|
One of the most fundamental decisions faced by every investor
is how to allocate a portfolio between stocks and bonds (or the way
we do it, between equity funds and bond funds). Some investors
prefer a total equity portfolio for its superior growth prospects.
Others invest exclusively in fixed-income instruments, preferring to
completely avoid the risks of the stock market. But most people seem
more comfortable somewhere in between those two extremes.
Yet the question remains: how far should you go in one
direction or the other? One good approach is that of our Worldwide
Balanced Portfolio, which splits all investments equally between
stocks and bonds, U.S. and international, large and small, and value
and growth. We believe this gives investors excellent representation
in all the major markets. It’s also very easy to understand. No
matter what part of the investment world is "hot" at the moment,
such a portfolio will take advantage of it.
Table: Balanced Asset Class Portfolios
(1970-2004) 
Of course not everybody wants to split things 50/50, and there
is a wide range of other possibilities. You will see some examples
in this large table of performance figures. The table shows the
results of 33 years of buy-and-hold investments allocated between
stocks and bonds in 10-percent increments, from all bonds (on the
left) to all stocks (on the right). In the final column, you’ll see
the annual performance of the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, a
standard equity benchmark that most investors agree is tough to
beat.
At first glance, this table looks pretty daunting.
It contains 396 annual performance figures, each one representing
what investors got, or would have gotten, in a particular year using
a specific allocation strategy. In addition, we include another 84
figures, seven at the bottom of each column, summarizing the results
of each strategy. But if you let me walk you through this table,
you’ll find it can be an excellent tool for deciding how to allocate
your assets between equity and fixed-income securities.
WHAT IS THIS TABLE?
The table shows the results of investments made in a
particular group of indexes and index mutual funds that are not
available to the public except through registered investment
advisors (including Merriman Capital
Management). The funds are managed by Dimensional Fund Advisors
(DFA), a company whose work is based on some of the finest academic
research ever done on investment returns. This research, the
indexes, and the optimum way to put them together is described in The
Ultimate Buy-and-Hold
Strategy.
To refresh your memory, this strategy uses no-load mutual funds
to create a sophisticated asset allocation model with worldwide
diversification balanced between large and small caps stocks with an
emphasis on "value" stocks. Every fund follows an index to track its
particular market segment, just as a number of public mutual funds
mirror the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index.
In The
Ultimate Buy-and-Hold Strategy, we started by
discussing an allocation of 60 percent of assets to equities and the
other 40 percent in fixed-income funds. You’ll see the results of
this allocation in the column in the large table marked "60% Equity
Portfolio."
Looking back at the large table, if you trace the numbers in
that column from the top, you’ll see the year-by-year performance of
the 60/40 Strategy from 1970 (up 3 percent) through 2002 (down 3.7
percent). Continuing downward, you’ll see that this strategy
produced a compound rate of return of 11.6 percent; its standard
deviation, a measure of volatility in which lower numbers mean lower
volatility, was 10.1 percent. To put that 10.1 percent figure in
context, scan over to the far right hand column and you’ll see that
the S&P 500 had a standard deviation of 17.7 percent. This means
that this 60/40 split of stocks and bonds carried approximately 57
percent of the volatility of the overall U.S. stock market.
While you’re at it, put one finger on the "Annual Return" line
(this is a compounded rate of return) of the 60/40 column and
another finger on the same line of the Standard & Poor’s 500
Index column. You’ll see that The Ultimate Buy-and-Hold Strategy
60/40 combo improved the performance of the U.S. stock market by 0.8
percentage points, or 7.4 percent – while reducing the volatility by
more than 40 percent.
THE BEST OF TIMES, THE WORST OF
TIMES
If you’re with me so far, you know how to read this table, and
you’ve probably scanned a few of the other columns as well. But
before we go on, look at the bottom five lines of each column. These
figures show, in percentage terms, the biggest losses you would have
sustained for each allocation. These are the worst month, the worst
quarter and the worst one, three, and five-year periods. Note that
these are not calendar years. For these lines in this table, any
"worst" period could start at the beginning of any month.
These figures are useful because they show the losses you must
be willing and able to tolerate in order to carry through your
strategy. This isn’t pleasant territory, but you’ll be far better
off to spend some time with this topic than to just concentrate on
the fabulous returns you might get. In real life, you’ll never get
those returns if you don’t stick with the program you select. And
you won’t stick with the program if the periodic losses push you out
of your comfort zone. When that happens, you’re likely to bail out
and sell your holdings at the worst possible time, when things look
bleak and you’ve sustained some significant losses. You’ll have a
tough time recovering, both financially and emotionally.
The reason we put so much attention on measuring and managing
risks is that this is exactly where so many investors get tripped
up. Spend some time thinking about how much of your portfolio you
are really willing to lose in a month, a quarter, or a year. Run
your fingers back and forth on those bottom lines and search for a
combination of losses you think you could tolerate.
That, in fact, is what the table is all about: giving you a way
to find the column, and hence the asset allocation, that’s right for
you.
WHAT THIS TABLE TELLS ME
When I study this table, one of the first things I notice is
the difference between the 100 percent equity portfolio and the
Standard & Poor’s 500 Index. If you’re looking for high return
and low risk, you can see that the 100 percent DFA all-equity
portfolio was clearly superior to the S&P 500, with a 26 percent
improvement in compound rate of return (13.6 percent vs. 10.8
percent) and a lower standard deviation to boot.
