Register For Our Mailing List

Register to receive our free weekly newsletter including editorials.

Home / 534

The far-flung past as prologue

Does a fish know it’s swimming in water? Probably not until it’s no longer submerged. This illustrates that it can be difficult to know — never mind understand — the paradigm you’re living in until there is an abrupt change.

The water we used to swim in

Interest rates are the reward for savers foregoing the ability to consume in the present. Since all economic and financial activity takes place across time, the world requires positive rates. Without positive interest rates, market signals in the economy and financial markets become distorted. All projects are funded, asset values inflate and capital is misallocated.

In the 2010s, the economic and financial market waters were comprised of suppressed rates that, at some points, reached the zero-bound and into negative territory. Financial markets swam in waters comprised of extraordinary returns, below normal volatility and lower than average correlation and thus historically good Sharpe ratios.

Until 2022, when the water (or paradigm) shifted.

Three decades versus three centuries

Still reeling from the interest rate shock of 2022, investors have been forced to confront what looks like an anomaly: the positive correlation between stocks and bonds.

However, the painful reality is that 2022 wasn’t so anomalous when viewed through a long-term prism. It was an example of the dangers of allowing the recent past to obscure protracted historical patterns. The water, or paradigm, is merely shifting back to its natural form as the hurdle rate for all investments, interest rates, has begun its normalization process.

In a November 2021 piece titled Respecting Three Centuries of Correlation, we highlighted the positive long-term correlation between nominal stock and bond returns and warned that recent decades of negative correlation were unsustainable. The historic correlation is illustrated below, going back three centuries in the United Kingdom and two in the United States.

Long-term positive correlation explained

Like the fish in the parable, this comes as a surprise to many today because it’s not what their experience has taught them. And it’s not what is taught in business schools (but should be).

Taking a step back, investors bunch varying investments into labels such as stocks and bonds, public and private debt, growth and value equities, etc. While these distinctions are important, material and worthwhile, what often gets lost is that they all ultimately rely on the hope or promise of cash flows.

Every investment requires a commitment of capital from a saver in exchange for future returns that compensates them for not only the commitment of time but also the risk that the project may fail. When viewing sub-asset classes in this way, there is one asset class: cash flows. The more predictable or stable the future cash flows, the lower the volatility that asset should exhibit relative to assets with greater time commitment and cash flow risk. This is where the benefits of diversification normally come from: a portfolio whose sources of returns (i.e., future cash flows) are diversified across time and risk levels.

While there have been and will remain diversification benefits between equities and fixed income securities, those benefits have been overstated in recent decades due to low inflation and artificially suppressed interest rates. Investors who were allocated across stocks and bonds not only enjoyed outsized returns with abnormally low volatility, but also uniquely high risk-adjusted returns, in part due to this negative but unsustainable negative covariance.

Why is this important?

The inflation and interest rate shock of 2022 has changed the water.

While we can’t predict the terminal value of real interest rates, we’re certainly closer to a more normal rate environment than before, which would imply a normalization of the long-run stock/bond relationship. Investors who have targeted future Sharpe or information ratios based on the recent past may be set up for underperformance.

What can we do?

As time passes, areas where capital was misallocated will be exposed. For instance, projects and cash flows that were a function of financial gearing will crumble under the weight of high debt burdens and bad projects will need to be recapitalized.

While correlations of asset classes such as stocks and bonds normalize, the importance of security selection and manager allocation will matter immensely, as these not only become drivers of return but also larger drivers of covariance and portfolio diversity.

Conclusion

As a famous investor once said, price is what you pay, but value is what you get.

In our view, while prices are high, the value of some financial assets is too low. The paradigm of suppressed capital costs and low labour expense has changed. There will be fish that will, at best, fall down the food chain and others that, at worst, get eaten. Conversely, the fish with the ability to deliver cash flows to investors that are less dependent on the prior regime may become scarce assets, and why we think the type of fish you have in your portfolio will be what matters in this new, but old, paradigm.

 

Robert M. Almeida is a Global Investment Strategist and Portfolio Manager at MFS Investment Management. This article is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered investment advice or a recommendation to invest in any security or to adopt any investment strategy. Comments, opinions and analysis are rendered as of the date given and may change without notice due to market conditions and other factors. This article is issued in Australia by MFS International Australia Pty Ltd (ABN 68 607 579 537, AFSL 485343), a sponsor of Firstlinks.

