Quiz!
Question 1: In the past 10 years, how much did the S&P 500 companies grow their book values (change in price divided by change in price/book)?
- 16.2%
- 6%
- -6%
Question 2: Last time the S&P 500 had approximately today’s valuations, what was its average annual performance in the following 10 years?
- 16.2%
- 10%
- -1%
S&P 500 10-Year Returns if The Past Repeats
The S&P 500 enjoyed strong returns averaging 16.2% per year in the past 10 years. 10 years look like a long track record, enough to entice investing in the S&P 500 today, based on this data. Let’s evaluate this theory:
1. Actual book-value growth calculated at a mere 6%: What was the growth in the book value of the S&P 500 companies in the past 10 years? We can calculate it as the difference between compounding the 16.2% price increase per year and about 9.6% price/book increase per year (x2.5 going from under 2 to nearly 5), which is 6% per year. It turns out that the past 10 years were not very exciting for the S&P 500 companies.
2. Valuations declined 9.6% per year: From the most recent cycle when valuations reached today’s valuations (year 2000), they declined from about 5 to about 2 in 10 years, which is equal to -9.6% per year.
3. If the past repeats itself, we can get -3.3% annual decline for 10 years = -28% total: If the companies do as well as the past 10 years = 6% per year, and valuations revert to normal as happened last time we reached today’s valuations = -9.6% per year, we get an annual decline of -3.3% per year, and a total decline of -28%.
We don’t know what the future will actually be. But, if you are projecting the past to the future, you should prepare for material declines for the S&P 500 over the next 10 years.
Quiz Answer:
Question 1: In the past 10 years, how much did the S&P 500 companies grow their book values (change in price divided by change in price/book)?
- 16.2%
- 6% [Correct Answer]
- -6%
Question 2: Last time the S&P 500 had approximately today’s valuations, what was its average annual performance in the following 10 years?
- 16.2%
- 10%
- -1% [Correct Answer]
See article for more explanations.
Disclosures Including Backtested Performance Data