This gives me dramatic evidence of how important it is to
diversify your investments. The all-equity DFA portfolio combines
multiple indexes, every one of which by itself has a higher
standard deviation than the S&P 500. Yet when you combine them,
they offset each other and produce a lower composite standard
deviation.
Here are two other things I notice in this table. Using the
portfolios based on the DFA strategies (net of all management fees)
gave an investor a chance to approximately equal the return of the
S&P 500 with only a 50 percent exposure to equities; and even
with 100 percent in equities, the DFA portfolios still had less
volatility than the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index.
If you are looking only for the highest performance on this
table, you’ve found it in the all-equity DFA portfolio, and that’s a
strategy we recommend to clients who can tolerate the risks. We
think those risks are very reasonable for that performance. But 13.6
percent a year may be more than you need to meet your goals. And the
risks may be too high for you, especially that 36.5 percent loss in
the all-equity DFA portfolio in the worst 12-month period during
these 33 years.
Based on many years of talking to clients and polling people
who attend my workshops, I have concluded that most retired people
regard a return of 10 to 12 percent, compounded annually, to be
satisfactory. And most people say they are willing to lose 10
percent of their assets in any given year (though certainly not year
after year!) to achieve such a return.
SEVERAL GOOD OPTIONS
The good news is that there are several combinations
in this table that exceed those specifications. On the conservative
end, the 20 percent equity portfolio produced a compound annual
return of 9.2 percent, and its largest (and indeed only)
calendar-year loss was only 1.0 percent. You’ll find higher returns
(and higher yearly losses) in the 30 percent and 40 percent equity
portfolios. Note that the 50 percent portfolio had a compound annual
return of 11.0 percent and a maximum calendar-year loss of 10.9
percent. That 10.9 percent loss in 1974 followed on the heels of a
7.7 percent loss in 1973. But for comparison, look what happened to
the S&P 500 Index in those two years: down 14.7 percent in ’73
and down another 26.5 percent in ’74.
You’ll also see that the standard deviation of the
S&P 500 was twice as high as that of the 50 percent Equity
Portfolio, 8.5 percent vs. 17.7 percent. You might also note that
the standard deviation of the 30 percent equity portfolio, which
produced a respectable CRR of 9.8 percent, was only about one-third
that of the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index.
Here’s how to make this table a useful tool for you
individually. Start by writing down two numbers: the target return
that you need (after you add one or two percentage points to give
yourself a margin for error) and the largest one-year loss you are
willing to tolerate. Then start with one of those figures and scan
the table to find an allocation that gives you what you need.
HOW MUCH DO YOU WANT?
Investors typically say they want the highest
possible returns. But when you suggest they put their money in pork
belly futures contracts or bet their life savings on Microsoft
stock, they quickly change their tunes. Still, if you are like most
people you want as much as you can get. So start with the all-equity
column and work your way to the left until you find a column where
you can tolerate every risk item, including the worst 12-month
period, and the worst periods from 36 to 60 months. When you find
that column, you have an idea what percentage of equity allocation
might be right for you.
Some risk-averse investors won’t want to tolerate
the bad times associated with the allocation that will give them the
returns they need. If you really need at least a 12 percent return,
for example, you may still find the risks of the 70 percent Equity
Portfolio are too high for you.
What should you do if you need the returns from a
column that has too much risk for you? Your first impulse might be
to go for the high return and ignore your gut in regard to the risk.
But I think that would be a big mistake. If your needs straddle two
columns, you should choose the one that has a level of risk that’s
right for you.
There are two main reasons for this. First, remember
that the figures in the table are not predictions of the future,
only results from the past. And the past is a more reliable
indicator of risk than of returns. For any given combination of
assets, the pattern of volatility will be more constant and more
predictable than the pattern of return.
Second, it is never acceptable or advisable to
manage a portfolio in violation of your risk tolerance. Year after
year, decade after decade, we see that people who do that are the
ones who bail out of their investments near the bottom of a market
cycle. They become bitter and cynical about investing. Worse, they
often stay out of the markets for many years, often permanently, for
fear of being burned again.
LISTEN TO YOUR GUT
If there is only one lesson you take from this
newsletter, I hope it is this: Never ignore your emotions or your
"better judgment" in order to chase higher returns. It’s just not
worth it. When we talk to clients who need or want higher returns
than their guts will allow, we spell out a few options, which of
course they already know about. If, as we often recommend, you
settle for a lower return in order to take on less risk, you may
have to work longer before you retire. Or you may have to spend less
and save more. You may be able to increase your tolerance for risk
with education. But for most of us, risk tolerance or risk aversion
is a character trait that’s just part of who we are, not subject to
much change. So unless you are certain that you are comfortable with
higher risk, listen to your gut.
A WORD TO MARKET TIMERS
The results we show in this table will apply in a
general way to all investors who choose fixed-income securities,
equities, or a combination. But the specific numbers are for
buy-and-hold investments only. Market timing changes the whole
dynamic of investing, often for the better, and you simply can’t
expect timed results to follow those we show here.
However, you don’t have to use the DFA mutual funds
to get some valuable guidance from this table. These results also
apply in general, though of course not specifically, to what we
expect from the do-it-yourself programs we presented in The
Ultimate Buy-and-Hold Strategy. Because Vanguard’s
index funds do not adequately represent U.S. and international small
company and value funds, we think the Vanguard program we outlined
would lag about two percentage points behind the DFA program shown
here. One other note: all these figures are calculated after our
maximum management fees of 1.0 percent annually.
|