For Analysis sake..

SAS Financial Advisors LLC |

Goldman Sachs issued a report today in regard to the performance of the US stock market over the next 10 years.  \

Their expectation is 3%!   CNBC Daily Open: Concerns over high interest rates return, pressuring stocks.

If you read the report, they are concerned about the historically high valuation of the current market averages. A common measure is a benchmark called the CAPE index that stands for the cyclically adjusted price earnings measurement.  It looks at a trailing 10 price earnings ratio (stock average price divided by the same averages earnings).  The rationale for a 10-year average is that the 10 years will take into account the annual natural fluctuations based on bubbles and bear and bull markets.  The goal is to provide a historically based expectation for long term financial planning.  It is not a useful short-term indicator.  As of today, the CAPE is at 37.9.    Here are some benchmarks to put some meaning to this number:  

Mean: 

17.17

 

Median: 

16.00

 

Min: 

4.78

(Dec 1920)

Max: 

44.19

(Dec 1999

For analysis's sake, the CAPE can be divided into tiers indicating odds of returns over 10 years.  Even though the max CAPE number is still 20% away, if you remember, December 1999 preceded the dot.com bomb and the minimum preceded the crash.  Looking at the median and mean show that current the CAPE average is quite high-in the top quadrant.  This is one reason Goldman Sachs is using 3% as its expected return. The SP 500 has averaged 13% during the last 10 years. It is easy to get used to these higher-than-average returns and therefore a decline in returns hurts more. How easy is it to forget 2022, the last negative returns in the stock market and for icing on the cake, a significant increase in interest rates.  

 

If we have the 3% return as our bottom guard rail and 10% as the most optimistic case, then a return of 6% is very acceptable.  Those opportunities are available, and we are taking advantage of them.