For more articles and papers from MFS, please click here.

Unless otherwise indicated, logos and product and service names are trademarks of MFS® and its affiliates and may be registered in certain countries.

 

RELATED ARTICLES

Passive investing has risks too

Mid-caps deserve a closer look

Beware the hit to earnings in 2023

banner

Most viewed in recent weeks

Five months on from cancer diagnosis

Life has radically shifted with my brain cancer, and I don’t know if it will ever be the same again. After decades of writing and a dozen years with Firstlinks, I still want to contribute, but exactly how and when I do that is unclear.

Uncomfortable truths: The real cost of living in retirement

How useful are the retirement savings and spending targets put out by various groups such as ASFA? Not very, and it's reducing the ability of ordinary retirees to fully understand their retirement income options.

Is Australia ready for its population growth over the next decade?

Australia will have 3.7 million more people in a decade's time, though the growth won't be evenly distributed. Over 85s will see the fastest growth, while the number of younger people will barely rise. 

The public servants demanding $3m super tax exemption

The $3 million super tax will capture retired, and soon to retire, public servants and politicians who are members of defined benefit superannuation schemes. Lobbying efforts for exemptions to the tax are intensifying.

20 US stocks to buy and hold forever

Recently, I compiled a list of ASX stocks that you could buy and hold forever. Here’s a follow-up list of US stocks that you could own indefinitely, including well-known names like Microsoft, as well as lesser-known gems.

The challenges of retirement aren’t just financial

Debates about retirement tend to focus on the financial aspects: income, tax, estates, wills, and the like. Less attention is paid to the psychological challenges of retirement, which can often be more demanding.

Latest Updates

Shares

Are term deposits attractive right now?

If you’re like me, you may have put money into term deposits over the past year and it’s time to decide whether to roll them over or look elsewhere. Here are the pros and cons of cash versus other assets right now.

Retirement

How retiree spending plummets as we age

There's been little debate on how spending changes as people progress through retirement. Yet, it's a critical issue as it can have a significant impact on the level of savings required at the point of retirement.

Estate planning made simple, Part I

Every year, millions of dollars are spent on legal fees, and thousands of hours are wasted on family disputes - all because of poor estate planning. Here's a guide to a key part of estate planning - making an effective will.

Investment strategies

Markets are about to get a whole lot harder

As the world shifts away from one of artificially suppressed interest rates and cheap manufacturing, investors will need to carefully consider how companies are positioned to navigate the new higher-cost paradigm.

Investment strategies

Why commodities deserve a place in portfolios

2024 looks set to be another year of reflation and geopolitical uncertainty — with the latter significantly raising the tail risk of a return to problematic inflation. That’s a supportive backdrop for commodities.

Property

What’s next for Australian commercial real estate?

It's no secret that Australian commercial property has endured its most challenging period since the GFC. Yet, there are encouraging signs that the worst may be over and industry returns should improve in the medium term.

Shares

Board games: two hidden risks for stock pickers?

Allan Gray's Simon Mawhinney thinks two groups with huge influence over our public companies often fall short of helping shareholders. In this interview, Mawhinney also talks boards, takeovers, and active investing.

Sponsors

Alliances

© 2024 Morningstar, Inc. All rights reserved.

Disclaimer
The data, research and opinions provided here are for information purposes; are not an offer to buy or sell a security; and are not warranted to be correct, complete or accurate. Morningstar, its affiliates, and third-party content providers are not responsible for any investment decisions, damages or losses resulting from, or related to, the data and analyses or their use. To the extent any content is general advice, it has been prepared for clients of Morningstar Australasia Pty Ltd (ABN: 95 090 665 544, AFSL: 240892), without reference to your financial objectives, situation or needs. For more information refer to our Financial Services Guide. You should consider the advice in light of these matters and if applicable, the relevant Product Disclosure Statement before making any decision to invest. Past performance does not necessarily indicate a financial product’s future performance. To obtain advice tailored to your situation, contact a professional financial adviser. Articles are current as at date of publication.
This website contains information and opinions provided by third parties. Inclusion of this information does not necessarily represent Morningstar’s positions, strategies or opinions and should not be considered an endorsement by Morningstar.