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Jeremy Siegel, Ph.D. The Future for Investors

Jeremy Siegel, Ph.D., The Future for Investors

Should You Bother With Government Bonds?

by Jeremy Siegel, Ph.D.

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Posted on Tuesday, May 12, 2009, 12:00AM

A few weeks ago Robert Arnott, chairman of Research Affiliates, caused quite a stir by publishing a paper in the May/June edition of the 'Journal of Indexes' entitled "Bonds: Why Bother". In the paper Arnott concludes:

"For the long-term investor, stocks are supposed to add 5 percent per year over bonds. They don't. Indeed, for 10 years, 20 years, even 40 years, ordinary long-term Treasury bonds have outpaced the broad stock market."

Arnott maintains that the long-term excess return of stocks over government bonds is only 2.5 percent, not 5 percent. Although Arnott doesn't identify the source of the 5 percent premium, he claims that it is widely used by pension plans and other investment advisers.

His conclusions are clearly designed to challenge the thesis of my book, "Stocks for the Long Run", which strongly advocates a diversified portfolio of global stocks as the overwhelming choice for long-term investors.

But a careful look at Arnott's data should not lead investors to bonds. At today's prices, stocks are even more attractive, while bonds are considerably less attractive than their historical returns. Here's why.

The Evidence

Long-term financial data has never given a 5 percent advantage to stocks over bonds. The data that I use in "Stocks for the Long Run" from 1871 to the present are virtually identical to the data Arnott uses. We differ only on the stock returns in the early 19th century, where Arnott finds much lower returns. Unfortunately, the accuracy of this earlier stock data, as even Arnott admits, is highly questionable. The well-documented data from 1871 through 2008 gives stocks a 3.2 percent per year advantage over bonds.

Although not as high as 5 percent, 3.2 percent per year is not trivial. If the long-term real, after-inflation return on stocks is 6.2 percent, and the long-term real return on bonds is 3 percent (both very close to their historical averages), then, over 30 years, a portfolio in stocks, measured in terms of purchasing power, will appreciate to a sum of more than 150 percent above that in bonds. Over 40 years, investors more than triple their money in stocks compared to bonds. (By the way, the arithmetic average return -- rather than compound return -- of stocks over bonds from 1871 through 2008 is 4.6 percentage points. This is the number the finance profession uses in the capital asset pricing model and other analytical applications.)

The Past 40 Years

Arnott additionally claims that there are long periods when stock returns fall behind bonds, and he notes that, over the past 40 years, the returns on government bonds have outpaced "the broad stock market."

But this is not true. At the bottom of the recent bear market, in March 2009, government bonds did indeed outperform the S&P 500 Index over the past 40 years. But bonds never outperformed any index that tracked the "broad stock market" that includes large as well as small stocks.

But bonds have admittedly done extraordinarily well over the past four decades. Over that time, long-term Treasuries have returned nearly 12 percent per year before inflation, and the returns on stocks ending at the bottom of the bear market in March of this year were just a few basis points lower.

But 40 years ago treasury bonds were yielding over 6.3 percent, about twice their yield today. It is mathematically impossible for government bonds to come close to matching those 12 percent returns in future decades. Stocks, on the contrary, can easily repeat their returns over the past four decades, since those returns were near their historical average.

Returns on Stocks and Bonds

Should the fact that government bonds did so well in the recent past encourage investors to invest in bonds today?

Absolutely not. In fact, it is quite likely that bonds will not only underperform stocks in the future but will also give investors negative real returns. And it is clear from examining Arnott's graph on stock and bond returns that, after long periods when stocks have trailed bonds' performance, such as in 1900 and 1941, stocks subsequently strongly outperform bonds.

Furthermore, Arnott does not discuss the extremely long periods of time where bonds have not only underperformed stocks but have given investors negative after-inflation returns. For the 55-year period from December 1925, when the well-known Ibbotson stock and bond series begins, through January 1982, total real government bond returns were negative. This means that, by rolling over in long-term government bonds, reinvesting all the coupons, and thereby taking no income, investors' bond portfolios were sinking in value.

Most strikingly, for the 40-year period from 1941 through 1981, government bond investors lost a whopping 62 percent of their value after inflation. A loss in purchasing power over this long a period has never happened in stocks. There has never even been a 20-year period when real returns in stocks have been negative. In fact, the worst 30-year real return for stocks is plus 2.6 percent per year, just slightly below the average real return investors earn with government bonds.

