Goldman Sachs The fact that the S&P 500 will deliver annual nominal total returns of 3% over the next 10 years has received a lot of attention. (Read TKer’s perspective and .)
I think Ben Carlson from Ritholtz Wealth Management BEST: “It’s rare to see such low 10-year returns, but it can happen. Nearly 9% of all rolling 10-year annualized returns have been 3% or less…so this is unlikely.” But it is possible.
Investors may want to hear a more definitive point of view. but These types of inaccurate assessments are the best we can do when we manage our expectations.
However, last week came with many on Wall Street backing away from Goldman’s forecasts.
JPMorgan Asset Management (JPMAM) expects US large-cap stocks to deliver an “annual return of 6.7% over the next 10 to 15 years.” .
“I feel more confident in our numbers than theirs over the next decade,” said David Kelly of JPMAM . “But overall, we think U.S. companies are outliers — they have sharp stances and are very good at increasing margins.”
“In our opinion, even Goldman “We may not be optimistic enough,” Yardeni said . “If the productivity growth boom continues through the end of the decade and into the 2030s, as we expect, the average annual return for the S&P 500 should at least match the 6% to 7% achieved since the early 1990s. It should be closer to 11% including reinvested profits.
“In our view, there is unlikely to be a lost decade on the horizon for US stocks if earnings and dividends continue to grow at a strong pace supported by higher margins thanks to better technology-led productivity growth,” Yardeni said.
Nicholas Colas, co-founder of Datatrek Research, is encouraged by the current state of the stock market and where it could be headed.
“The S&P 500 begins the next decade filled with profitable global companies, and there are more in the pipeline,” Colas wrote on Monday. “Ratings reflect that, but they can’t know what the future holds.”
He believes that “the next decade will see S&P returns at least as strong as the long-term average of 10.6%, and perhaps better.”
Colas noted that historical cases in which returns were less than 3% “always involved very specific triggers that explained those below-average returns.” The Great Depression, the oil shock of the 1970s and its aftermath, and the global financial crisis were all linked to these low returns. -Year returns.
Comments are closed, but trackbacks and pingbacks are open.