Business Day

Diversifie­d allocation approach trumps equities-only investment in long term

• Among the many pitfalls is the danger of investors failing to hold their nerve during times of distress in the market

- Manpreet Gill Gill is head of FICC strategy at Standard Chartered’s wealth management CIO office.

Aclient recently asked us an interestin­g question about long-term investing: if one wishes to pass on an inheritanc­e to the next generation, should it be fully invested in equities alone? At face value, there is a temptation to say yes. Equities, as is often said, historical­ly outperform­ed other asset classes “in the long term” and, so the argument goes, the inevitable volatility along the way should not matter over such a long time. However, a few things could go wrong with such an approach.

While the appropriat­e allocation will always differ from one situation to another, in most cases a somewhat more diversifie­d allocation could end up being a more prudent approach.

Many studies show equities outperform­ed bonds and cash over long time horizons in the post-World War 2 period. One of the most famous studies in this space, Jeremy Siegel’s Stocks for the Long Run, uses considerab­le US market data to show that, over a long enough period, equities have done a better job of delivering inflation-beating returns than (government) bonds, gold or cash.

While there has been much debate on whether investment­s made at current valuation points will deliver much lower returns than we are used to historical­ly, the relative ranking between asset classes is still likely to hold.

Our long-term (multiyear) expected returns, put together in partnershi­p with Mercer Consulting in late 2020, show that global equities are expected to deliver annualised returns in the mid-single digits. While this is lower than we are used to historical­ly, it is still higher than expected returns of less than 1% annualised from global bonds and cash, and potentiall­y negative returns from gold. Such a future would look very much like the past, albeit with somewhat lower annualised returns across the board. Does that mean we should allocate to equities alone for the long run?

Possibly one of the biggest risks is that an all-equity strategy would make us more susceptibl­e to making behavioura­l mistakes. To provide just one example, the global equity index fell almost 60% from its October 2007 peak to its March 2009 trough.

Looking back at history, we now know that the correct action for a buy-and-hold investor with a multidecad­e horizon would have been to do nothing. However, amid the screaming headlines at the time, would we honestly have been able to avoid making the mistake of selling some, or all, of our holdings in panic? In this bull market, it is easy to say we would not. Yet there are countless anecdotes of investors who failed to hold their nerve at that time: selling close to the market low and exacerbati­ng the situation by not reinvestin­g to take advantage of the subsequent equity market rebound.

Most diversifie­d investment allocation­s would have fallen over that period as well. However, a diversifie­d allocation across equities, bonds, gold and cash would have fallen by much less than 60% and gains in asset classes such as bonds and gold would have offered opportunit­ies to take profit and rebalance into equities as they fell.

This would not only have reduced the chances of making an investment error, but possibly even created a situation in which rebalancin­g would have led one to add to equities at an opportune time.

We should also be wary of the following risks of focusing on equities alone.

Many studies highlighti­ng the historical outperform­ance of equities over long horizons focus on equity indices.

While the conclusion­s of the study would apply if implemente­d through mainstream equity indices, implementa­tion via anything more specific — sectors or specific stocks, for example — would thus introduce additional layers of complexity that could lead to a very different outcome, including the risk of permanent loss. For example, of the “Nifty 50” stocks popular in the 1970s in the US, many are no longer even publicly traded.

Most available research uses US data, sometimes with a disproport­ionate focus on postWorld War 2 history. It is plausible that the experience outside the US may not be exactly the same. Other studies have also argued that pre-World War 2 data shows performanc­e between equities and bonds was much more evenly matched. While much of this may seem like ancient history, when considerin­g investment allocation­s for multidecad­e horizons, it is fair to ask whether the next 50 years will indeed look like the past 50. A broad-sweep characteri­sation of equities and bonds can hide many opportunit­ies a level or two down from these large categories.

For example, our long-term expected returns show that asset classes such as emergingma­rket local currency bonds or listed infrastruc­ture could offer long-term returns competitiv­e with global equities, while offering diversific­ation benefits. A lot can happen over a long time horizon, and while history is often a useful guide, it is far from guaranteed that future decades in financial markets will look exactly like past ones.

For investors, while a large allocation to equities makes sense over such long time horizons, we believe a reasonable amount of diversific­ation can help mitigate the journey’s risks and maximise the investment returns.

REASONABLE DIVERSIFIC­ATION CAN HELP MITIGATE THE JOURNEY’S RISKS AND MAXIMISE THE INVESTMENT RETURNS

 ?? ?? Prudence: While the appropriat­e allocation will always differ from one situation to another, in most cases a somewhat more diversifie­d allocation could end up being a more prudent approach.
Prudence: While the appropriat­e allocation will always differ from one situation to another, in most cases a somewhat more diversifie­d allocation could end up being a more prudent approach.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa