Of rising rates and
falling returns: James Saft
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[February 16, 2017]
By James Saft
(Reuters) -
Try
to hide wherever you like but periods of rising interest rates mean
lower returns.
The Federal Reserve raised rates for the first time in more than nine
years in December, and seeing as short rates are at 0.50 to 0.75
percent, investors may be facing an extended and potentially steep trip
to higher levels. U.S. inflation is now at 2.5 percent, the highest
since 2012, and hawkish testimony before lawmakers by Fed Chair Janet
Yellen has prompted traders to now see a 42 percent chance of a March
hike, up from just 30 percent Monday.
For many investors, especially those in their twenties or thirties, this
may well be their first time trying to maximize returns during a
tightening cycle.
A new study, looking at more than a century of easing and tightening
cycles, makes somewhat grim reading, pointing to the likelihood that
inflation-adjusted returns will be lower as the Fed takes rates higher.
“It is hard to identify assets that perform well in absolute terms
during hiking cycles, although we do detect relative outperformance at
such times from defensive versus cyclical stocks and from large-cap
versus small-cap stocks,” Elroy Dimson, Paul Marsh and Mike Staunton of
the London Business School write in a study carried out as part of
Credit Suisse’s annual study of global investment returns. (http://publications.credit-suisse.com/tasks/render/file/index.cfm?fileid=41C8D99B-F01F-0510-9BC5389C682E94D5)
In inflation-adjusted terms all major financial assets and all principal
real assets, like farmland and precious metals, perform less well when
rates are rising than when they are falling.
“While some sectors and asset classes are less sensitive than others to
tightening cycles, interest rate rises are accompanied by lower risk
premia, inferior industry returns, smaller rewards from many
factor-investing strategies, and reduced price appreciation for a wide
variety of real assets,” the authors write.
To measure returns in a way in which an investor who doesn’t know the
future path of rates could mimic the study uses a simple strategy. It
compares returns of an imaginary investor who buys on the day after an
initial hike and stays invested so long as rates stay the same or
continue to rise, with one who buys on the first cut and stays in until
rates rise.
GETTING REAL
In inflation-adjusted, or real terms, U.S. equity investors have made
6.2 percent annualized since 1913. When rates were falling that
annualized return is 9.3 percent but when they are rising it falls to
2.3 percent.
For U.S. bonds, real returns over the period were 2.2 percent, with a
3.6 percent return when rates were falling and just a 0.3 percent return
when they are rising.
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Traders works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) as
a television screen displays coverage of U.S. Federal Reserve
Chairman Janet Yellen, in New York, U.S., December 14, 2016.
REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
The reasons are straightforward. Higher rates make the future stream of
cash a share represents less valuable in net present terms. As for bonds
the capital value gets hit as current market rates rise compared to the
coupon on an older bond, while inflation, the underlying cause behind
tightening, eats away at the value of the yield.
And while those higher returns during periods of falling interest rates
come with higher volatility - some 25 percent higher for U.S. stocks -
returns are still better on a risk-adjusted basis. U.S. equities have a
Sharpe ratio - a standard risk-adjusted return measure - almost four
times higher during falling rate periods than when they are rising.
Real assets also do worse when rates are rising despite often being
thought of as a shelter from inflation. The study looked at 11 real
assets, from violins to real estate to wine, and found that every one
did better during periods of easing. Silver, for example, returns 8.9
percent more annualized in the two years following rate falls compared
to the two years after rate rises. For art the difference was 3.2
percent annualized.
Within equities the study did find the expected difference among
sectors, with those thought to be cyclical offering a return levered to
economic growth, differing sharply from those which are defensive and
have more stable growth. For example, looking at returns since 1926
shows that healthcare stocks, a classic defensive sector, have
outperformed the broad index by 4.5 percent annualized during rising
rate periods but have lagged slightly when rates are falling. Retail, a
cyclical sector, outperforms the index by 3 percent annualized during
periods of falling rates but lags by 2.1 percent when rates rise.
To be sure, diversification still has benefits during periods of rising
rates, as it allows investors to take on more risk than they otherwise
would. It isn’t however, a magic bullet which allows you to avoid the
lower returns which tightening cycles bring.
History, as they say, could be different this time as rates rise, but
investors ought not to bet on it.
Returns will be lower and we should all plan accordingly.
(Editing by James Dalgleish)
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