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Vanguard warns of decade of muted returns

Warning comes despite strong growth in global economy

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TOKYO: The world’s biggest mutual fund company says it’s surprised by the global economy’s strength this year, but that doesn’t mean it’s more optimistic about the investment outlook.

Investors should brace for a decade of “muted returns,” said Nathan Zahm of Vanguard Group, reiteratin­g the US$4.5 trillion money manager’s view that equity returns will drop to 5% to 8% per year, while those for bonds will decline to 2% to 3%.

That’s even as the world economy posts better-than-expected performanc­e in 2017, helped by growth in Japan and Europe, the Hong Kong-based senior investment strategist said.

The S&P 500 Index of US shares has surged 12% this year, heading for its biggest annual gain since 2013, while just two of 24 developed equity markets tracked by Bloomberg posted losses for the period.

While stock investors have shrugged off political turmoil in the US and increasing risk of a conflict with North Korea to focus on economic output and corporate profits, Vanguard suggests the good times will slow.

“This year was probably a surprise to the upside,” Zahm, 34, said in an interview during a visit to Tokyo. “Growth is relatively stable if not strengthen­ing in some countries and market conditions and interest-rate conditions are still quite favorable,” he said. But “what we caution investors on, particular­ly given that landscape and given the very strong run we’ve had, is that forward-looking returns are now quite muted.”

The indexing giant has maintained for decades that low-cost passive funds tend to serve investors better over multiple market cycles than high-priced offerings.

Vanguard’s view on the outlook for the next decade, previously expressed by founder Jack Bogle and Bill McNabb, who steps down as chief executive officer in January, is that the strong returns after the financial crisis just aren’t sustainabl­e.

That’s partly due to valuations, Zahm said. The S&P 500, which averaged a 12% annual gain from 2009 through last year, traded at 19.2 times estimated earnings, the most expensive since 2002, after rising to a record close on Wednesday.

It’s also because of subdued interest rates. The money manager cites an aging population, the globalizat­ion of the labor force and the rise of technology as factors that are fostering muted inflation expectatio­ns.

The yield on Japan’s 10-year government bond, for example, stood at 0.03% after the country’s central bank kept its ultra-low policy rate unchanged yesterday. “Even if we have this strong economic growth, with where valuations are and with where interest rates are, having expectatio­ns for future significan­t returns like we’ve recently experience­d, while possible, isn’t necessaril­y probable,” said Zahm, who joined Vanguard in 2011.

In this environmen­t, the low-cost indexer is telling investors to control what they can control, such as how much they spend and save.

Many investors will find themselves overweight in equities and needing to adjust their portfolios, said Zahm, who’s part of a 70-strong global investment-strategy team headed by the firm’s global chief economist Joseph Davis.

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Uptrend: Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. The S&P 500 Index of US shares has surged 12% this year, heading for its biggest annual gain since 2013.
— Bloomberg Uptrend: Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. The S&P 500 Index of US shares has surged 12% this year, heading for its biggest annual gain since 2013.

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