&P 650, or NASDAQ
God knows where. Now I guess I'm on somewhat of a rant here but come on people
get a hold of yourselves. Earnings have been phonied up for years and the
market still sells at high multiples of phony earnings. Dividends and dividend
increases have been miserly to say the least for several decades now and you've
been hoodwinked into believing the CORPORATION should hold on to them for you
so that they can convert them into capital gains and save you taxes. Companies
have been diluting your equity via stock options claiming that management needs
incentives of millions of dollars just to get up in the morning and come in to
work. Then they pick you off by trading on insider information, selling shares
before the bad news hits and you have a chance to get out. If you try to get a
hot IPO you find all the shares are taken - by Bernie Ebbers. Come on
stockholders of America, are you naïve, stupid, masochistic, or better yet, in
this for the "long run?" Ah, that's it, you own stocks for the "long run." We
bond managers may have had a few good relative years but who can deny Stocks
for the Long Run? Not Jeremy Siegel, not Peter Lynch, maybe not even Bill Gross
if you stretch the time period long enough - 20, 30, 40 years. But short of
that, stocks can be, and often have been poor investments. The return on them
depends significantly on their beginning valuation and right now valuation
remains poor. Dow 5,000 is more reasonable. Let's see why.
To present my case I resort to a panel of expert witnesses, academicians and
financial theorists with a lot more brainpower than I have. Over the past
several years, in contrast to the more bullish and optimistic Jeremy Siegel, or
Jim Glassman of Dow 36,000 fame, there have been several more realistic and
down to earth experts that speak to low, not high, equity returns over the
foreseeable future. Their primary thesis is not that the U.S. economy is headed
for a depression or that the economic sky is falling but that even under near
normal economic growth rates, the U.S. stock market is priced at current levels
to return less than has been historically "required." Grow those earnings they
say (although let's be sure what they are) at near historic rates and you'll
still need much lower prices in order to offer stock investors a chance at
returns that exceed corporate bonds or even inflation protected Treasuries -
TIPS. Many of you readers may be familiar with Peter Bernstein via his books on
risk or even gold, but recently he teamed up with common sense and actuarial
wizard Rob Arnott to produce a brilliant piece of research entitled What Risk
Premium is Normal? In addition, the trio of Elroy Dimson, Paul Marsh, and Mike
Staunton have written a book that may have equaled or perhaps surpassed
Siegel's, as well as Ibbotson and Sinquefields' study of world wealth, with
their Triumph of the Optimists, a 101-year survey of investment returns. I
shall refer to both sets of authors frequently over the next few pages.
Let me say first of all that it is difficult to keep this simple. I've read,
reread and near-memorized both of these research gems. Their contents seem
simple to me now but they were not at the beginning, so I must assume the same
for most of you. Besides, you have minutes not months to get my drift, and if I
am to help you I must inform you quickly and yet simply, even leaving some
critical think pieces out, in order to do so. Forward. The crux of the
valuation argument is this: Stocks historically return more than almost all
other alternative investments but only when priced right when the race begins.
If you start from day one with P/E's too high or importantly, dividends too
low, you will not obtain equity returns in excess of bonds. Seems simple
enough. People know that if they pay twice the market price for their house,
that it will take years and years to get their money or their equity out.
Somehow though when it comes to stocks they forget.
Maybe they forget because it's hard to know at any point what a stock or a
stock market should be worth. Here's some help. Jeremy Siegel, "DMS" (author's
Dimson, Marsh and Staunton), as well as "B&A" (Bernstein and Arnott) all pretty
much agree that over the past 100 years U.S. stocks have provided a real return
(after inflation) of about 6.7%. While that return has been higher than for
most other countries shown in the "DMS" chart below, in none of the countries
did stocks fail to outperform bonds over the past century and that includes
several stock markets, which virtually disappeared during WWI and WWII. The
average real return for the 16 countries shown was 5.1%. Remember that these
returns are ex-inflation, so that arguments for higher nominal returns in
inflationary periods and lower nominal returns during times of low inflation
are neutralized.
Using the commonsensical approach that "100 years of the past" is "100 years of
prologue" an investor might reasonably expect to have future real returns come
close to 6.7% in the U.S. and 5.1% globally. Remember though, to get those same
returns with similar economic growth you have to start at the same valuation
point as an investor did in 1900. Maybe the market was super cheap then and
very expensive now. Makes a difference, and as you're about to find out, that
was exactly the case. Although 1900's stock market would provide 6.7% real over
the next century, turns out it was because of some reasons that you probably
wouldn't think of right off the top of your noggin. Most investors would say it
was because earnings grew that much, so stock prices just naturally followed
like a little puppy dog at the heels of its master. Wrong. The two primary
components of this 6.7% real return were 1) a beginning dividend yield of 4.2%
and 2) rising valuation (P/E's going up). Real earnings growth, or its twin,
real dividend growth, comes in a poor third. Over those same 100 years, real
dividends managed to grow at only .6% as seen in the "DMS" chart below.
Ninety percent of the market's real return then came from factors other than
earnings growth. Most of it came from the initial dividend yield.