Looking Forward

Looking at today's markets, the forward-looking prospects for government bonds are very poor. Yields on 30-year inflation-protected bonds are 2.3 percent, and yields are only 4 percent on 30-year Treasuries. In contrast, after stocks have fallen 50 percent from their previous high, as they did in March of this year, their subsequent 30-year real returns have always been in excess of 10 percent per year.

The 40-year outperformance of government bonds over large stocks has ended. Since the March 8 lows, stocks have rallied 30 percent, while government bonds prices have fallen sharply. By April 30, the 40-year stock accumulation in the S&P 500 Index is more than 15 percent ahead of bonds and even more for the broader stock market. Years from now, we will look back at Rob Arnott's article as a turning point that marked the end of both the long bull market in bonds and the bear market in stocks.

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73 Comments

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  • paul - Wednesday, May 27, 2009, 10:12AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    The idea that bonds have had a 40 year bull market is misleading.. bonds from the late 1960's till early 1980's did worse than stocks.. the bond bull market began in early 1980's with the breaking the back of inflation,inflation is bonds natural enemy..and over the past 25 years,inflation has been kept in check. But fast forward to 2009 and it a whole role reversal of 1982..you were down the mountain of inflation in 1982..from a high.. 2009 your looking up that mountain and see what lies ahead with infllation..and no one will want to be in 3% treasuries yields if inflation hits 5% or more.. You could have real big bonds crash coming over next few years..it all depends on bonds mortal enemy-inflation

  • Martha - Wednesday, May 27, 2009, 9:49AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Mark S: Dr Siegel DID mention TIPS, in the next to last paragraph. "...forward-looking prospects for government bonds are very poor. Yields on 30-year inflation-protected bonds are 2.3 percent..." He didn't include the word Treasury but that's what he is talking about. Reading the comments, it seems that the definitions many folks use for the terms Dollar Cost Averaging and Buy And Hold are different from my own. Dollar Cost Average generally refers to what happens with 401k contributions or what you set up with a fund company for periodic contributions: buying a fixed amount on a regular schedule regardless of price. I suggest that it is also an appropriate term to describe averaging INTO AND OUT OF a stock or fund position. Portfolio rebalancing does not disqualify one as a Buy And Hold investor. I can only attest to what combining the two has done for my portfolio which remains far higher in value than my total contributions between 1993 and 2006 (when I became unemployed - now self-employed but with not much cash to spare). As steps, here's my general investing style: 1) Average in to what is hot. 2) Scrape some off the top periodically but leave an open position for future gains and/or ongoing contributions. 3) Use the scraped off part to fortify lagging positions or keep the security of some cash. Despite my investing timeline, I was lucky to miss out on the Internet bust beyond the extent to which it dragged everything down. That was just chance as my company 401k didn't offer a tech fund until just before the bust and I didn't like the valuations. Perhaps part of my general good performance since then is because I upped my contributions during the 2001-2003 collapse, bought tech fairly aggressively and small caps very aggressively. This time is different but only in degree and in the likely "shape" of the market recovery. No V recovery this time because housing and the banking system are much bigger parts of the economy and the bubble grew for a much longer period. On my portfolio spreadsheet, I am projecting 3.5% appreciation for the next 5 years, partly because I think that might be all I can achieve given the economic backdrop and partly to keep my expectations in line. I've been a net seller this year (mostly Jan and April) but reinvested the bulk of the proceeds (mostly March) in laggards that exploded higher. You can bet I'm watching this rally with sell limits in place (but no stop loss orders) to pull some profits. One thing this downturn has taught me is the value of the cash and fixed income portion of a portfolio. Starting in late 2007/early 2008, that piece got added to my plan as an investment to be built up over time. I will be 63 to 2019 and I would hate to have a 10 year cycle bite me at that point.

  • ClaudeL - Tuesday, May 26, 2009, 1:17PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Jeremy gets it right once again. Stocks are not perfect (no investment is), but they are the best way to build wealth over a lifetime. But, you have to stick to it. Use low-cost index funds, and invest regularly, whether the market is high or low. It has worked for me over the past 20 years.

  • Lukitos - Tuesday, May 26, 2009, 12:57PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    Buy both

  • TJ - Tuesday, May 26, 2009, 7:46AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Crunching numbers is an art form practice by some of the best spin doctors out there. What's the saying, "if you don't like this legal opinion get another lawyer'? Base on my research, I would have to go with Dr. Siegel spin this time. Buying bonds at these levels will get you scalped when interest rates start heading north..you don't want to be caught holding these mid-long term bonds.

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