Monday, March 16, 2009

History is no Guide

Commentary: Don't let history be your guide to investing - CNN.com

The following information is quite interesting:

Historically, stocks have produced the greatest long-term return of any financial asset, and "stocks for the long term" was the traditional mantra.

The thinking was that investors took on a worthwhile risk by putting money in stocks rather than taking the guaranteed interest on a U.S. Treasury bond. The idea was that the risk would be justified by stocks posting a better return than bonds. But by the end of 2008, for the first time ever, we saw a 25-year period in which long-term U.S. Treasury bonds actually outperformed the Standard & Poor's 500 stocks

So are bonds a good bet now?

A word of warning about long-term Treasury bonds. I think rates are likely to rise, probably quite sharply, over the next few years, which would clobber the prices of existing bonds. My reasoning: As the world financial panic (which has turned Treasury securities into a supposed safe haven) abates and the impact of huge U.S. government budget deficits is felt as the government has to sell vast amounts of bonds to raise money, rates have nowhere to go but up.

Diversify, Diversify, Diversify ...


1 comment:

  1. Frank Roellinger4:14 PM

    Hi Bill, I just found this. Very interesting that it was posted very close to the beginning of one of the biggest bull markets in history!

    History does repeat itself in the stock market, in the sense that long term trends recur. In fact, "...the existence of trends [is] one of the most statistically significant anomalies in financial markets." So states this academically rigorous article:

    http://arxiv.org/pdf/1404.3274v1.pdf

    Here is how I take advantage of this fact, illustrated by an out-of-sample test over more than 55 years which quite handily beats buy and hold of the S&P 500:

    http://sixfigureinvesting.com/2013/09/modified-davis-method/

    2016 was a better year for this method than 84% of all years since 1960, returning nearly 30%.

    Happy New Year! -- Frank

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