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Expected Portfolio Returns – There Are No Guarantees

19th January 2016

This article was originally published on Quadrant Group’s website. Quadrant Group was acquired by Progeny in March 2017.

Estimating future asset class and portfolio returns is an important – if tricky – part of the financial planning process. Advisers may provide clients with an ‘expected’ rate of return for a portfolio as a guide to what it might deliver, on average, over time. These forward looking assumptions are best based on a horizon of 20 years or more. Trying to make short-term guesstimates of market returns in the next year or two would be speculation. In a statistical sense, the ‘expected’ return is the average of possible returns weighted by their likelihood of occurring, not the only outcome that may occur.

At its simplest, the expected return of an investor’s portfolio is the sum of the expected returns of each asset class in the portfolio weighted by the allocation made to it. The one thing this expected return is not, is any form of promise or guarantee that this level of return will be delivered consistently, year in, year out. The one certainty in investing is the uncertainty of short-term market returns.

The hard part is making long-term returns assumptions for each asset class. No crystal balls exist to see into the future. In fact, it is the uncertainty of outcome that investors face that delivers returns; higher returns come with greater outcome uncertainty. It is inevitable that any assumptions made will be approximations. That does not mean that they cannot be reasonable and useful when based on sound analysis.

Fortunately investors have a relatively long period of data for developed market equities, bonds and cash from 1900. This helps to provide insight into both the long-term returns and interim uncertainty of being an owner of companies or as a lender. The long-run real returns for bonds and equities are around 2% and 5% respectively1, yet over the past 15 years, equities have done poorly and bonds exceptionally well, compared to their long-run averages. It is evident that extrapolating short-term data is naïve at best.

Using rules of thumb estimates for future equity returns

A commonly used rule of thumb for equity returns works on the basis that the return from equities is made up of the expected returns of enterprise (dividends received and the long-term real growth in earnings) and speculation (the change in the price that investors are willing to pay for each £1 of earnings, reflected in the price-to-earning or P/E ratio). In the very long-term, market returns must equal the returns of enterprise.

Real return = [Current dividend yield] + [Real growth in earnings] +/- [Change in P/E]

Given a dividend yield of 2-3% and long-term real growth in earnings of around 2-3%, a real return in the region of 5% is not unreasonable for developed market equity. Financial planning decisions made on assumptions materially higher than this should be viewed with a high degree of caution. Value and smaller companies, as well as emerging markets have higher expected returns – perhaps 1% to 2% higher – than broad developed equity markets, raising expected returns at a portfolio level.

Using rules of thumb estimates for future bond returns

A simple rule of thumb for bonds is that government bond yields tend to be about 0.5% to 0.75% below nominal GDP. One can extrapolate from this that real yields should be around the same level below real GDP growth. Developed economies are expected to grow between 2% to 3% in real terms over the longer-term. On this basis a 2% real yield assumption is not unreasonable over the longer term.

Using a good dose of common sense

Finally, it is important to remember that no-one has a crystal ball and expected returns come with a high degree of uncertainty in the short-term and maybe even the longer term. Astute advisers and investors should run a number of returns scenarios to establish what this uncertainty would mean to them. Halving expected portfolio returns is not a bad starting point for a basic stress test.

A word of caution

Sadly, it is not unusual to hear stories of less scrupulous advisers and product providers tempting investors with promises of spectacular returns on their portfolio. A useful rule in investing is that if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. By and large, a return of 1% to 2% above inflation for bonds and 5% to 6% above inflation for equities is a sensible litmus test. Returns materially higher than these levels imply a material increase in the risks being taken on, which need to be fully understood.

Finally, remember not to beat up on your adviser because your portfolio has not delivered its expected return since you last met up – it is not expected to!

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[1] Source: Credit Suisse Global Investment Returns Yearbook 2015.

This article does not constitute financial advice. Individuals must not rely on this information to make a financial or investment decision. Before making any decision, we recommend you consult your financial planner to take into account your particular investment objectives, financial situation and individual needs. Past performance is not a guide to future performance. The value of an investment and the income from it may go down as well as up and investors may not get back the amount originally invested. This document may include forward-looking statements that are based upon our current opinions, expectations and projections.

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