And so dear reader, in an attempt to keep this simple and help you to plough
through what can get most complicated, the primary element in determining how a
stock market is priced - whether it's cheap or expensive - is its yield. At
4.2% in 1900, the market needed an additional 2.0% annual push from a tripling
of P/E ratios over the century to get near that 6.7% real return. Earnings
growth was a pathetically small factor. How could that be? As Peter Lynch said
in a recent CNBC interview when asked about the future of the stock market,
"Well, since WWII corporate profits have grown about 8 or 9 percent a year…I
don't see why that won't (sic) be different the next 50 years," implying that
stock prices would do the same or more. The problem is, as Peter Bernstein
points out in an August 2002 research piece entitled The Trouble With Earnings,
at least 50% of the earnings growth over the past 40 years has been earnings of
the "mystical" kind - pro forma, operating, phonied up. Those "earnings" didn't
flow through to dividends. In addition a goodly portion of Lynch's 8-9
percent - and the faster portion it turns out - has come from newly created
companies that are not even listed and available for purchase by outside
investors. The balance after subtracting 4 percent inflation… has been near the
.6% real growth of the past 100 years or the .8% of the past 50 years. You are
being hoodwinked America. You pays your money and you gets…you gets…a dividend
yield and a little bit of dividend growth: .6% real over the last 100 years.
Where does that leave us (you - not me - I'm out of the market) today? Well,
most large market indices (NYSE, Wilshire 5000) yield somewhere in the area of
1.7%. Whoa now, did I say 1.7%? Yes siree. And despite the claims for higher
implied yields due to stock buybacks (mostly fallacious) even if we grant an
"implied" yield of 2.0% to the market, it's hard to see how we can get to our
6.7% real return target. Say real dividends grow at 2.0% for the next 100 years
instead of .6%. Not sure why that would be but let's just say that to be more
than fair. If so, then a 2% implied dividend yield, plus 2% real dividend
growth, only equals 4% - far short of our hoped for or perhaps required 6.7% of
the past 100 years. How to get there? Well, absent faster economic growth which
would lead to even higher dividend growth than I've already generously granted,
the only way to make that happen is to start with a yield of 4.7% and the only
way to do that would be to cut the market averages in half or more. Dow 4,000
would do it as would S&P 400.
Now to be fair and truthful to B&A and DMS, both assert that the 6.7% real
return over the past 100 years should never have been the "expected" return
anyway. After all, 2.0% of that 6.7% came from a tripling of P/E ratios which
is really not rational to expect again over the next century. A rather
unscientific adjustment, which neither DMS nor B&A employ, would be to use the
100-year real return from equities without the tripling effect, or 4.7%. If so,
with 2% real dividend growth, stock markets need to yield 2.7% and would fall
by 20% in order to get there. At Dow 7,000 or so we would be fairly priced.
B&A and DMS approach it a little differently though, using an historical
"equity risk premium" to get to an appropriate starting point valuation. This
equity risk premium is really the excess return that investors require over and
above real Treasury yields (best measured by TIPS yielding nearly 3.0%) to
compensate them for the increased volatility and increased risk of owning
stocks. Both B&A and DMS calculate that risk premium should be roughly 2.4%
when measured against 30-year TIPS. Let me though, introduce my final chart
that you can play with yourself. This chart's horizontal axis tracks the equity
risk premium that you, the investor, would be satisfied with. Ask yourself
this: How much more real return over and above 30-year Government guaranteed
TIPS do you need to compensate you for owning stocks? If you say nothing, then
the sky's the limit - Glassman theorized just this when writing Dow 36,000. If
however, you have some common sense and know that even over the long term
there's a decent chance of something going haywire - war, depressions,
deflation, etc. - then you'll need something more than the government
guaranteed TIPS rate of 3.0% to buy stocks. B&A and DMS say it has been and
should be an extra 2.4% in which case the DOW is worth 5,000 on this chart. But
put in your own number and see what value you get.
If you've got even half of your marbles left, I'll bet you your number is
nowhere near today's level of 8,500. That means that in order to get a real
return sufficiently higher than 3.0% to meet your "risk premium" requirements
the market has to go down before it can go up again. And when it starts to go
up again, it's only going to produce inflation adjusted, real returns of 5%
over the long run if it mimics what the market has returned over the past 100
years (absent a tripling of P/E ratios). Until then, stocks are losers and
anyone who owns too many of them will be losers too. As Warren Buffett has
said, in the short run the stock market is a voting machine but in the long run
it's a weighing machine. Despite being down nearly 50% from its highs, this
market remains overweight. Forget about "Stocks for the Long Run" until they
slim down to the point from which even yours truly can admit that they will
outperform the bond market. And if some of this is confusing, just remember
this: the market needs to yield close to 3.5% before it approaches fair value,
and that means DOW 5,000. While stocks are the best bet over the very long
term, they will not be, nor will they beat bond returns until they begin the
race from a fair valuation. Since in the short-term the stock market is a
voting machine/popularity contest, it's impossible to say exactly when, if
ever, this fair valuation mark of approximately Dow 5,000 will be reached. If
it doesn't get there however, future real equity returns will be lower than 5%,
and a diversified portfolio of government, mortgage, and corporate bonds will
be the best performing asset class for years to come. And oh, one large caveat.
If the bond market continues to rally and the Fed can successfully engineer a
2% long-term TIPS rate instead of 3%, then stock markets are actually within
10% of fair valuation. That, however, would continue to support the case for
bonds as the better performing asset class. Sounds like an opening for a bond
geek to write Bonds for the Long Run. Count me out - one book's enough for me.
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